Jammed with entertaining actors and powered by
plot elements that worked better in other movies, the comedic Western Something Big is a slog to watch because
it’s episodic, phony, and unimaginative. It says a lot about the picture that
the protagonist repeatedly proclaims that he wants to achieve “something big”
during his lifetime, but the exact nature of that something is withheld from
the audience until the final act. Turns out it’s merely an armed heist. Myriad
other films have been predicated on the very same threadbare premise, so why
all the obfuscation? The solution to this mystery is as elusive as answers to
other questions, like why this would-be comedy contains so few actual jokes. If
nothing else, Something Big explains
why director Andrew V. McLaglan spent most of his career making manly-man
action flicks, because a comic genius he is not.
Dean Martin, looking quite
bored, stars as Joe Baker, an Easterner who fled to the West in search of
adventure. After years pursuing an outlaw lifestyle, he’s fallen far short of
achieving legendary status, so when he learns that his long-estranged fiancée
is on her way to collect him, he decides it’s time for a grand scheme. Baker
learns that a local thug named Cobb (Albert Salmi) can get his hands on a Gatling
gun, so Baker makes a deal. In exchange for the gun, Baker will furnish Cobb
with a woman. Baker then attacks passenger wagons until he finds a suitable
candidate, Mary Anna Morgan (Honor Blackman). He kidnaps Mary Anna but doesn’t
believe her when she says she has powerful allies. She ain’t lyin’. Her husband,
Colonel Morgan (Brian Keith), is the commandant of the local U.S. Army fort.
And so the contrived plot goes—Baker contemplates trading Mary Anna for the gun
even as he falls for her, and Mary Anna grows to respect Baker even though she
knows Baker’s fiancée is en route. Lost amid this romantic silliness is Baker’s
grand scheme, which should have been the focus of the movie. Worse, Something Big wastes time servicing
goofy subplots, notably the one about two horny frontier dames.
Set to
obnoxiously bouncy music by Marvin Hamlisch, Something Big lurches from one disconnected vignette to the next,
the appeal of each scene dependent upon the actors present in the scene. By
far, the bits featuring Keith as a blustery military officer and Ben Johnson as
a gruff scout are the most rewarding. Conversely, the movie squanders the
presence of Robert Donner and David Huddleston, who have tiny roles, and the
filmmakers give too much screen time to Blackman, Martin, and Joyce Van Patten,
all of whom give pedestrian performances. Despite its title, Something Big offers only small
pleasures, at best.
Something
Big: FUNKY
It's unintentionally funny that the villain's called Emilio Estevez. (Also, the title song - which Hamlisch had nothing to do with - is dire.)
ReplyDeleteNoticed the Emilio Estevez thing, which is indeed amusing, though I couldn't bring myself to describe the Mark Lindsay-crooned title song, which is indeed a sonic horror. BTW what's with manipulating poor Honor Blackman's photo on the poster to make here appear as if she's in a Russ Meyer flick? Someone taking the "bigger is better" ethos of the poster to a needless extreme?
ReplyDeleteI remember Dean Martin promoting this movie on his TV show. I did go see it. I think I liked but I was 11 at the time and almost liked anything as long as it wasn't kid stuff.
ReplyDelete'BTW what's with manipulating poor Honor Blackman's photo on the poster to make here appear as if she's in a Russ Meyer flick?'
ReplyDeleteMy exact thought when I saw the poster: " What's Blackman's head doing on Uschi Digard's body??".