film    print    sound    leisure    forum
company line »

shopping guide »

contact us »

get reviewed »

get published »

expand yourself »


find it »

Teleport City search allows you to search our entire site as well as our favorite sites about cult films, obscure music, literature, and swank living.


film home | a-b | c-d | e-f | g-h | i-l | m-n | o-q | r-s | t-v | w-z

Friday, September 15, 2006

Unleash the Hordes




Being a History of the Mongol Peoples and Their Most Famous Historical Figures as Portrayed by White People in Fake Eyelids

THE CONQUEROR -- 1956, United States. Starring John Wayne, Susan Hayward, Pedro Armendariz, Agnes Moorehead, Thomas Gomez, John Hoyt, William Conrad, Ted de Corsia, Leslie Bradley, Lee Van Cleef, Peter Mamakos. Directed by Dick Powell. Written by Oscar Millard. Purchase from Amazon.com.

THE MONGOLS -- 1961, Italy/France. Starring Jack Palance, Anita Ekberg, Franco Silva, Antonella Lualdi, Gabriele Antonini, Pierre Cressoy, Andrej Gardenin, Gianni Garko, Roldano Lupi. Directed by Andre De Toth, Leopoldo Savona, Riccardo Freda. Written by Ottavio Alessi, Alessandro Ferrau, Ernesto Gastaldi, Ugo Guerra, Luciano Martino.

HERCULES VERSUS THE MONGOLS -- 1963, Italy. Starring Mark Forest, Maria Grazia Spina, Ken Clark, Jose Greci, Howard Ross, Tullio Altamura, Nadir Moretti, Fedele Gentile, Loris Loddi, Giuseppe Addobbati, Bianca Doria, Renato Terra, Bruno Scipioni. Directed by Domenico Paolella. Written by Alessandro Ferrau, Luciano Martino, and Domenico Paolella. Purchase from Amazon.com.

HERCULES VERSUS THE BARBARIANS -- 1964, Italy. Starring Mark Forest, Jose Greci, Ken Clark, Gloria Milland, Howard Ross, Roldano Lupi, Mirko Ellis, Tullio Altamura, Renato Terra, Elisabetta Wu, Daniela Igliozzi, Bruno Scipioni. Directed by Domenico Paolella. Written by Alessandro Ferrau, Luciano Martino, and Domenico Paolella.

SAMSON AND THE SEVEN MIRACLES OF THE WORLD -- 1961, Italy. Starring Gordon Scott, Yoko Tani, Helene Chanel, Dante DiPaolo, Gabriele Antonini, Leonardo Severini, Valery Inkijinoff. Directed by Riccardo Freda. Written by Oreste Biancoli and Duccio Tessari. Purchase from Amazon.com.


Genghis Khan is certainly one of the great figures in the history of the world. When you say "Mongolia," he's the first person of whom you're likely to think. He conquered China, swept westward, and eventually had a chain of shopping mall formal wear rental stores named after him. Were it not for Genghis Khan's contributions to society, I would have been at a loss as to wear to rent my tux for the prom back in 1990. But aside from all that, he was one of the world's great conquerors, and whether he was a hero or a villain depends largely on whether or not he conquered in your name or just plain conquered you. Certainly as with all history's epic conquerors -- Ramses, Alexander the Great, Julius Caesar, Vlad Tepes, and Bono from U2 -- Genghis Khan is a person who lends himself to having a sweeping, vast, and complex movie made about his life and influence. And like most of the conquerors throughout history, he's still waiting for that movie to be made.

Not that there haven't been movies made about him. It's just that...well, let me put it this way. When you think, "leader of the Mongol hordes?" who's the first actor that comes to mind? Because if it isn't John Wayne, then you're not thinking like Howard Hughes, and since he's the one who made the Genghis Khan movie, that's who he cast.

John Wayne? Really, it doesn't seem quite so silly after you've seen Susan Hayward cast as a pale-skinned, red-haired Tartar princess. And since the casting director himself was obviously aware of how ludicrous this was, they even throw in a line to the effect of, "I know. A red-haired Tartar princess? Can you believe it?" Well, no, not really. But honestly, if casting Caucasians -- especially extremely famous and recognizable Caucasians like Wayne and Hayward -- is a film's most grievous misstep, then I can forgive it. There are plenty of "fake Asian" movies I enjoy despite the loopy casting. Peter Lorre as the mysterious Mr. Moto, Boris Karloff as Mr. Wong, and Warner Oland as Charlie Chan -- despite the fact that these were all Caucasian leads in Asian roles, the movies were still often quite enjoyable, and the overall racial tone was generally Asian-positive, if delivered in something of a misguided way. At least they were the heroes. Charlie Chan spent almost his entire run of movies being goofily lovable and exposing insidious whities as the evil masterminds behind the various nefarious plots he foiled.

