Shakespeare meets the Spaghetti Western in this impressively directed film from Enzo G. Castellari. Koch Media R2 German disc.
The Film
The Spaghetti Western really kicked off in 1966 when Sergio Corbucci's Django
walked into frame for the first time - deliberately challenging the
accepted genre conventions, it effectively challenged other directors to
twist the genre in their own way, and make the Spaghetti Western more
than just an imitation of the American Western. European Cinema has a
prospensity for weird film-making, and within the year Giulio Questi's dark and twisted Se sei vivo spara (1967) had been released, followed shortly by the even stranger Death Sentence
(1968). In that same year, based on an idea by Sergio Corbucci (probably inspired by Kurosawa's The Bad Sleep Well
(1960)) came the
strangest adaptation yet, as Western met Shakespeare with gothic
horror trappings in Johnny Hamlet.
Johnny
(Andrea Giordana) returns home from fighting in the Civil War to find
that his father has been murdered and that his mother has married his
Uncle Claudio (Horst Frank). The blame for the murder has been placed
on an outlaw named Santana who was apparently killed by Claudio shortly
after the killing. Johnny is suspicious and sets out to track down the
real killer...
Most of the characters in the screenplay remain faithful to Shakespeare's play, with the lead role taken by Johnny (called Django in the German dub) and the
characters of Claudius, Hamlet's mother, Polonius (now a Sheriff) and
Horatio all appearing in their usual forms. Rosencrantz (Ross) and Guildenstern (Guild)
also turn up, although no mention is made of them being former friends
of Johnny/Hamlet's. The female characters are slightly mixed up, with
the Ophelia character known as Emily, and a different character called
Ophelia. The story itself has plenty twists on the original, the
character and storyline revolving around the badit Santana is a new invention, and
to keep the film moving there are a number of action scenes added,
as henchmen try to kill Johnny and he is ultimately framed for
murder. A lot of people die, although not in the same order or manner
as in the play, which does mean there are some surprises even for those
who know it well. The film has a dark vein of humour running
through it, and builds to a good climax.
From the opening,
red-lit, fog enshrouded dream sequence that looks like something out of
a Mario Bava film, it is clear that Johnny Hamlet
is not going to be a normal Western. The most impressive set is a
candle-lit graveyard in a cave where Johnny first sees his father's
grave and the camera loops around his face as he talks to his father's
presence. In lieu of a castle, Claudio's house has a suitable gothic
ambience with candles and paintings remniscent of Sabata (1969).
The only downside of the film are a couple of fist-fights that
although well directed, last too long and really drag. Composer
Fransecso De Masi (New York Ripper
(1982)) gives the film a very fitting soundtrack - from the opening
guitar theme 'Find a Man' (that sets words from the play to a modern
guitar theme) to some dark, creepy choral themes that give the film a
real gothic ambience.
Italian
actor Andrea Giordana took the lead after a very popular starring
role in the Italian mini-series adaptation of another piece of classic
literature, The Count of Monte Cristo
(1966). He looks very suitable for the role, with some impressive gun
handling and good acting. German actor Horst Frank plays the villainous
Claudio to perfection with obvious affection for his new wife, but a
subtle hint of evil and scheming. The rest of the cast play their parts
well, Ignazio Spalla as Guild should be instantly recognisable to fans
of the Sabata films, appearing as Sabata's friend in all three of the
official films.
Like many Spaghetti Westerns, Johnny Hamlet
was retitled for the German market and plugged as a Django film -
ultimately, with the Hamlet element played down by promoters, the film
was seen as just another Spaghetti Western and performed unimpressively
at the box office. However, Johnny Hamlet
is a very impressive film with a clever script and some fantastic
direction, boosted further by a powerful soundtrack and great acting -
only the relative lack of action scenes will put some people off this
production. One of the best Spaghetti Westerns, Johnny Hamlet
is highly recommended to all genre fans. Shakespeare movie collectors
might well find this relatively faithful adaptation of interest.
In brief:
Anyone famous in it?
Horst Frank - a German actor who often played the Western villian, including in The Grand Duel (1972)
Directed by anyone interesting?
Enzo G. Castellari - Italian director who cut his teeth on Westerns before moving on action and crime films including Street Law (1974) and Heroin Busters (1976) and returning to the genre to direct Keoma (1976).
Any violence?
Some gunfights and fistfights, only a little blood.
Any sex?
None
Good soundtrack?
A great soundtrack including a catchy title song, and some creepy organ and choir themes.
Who is it for?
All Spaghetti Western fans should see this one, and might interest Shakespeare fans.
The DVD
Visuals
Original Aspect Ratio - 2.35:1 anamorphic wide-screen. Colour. The
image is very good with strong colours and detail and only a fine layer of grain. Some speckles.
Audio
Italian and German mono tracks, both sound good. Note: The German track is missing some scenes so Italian track plays here, with subtitle track 2 filling the gaps. Note 2: The German track has a slightly different and inferior musical soundtrack in a few scenes.
Subtitles
German 1 - translate the Italian track. German 2 - fill in for the missing scenes. English - translates the Italian track.
Runtime
Main feature runtime: 1hr 31m 08s (PAL)
Extras
The disc includes:
Interviews
with director Castellari, composer Fransecso De Masi and Franco
Nero (who isn't in this film). They talk about this film,
and Castellari's career in general. Very interesting. In
English and Italian with German and English subtitles. (33m 59s)
Original German and Italian trailers, very poor condition. (2m 51s) (3m 01s)
Photo galleries - promotional photos, behind the scenes and promotional material. Manual scrolling.
Booklet in the DVD case has brief notes on the film in German only.
EASTER EGG: Music video of film clips set to the 'Find a Man' theme, with Karaoke style subtitles. (2m 36s)
Availability
German release. DVD Title: Die Totengräber warten schon
Packing
Single disc digipack in cardboard sleeve.
Region
Region 2 (UK, Europe) - PAL
Other regions?
Japanese DVD, no English options.
Cuts?
The film is believed to be fully uncut. Titles and credits are in Italian.
Summary
A rather unique Spaghetti Western with a clever script, boosted by strong direction and acting. Highly recommended to fans.
A great DVD release, print
quality is strong and audio is good. The documentary is very
interesting. Only the lack of English audio might annoy some.