Part spaghetti Western and
part Dirty Dozen ripoff, this
Italy/US/Yugoslavia coproduction has a serviceable premise, then loses its way
thanks to a forgettable leading performance and an overly mechanical plot.
Along the way, several colorful actors are subsumed by the overall mediocrity
of the piece, delivering half-hearted interpretations of underdeveloped roles.
Even the action highlights are ho-hum. Those who want nothing more from
adventure pictures than a steady flow of death-defying bravery and tight-lipped
macho posturing will be able to consume the picture like a serving of empty
calories, but those who expect anything more will get bored fairly quickly. In
the Wild West, U.S. Cavalry soldier Kaleb (Bekim Fehmiu) completes a
fortnight-long patrol and discovers that while he was away, Apaches raided the
outpost where he lives and killed his wife. Kaleb blames the death on his
superior officer, Colonel Brown (Richard Crenna), so Kaleb tries to quit the
service and devote his life to killing Apaches. When Brown refuses Kaleb’s
resignation, Kaleb shoots the colonel and becomes a fugitive from military
justice. Two years later, blustery General Miles (John Huston) arrives on the
scene, demanding that Brown illegally cross the Mexican border to slaughter a
band of Apache raiders. What’s more, Miles demands that Brown’s men bring Kaleb
in from the wilderness, because during the intervening period, Kaleb has made
good on his vengeance pledge by slaughtering Apaches heedlessly, thereby
becoming the ideal man to lead the mission into Mexico.
Once all the narrative pieces
are in place, Kaleb finds himself supervising a band of soldiers, including Kaleb,
who would just as soon kill the notorious deserter as kill Apaches. Among those
playing soldiers are Ian Bannen, Chuck Connors, Ricardo Montalban, Slim
Pickens, and Woody Strode. (Naturally, Crenna’s character is along for the
ride, too.) With this much talent at their disposal, producer Dino De
Laurentiis and director Burt Kennedy should have been able to come up with
something much more interesting than The
Deserter, which is sometimes known as The
Devil’s Backbone. Alas, the script is unrelentingly clichéd, predictable,
and superficial, and the filmmakers miscalculated, badly, by casting
Yugoslavian stud Fehmiu in the leading role. Just one year previous, Paramount
tried to make Fehmiu into an international star by toplining him in the epic
melodrama The Adventurers (1970), so
this picture presumably represented the completion of a two-picture deal. A
European equivalent to, say, James Franciscus, Fehmiu is suitably brooding and
athletic, but he’s got the depth and range of a statue. With his performance
creating a vacuum at the center of The
Deserter, the movie is doomed to disappoint from its very first frames.
The Deserter: FUNKY
Okay, it's pretty routine but it sure looks nice, with fine photgraphy and settings (the fort was built for the film). One of the weakest aspects is Piero Piccione's music. I think a more muscular score would have helped greatly.
ReplyDeleteBut that still leaves Fehmiu. His facial contortions when Crenna mentions his wife's death are hysterical (never mind "THEY SKINNED HER!!!").