Nothing wrote:Except there are no heroes in Leone.
Anti-heroes, fine. Leone subverts the regular depiction of Western heroism, but he no more fails to construct his own version of heroism than Kurosawa failed to construct his own genuine, if eccentric, version of heroism in Yojimbo and Sanjuro.
Nothing wrote:The intended irony behind the title of 'The Good, the Bad & the Ugly' is that the three protagonists are barely distinguishble - they are all greedy immoral capitalists willing to murder for profit.
The greed and amorality of Leone's heroes comes directly from Kurosawa's Yojimbo, not Leone's politics, whatever they might actually be. It has nothing to do with capitalism. Leone's films build on and develop Kurosawa's later version of heroism, they don't build on or develop marxist concerns.
For me, the actual irony of The Good, The Bad, and The Ugly's title is that while everyone starts out seeming like an indistinguishable blend of the three qualities, making the film bathetic, by the end they genuinely become gigantic and mythic enough to deserve such archetypal labels. What was bathetic turns into real, if unexpected, grandeur. Therein is the irony.
Nothing wrote:I just did. And it's pretty tenouus assigning Leone's politics to his writers. He worked with many different writers over the course his career and yet his politics remained consistent.
Luciano Vincenzoni worked on For a Few Dollars More, The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly, and Duck, You Sucker, and Sergio Donati worked on the latter and Once Upon a Time in the West. Leone would use some of the same writers. He also favoured a certain type of young, cinema-loving writer (such as Bertolucci) to write the stories for his films. Leone's political content is just vague enough, and his themes consistent enough, that one could get the impression that he's working through the same political questions throughout his career. He's really not. There is very little that is marxist about the dollars trilogy, most especially because Eastwood gets his (well deserved by then) monetary reward in all of them before riding off, solitary as when he began. OUATIW is more marxist, but that material is weakened by parallel concerns that compete for focus (and if you're me, win). There is a lot of marxism in Duck, You Sucker, but I find the Rod Steiger character ends up subverting enough of the revolutionary idealism of the Zapata Western that I can't be sure just what is sincere and what satirical in that movie's politics.
Nothing wrote:If you can't see that then it's no wonder you don't make much of his work.
Excuse me? The Good, The Bad, and the Ugly is probably my favourite Western, and both Once Upon a Time in the West and Duck, You Sucker are considerable achievements and personal favourites of mine.