Crammed with big-name actors,
colorful locations, and complex schemes, Brass
Target should be a rousing thriller. Unfortunately, the team behind the
picture tried to do too many things, and the starring role was unwisely given to
John Cassavettes—who by this point in his career preferred directing low-budget
films to acting in Hollywood flicks—so the combination of a confusing
script and a phoned-in leading performance makes it difficult to appreciate the
picture’s many admirable qualities. Set in 1945 Europe, just after the defeat
of the Nazis, Brass Target begins
with an exciting robbery: Mysterious criminals attack an Allied train and steal
a fortune in Nazi gold. The theft divides Allied powers, because Russians blame
Americans for the loss, so belligerent U.S. General George S. Patton (George
Kennedy) vows to recover the gold and prove his country’s innocence. And then
the movie veers off-course.
Instead of focusing on Patton and the conspirators
who want to impede his investigation, the picture shifts to an Army detective,
Major Joe De Lucca (Cassavettes), who digs into the robbery while dealing with
myriad personal melodramas. Among other things, he’s got a fractious friendship
with Col. Mike McCauley (Patrick McGoohan), a schemer who trades in stolen war
loot, and both men love Mara (Sophia Loren), a European who survived the war by
sleeping her way to safety. The movie’s plot gets even more complicated when
the conspirators—primarily Col. Donald Rogers (Robert Vaughn) and Col. Walter
Gilchrist (Edward Herrmann)—hire an enigmatic European assassin (Max Von Sydow)
to kill Patton lest the general discover their crime.
Any one of these
storylines would have been enough for a satisfying movie, so Brass Target ends up giving each of its
component elements short shrift. More damningly, the best scenes, which depict
the assassin’s meticulous planning of an attempt on Patton’s life, feel like
repeats of similar scenes in the acclaimed thriller The Day of the Jackal (1973). Nonetheless, Von Sydow gives the picture’s
best performance, especially since the other acting in the movie is highly
erratic.
Cassavettes preens and scowls like some sort of irritable peacock;
Loren looks lost, which is understandable seeing as how her character is
anemically underdeveloped; Kennedy plays Patton as a foul-mouthed bully, his
acting inevitably suffering by comparison to George C. Scott’s Oscar-winning
turn in Patton (1970); and McGoohan
is terrible, his accent shifting inexplicably from one line to the next. Still,
Brass Target has tremendous
production values, and the milieu of the story—postwar Europe as a lawless
frontier—is fascinating. Plus, the central gimmick of the narrative, a
conspiracy-theory explanation for the real Patton’s death in 1945, is
imaginative. One suspects, however, that the premise was explored to stronger
effect in the Frederick Nolan novel from which this film was adapted. (Available
at WarnerArchive.com)
Brass Target: FUNKY
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