Energetic and fast-paced but also silly and a
little bit trashy, this spaghetti western enjoys minor cult status because
ex-Beatle Ringo Starr plays a supporting role. Yet Blindman is moderately enjoyable on its own merits. The plot is
typical spaghetti-western weirdness, predicated on outlandish schemes and
superhuman abilities, suggesting that star Tony Anthony (who also provided the
story) studied the genre. Beyond the usual tropes of overwrought music and wild
camera zooms, Blindman includes
themes of heroism, pride, and revenge, all delivered by way of a lone-wolf
protagonist who’s an artist with his six-shooters. As promised by the title,
said protagonist is sightless, so every scene in which he hits a target is
inherently ridiculous.
Vigorously directed by Ferdinando Baldi, the picture
begins with Blindman (Anthony) rolling into a small town looking for trouble.
As in, he’s there to find a man named “Trouble.” Apparently that fellow knows
the location of the 50 women whom Blindman purchased. To get Trouble’s
attention, Blindman repeatedly shoots the bell of a church tower. After
Blindman learns that the women were kidnapped by a criminal named Domingo, Blindman
embarks on an adventure to recover his “property.” Turns out the ladies were
imported from Europe as mail-order brides, so it’s not as if either Blindman or
Domingo wants a personal harem; rather, they hope to sell the women for profit.
Much of the picture comprises back-and-forth scenes during which Blindman takes
the women from Domingo or vice versa, with Domingo’s brother, Candy (Starr),
caught in between.
Is this stuff as insane as it sounds? Yes and no. On a
narrative level, Blindman is bizarre,
since very little of what happens onscreen could actually occur in reality. Yet
on an experiential level, Blindman
lacks the fever-dream quality of, say, Sergio Leone’s spaghetti-western
masterpieces. Anthony and Baldi take time to set up characters and situations,
as if doing so will make the flick seem more credible. It does not. That said,
Anthony, Baldi, and their collaborators muster a handful of decent action
scenes, so the film moves along nicely. Still, there’s only so high this
picture can fly, because the acting is merely serviceable, and because the
film’s treatment of women is grotesque. Just because the story is set during a
historical period when women were treated poorly doesn’t justify the incessant
abuse of female characters or the myriad nude scenes.
Blindman:
FUNKY
1 comment:
This would almost be my favorite Euro-western, save for the repulsive abuse of the brides. It's funny, exciting & beautifully mounted, but...those scenes, particularly when the woman are attacked in the desert, are unwatchable. Even given the times it was made in, what were they thinking?
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