Sabata

1970 "The man with gunsight eyes comes to kill!"
6.7| 1h39m| PG-13| en| More Info
Released: 02 September 1970 Released
Producted By: United Artists
Country: Italy
Budget: 0
Revenue: 0
Official Website:
Synopsis

Several pillars of society have robbed an Army safe containing $100,000 so they can buy the land upon which the coming railroad will be built. But they haven't reckoned on the presence of the master gunslinger, Sabata.

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Reviews

Scanialara You won't be disappointed!
Plantiana Yawn. Poorly Filmed Snooze Fest.
Steineded How sad is this?
AshUnow This is a small, humorous movie in some ways, but it has a huge heart. What a nice experience.
SciFiSheriff To be honest when I first heard of the movie Sabata, I was reluctant to see because it wasn't really well known and at this time I was only getting into westerns. I had never seen a western and boy, I'm glad I started with this one! The film is an action packed, laugh-out-loud adventure. I have never laughed so much at an action flick. There is some scenes that are so wacky that you will honestly burst out laughing every time you watch it, wither that be your 1st watch or your 100th! It's not even meant to be a comedy and some might not find it funny but i certainly did!It's about a gunfighter taking out a bunch of do-badders in a lawless town. Battles throw down. That's your movie.When the battles do throw down ,Boy, are you in for a treat! there's banjo guns blazing, men being shot on waggons, explosions, loud gunfire and a lot more. Any action junkie will love this flick. The theme is catchy and were well written. I will have to admit, This might not be everyone's cup of tea because of extensive action and it is not as well known as other westerns.This is the movie that got me into westerns and it will always be special to me. So if you want a all action, belly-aching, leave you brain at the door adventure or if you are new to westerns give this one a watch. Boy, you won't be disappointed
TankGuy Sabata is a gem as it is unique among other spaghetti westerns. Lee Van Cleef gives probably his best performance and the film is high on action.The action never stops as the film begins with a bank robbery, then about twenty minutes later shows sabata killing all the robbers and returning the money. A few scenes later banjo shoots dead several unknown goons who are out to kill him. Other action includes excellently choreographed fist fights and brawls, small shooting and a large shootout at a ranch. The killcount is very high.As with most spaghettis, sabata is extremely cheesy and includes several funny, comedic and weird moments. The theme tune is excellent as well.A must see for western and action movie fans.
zardoz-13 If you have a ravenous appetite for Spaghetti westerns lensed in rugged Spain with exhilarating music like composer Marcello Giombini's score and Carlo Simi's evocative sets (he collaborated with Sergio Leone), "Sabata" is a surefire sagebrusher. Writer & director Gianfranco Parolini made two "Sabata" movies with Lee Van Cleef, including "Return of Sabata," but "Sabata" surpasses its gimmicky sequel. Unfortunately, another Parolini western,"Indio Black," starring Yul Brynner, was retitled "Adios Sabata." The Yul Brynner character, however, had nothing to do with the Lee Van Cleef hero. Furthermore, "Indio Black" came out between the two "Sabata" movies, so it isn't surprising the producers altered the title. Remember, virtually all Terence Hill's movies after the triumph of "They Call Me Trinity" were retitled "Trinity," even though the Trinity character had no part in them. Similarly, after the success of Sergio Corbucci's "Django," many Franco Nero westerns were retitled "Django." Gianfranco Parolini's "Sabata" pits the eponymous gambler against a murderous rancher, Stengel (Franco Ressel of "The Mercenary"), abetted by an army of gunmen, who connives to eradicate all traces of an elaborate bank robbery that he has orchestrated. Two prominent businessmen and he sought to steal $100-thousand from the U.S. Army. These thieves planned to purchase land with their ill-gotten gains which the railroad would eventually have to pay dearly for to cross on its westward route. Like Sergio Leone, who forged the Spaghetti western as we know it, Parolini emerged from the same cultural heritage. Parolini helmed three major peplums, "Samson," "The Fury of Hercules," and "The Ten Gladiators," while Leone received credit for directing only one peplum. Conversely, Leone beat Parolini to the draw with westerns. Parolini's first oater was 1965's "Johnny West," while Leone helmed "Fistful of Dollars" in 1964.Sergio Leone discovered bit part heavy Lee Van Cleef and turned him into viable supporting star in "For A Few Dollars More" and "The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly." Parolini went a step farther and gave the former accountant his first recurring major character role with "Sabata." Van Cleef would encore his role in "Return of Sabata," the only instance of Van Cleef playing the same character twice. Between "For A Few Dollars More" and "The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly," Lee Van Cleef became a star in "The Big Gundown." Sergio Sollima's "The Big Gundown" was released about a month before Leone's magnum opus "The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly." Meantime, Parolini lived in the shadow of Leone's success and exploited it. Essentially, Parolini appropriated Leone's masterpiece "Once Upon A Time in the West" with its sprawling story about the westward expansion of the railroad and converted Lee Van Cleef's sartorially elegant character Colonel Douglas Mortimer into the derringer wielding Sabata who carries around a Winchester with an extension barrel so he can make long range shots. Remember, Colonel