This thriller is a little more complicated than its average American cousin and, if filmed in the states, would star Steve McQueen in all likelihood. Luckily, this was shot in Italy and Las Vegas and John Cassavetes plays our titular character, Machine Gun McCain. Cassavetes is pitch perfect (like the blurb on the cover says) as the three time loser, sprung from prison to do a job. He is hired by his own disenfranchised son to pull a big caper and that is where the double crosses, ulterior motives and big time Mafioso shenanigans (courtesy of Columbo himself, Peter Falk). The plot twists and the lies that characters heap upon one another make for compelling viewing.
There are issues with the film, though. Aside from our
leads, the cast is rounded out by competent, but non-English speaking actors. This
is a hallmark of the low budget Italian Film Renaissance of the 60s and 70s. They
are speaking English in the film so the nuance of language is sometimes lost. This
also means that the entire film is dubbed as well with American voice actors in
place of the Italians and the English-speaking leads recreating their own
dialogue. The out of sync issues are less prevalent here than in other Italian
films (the most egregious offender, in my opinion, being James Franciscus and
Karl Malden’s poor ADR in Cat O’ Nine Tails). Once the viewer gets
through this, the vibrant color and camera work that even low budget American
films exhibit are not evident here. Again, it only really dates the film and
doesn’t impact the powerful storytelling.
Machine Gun McCain, dear readers, is a fine entry in
the Spaghetti Mobster genre and well worth your time.
No comments:
Post a Comment