Mortimer carried components in his saddle roll to modify his weapons when he needed greater range. Sabata doesn't have Colonel Mortimer's tragic past either. Instead, Sabata is a gambler who happens to be a superb marksman."Sabata" qualifies as one of Van Cleef's half-dozen top tier Spaghetti westerns. A classic action packed sagebrusher with melodramatic twists and turns needs a violent, larger-than-life villain to challenge the hero. The villainous Stengel, played by Franco Ressel, is especially clever, conceited, and nefarious. He is a supreme egotist and has no qualms when it comes to getting what he wants. In typical Spaghetti western tradition, Sabata doesn't play fair against the unscrupulous Stengel. Once he deduces that Stengel engineered the ill-fated hold-up, he closes in on Stengel and his two associates, Judge O'Hara ( ) and Ferguson and tries to extort money from them for his silence. Neither Gene Autry nor Wild Bill Elliot would stoop to such nasty tactics."Sabata" opens with a cool set-piece. The U.S. Army has just locked $100-thousand dollars in the bank at Daugherty City for safe keeping and has posted sentries around it. Nevertheless, Stengel's chief henchman Oswald (Robert Hundar of "Goliath and the Dragon") and his accomplishes kill the Army guards with knives while lightning crackles overhead in the night skies. They remove the bank vault from the wall and slide it out on rails into a buckboard and light out for the border. A dying Army guard stumbles into the saloon to warn the civilians about the robbery. Sabata, who arrived in Daugherty before the robbery took place, has just stopped a crooked game of craps, and demonstrated his adroit ability to sling dollar coins into a player piano. Sabata takes a short-cut and beats the outlaws to the border. He commands them to turn back. They refuse to because they believe mistakenly that high up and far away on a cliff where our hero stands that he cannot possibly hit them with his Winchester. Sabata has attached an extension to the barrel and kills all seven of them.Sabata returns to Daugherty City with the safe, the defunct outlaws, and the Army pays him a $5-thousand dollar reward. By this time, Sabata has made friends with a drunkard, Carrincha (Pedro Sanchez of "Adios, Sabata"), and his buddy, Alley Cat (Nick Jordan of "Five For Hell"), who performs acrobatic feats. A mysterious stranger, Banjo (William Berger), who is passing through Daugherty City, teams up with Sabata. Banjo conceals a modified Winchester carbine in his banjo and is a crack shot himself. The final confrontation between Stengel and Sabata at his ranch is classic, and Sabata's coin slinging capability pays off. Parolini keeps the action moving at a snappy clip, stages several exciting gunfights, springs some surprises along the trail. Stengel utters a memorable line before he dies: "Life is only worthwhile when you can face death without showing any fear." "Sabata" ranks as one of Lee Van Cleef's better non-Sergio Leone westerns, but it doesn't surpass "Death Rides A Horse."
Poe-17 Not that they will alter your enjoyment of this film but ...POSSIBLE SPOILERS AHEAD!!! There were three of them up for grabs back then; Clint Eastwood, Charles Bronson and Lee Van Cleef. Of course, Clint won the star and then history went its way. Charles went on to reign in the beautiful "Once Upon a Time in the West" alongside of Henry Fonda who did the best "against type" in cinema history. Lee Van Cleef followed Clint through "For a Few Dollars More" and the great but not-as-good-as-"Once Upon a Time In The West" classic "The Good The Bad and the Ugly".Clint had the squint but Lee Van Cleef was the actor all spaghetti westerns wanted. His eyes, the physical features of his face, his poise and delivery of lines (when the lines weren't way way dumb - he had a director, remember).Way up over the top bounty hunter, good-guy/bad-guy, supernatural marksmanship, mysterious even when the mystery isn't resolved ... he played the same character in many films, even a "shouldn't have been done" Magnificent Seven" outing."Sabata" gave him his role, three years after Clint's squint.With "Sabata", Lee found his role that Clint Eastwood found with his "Man with no name". "Sabata" was more tongue in cheek and visually energetic but it played exactly into the era. The "Sabata" series missed their chance the same way all those Country and Western singers missed their opportunity when Garth Brooks took things over.The second "Sabata" starred Yul Bryner as "Indio Black" ??!! and Lee stepped in for other sequels but the momentum was gone A lost possibility for cinema. It died on the vine.But "Sabata" remains with all its potential and presentation as a viable series of films whose history just wasn't to be.From the theme (catchy), to Banjo's music (so fitting) to Sabata's accuracy when tossing coins (which resolves a critical point in the movie) this film stepped outside the traditional western ( as overseas films about the American West were doing those days - check out the saguaro cactus in filmed-in-Spain films ... planted plastic).A mis-timed mythology that should have made its mark."Sabata" is the origin that wanted and could have become a set of movies to be cherished by western cinema lovers.it didn't. Our loss.But this seminal film is around for us to revisit and remember.On a personal note there is a couple of lines of dialog that have perplexed me from my first viewing - which came from out of the blue. They are at the end of the film. A companion of Sabata asks "Who the hell are you?" and Sabata says; "Didn't I ever mention it?" End of movie.I would love to know if that was just an enigmatic piece of dialog inserted into things, or if that statement addressed a specific intent of the movie.I don't know how to resolve that question.Any insight would be appreciated.