So I can forgive the fake eyelids and bad accents and "honorable grandparents say..." dialogue as long as the movie is enjoyable. Heck, I can even forgive those ridiculous Fu Manchu movies since, although he is the classic "inscrutable Oriental" villain, the movies are simply so utterly absurd that I can't see much point in getting all in a huff about them, especially now. I mean, how many people walk around after seeing a Fu Manchu film (how many people have even seen a Fu Manchu film?) and quake at the thought of ghoulish eight-foot-tall Chinese dudes who still dress like it's the Ming Dynasty stalking about with death rays and chambers of horrors and looking an awful lot like Christopher Lee with fake novelty store buckteeth?

So no, although the famously awkward casting of John Wayne as the legendary Mongolian warlord is the most obvious foible The Conqueror makes (and let's not forget his Mongolian henchman, Lee Van Cleef, or William "Jake and the Fat man" Conrad), there is so much hilariously bad stuff about this disaster of an epic that you'll hardly even notice that the leads aren't Asian. From the promise of epic battles that never materialize to the wretched dialogue to the delivery of said dialogue, The Conqueror really takes every level of filmmaking to a level of badness that quite possibly attains the sublime.

We first meet Genghis Khan when is but the lowly Temujin, looking to cause trouble with a fragile peace between warring Mongolian tribes by kidnapping the princess Bortai (Hayward). The film is on thin ice the moment Wayne starts spitting out the ridiculously stilted (even for an epic from the 1950s) dialogue in his classic John Wayne acting style. His Duke Manchu performance here demands to be placed on a pedestal right alongside William Shatner, Adam West, or Jack Palance at their most histrionic (Palance himself played a Mongol warlord in The Mongols, but we'll get to that some other day). Wayne was never what you would call a great actor, but like many men who weren't great at their chosen craft, he found a highly stylized way of delivering lines that worked remarkably well in certain settings and circumstances. Watch Wayne in a movie like The Searcher or True Grit or a host of other films, and you'll see that with the right material, his style can be very effective.

Saddled with ham-fisted dialogue that sounds like a teenager trying to write in the style of a bloated 1950s epic, however, and Wayne seems like just about the worst thing to ever happen to movies. "I feel this Tartar woman...is for me...and my blood says...take her. There are...moments for wisdom...and moments...when I listen to...my blood; my blood says...take...this Tartar woman!" Wayne stammers in one of the ripest lines. I've seen plenty of bad acting and bad casting, but this one, folks...this one really blows me away. Of course, the worse he gets, the worse the dialogue gets, the more enjoyable the movie becomes.

Wayne himself apparently loved the script, and producer Howard Hughes could imagine no one else in the world who would be better suited to inhabit the furry hat and armor of the Mongolian conqueror. "The Conqueror is a Western in some ways," John Wayne unsuccessfully argued. "The way the screenplay reads, it is a cowboy picture and that is how I am going to play Genghis Khan. I see him as a gunfighter." Which is why Wayne plays the Mongolian with his usual bowlegged swagger and Western movie drawl. I suppose, in reflection, things could have been a lot worse. It could have been an epic movie about ancient Troy or Alexander the Great where a bunch of American actors inexplicably fake British accents. Listening to Brad Pitt "British-up" his Greek character Achilles in Troy makes me miss the days when John Wayne played Genghis with all the sauntering "Well, hey, pilgrim" nonchalance for which he was known.

Which is good, because besides John Wayne's shockingly wretched (he manages to be wooden and hammy at the same time, which is a state few actors can attain) reading of his lines, The Conqueror disappoints on all other levels. As one of the very first films made in CinemaScope -- that's widescreen, to you and me -- one expects it to be a lavish, opulent blowout on the grand scale of other CinemaScope pioneers like The Robe and The Egyptian. This was the dawn of the era of massive Hollywood epics, the grandeur and excess of which have to this day never been rivaled even in this age of CGI. These movies were huge. Everything about them seems to dwarf the common member of the audience, from the sets to the acting to the costumes. These movies were self-indulgent and bloated, but you can't deny that you pretty much see every single penny on the screen. This all came about as a result of the rise of television. Movies had to give audiences something they couldn't get on TV, and that meant exotic, TechniColor, CinemaScope blow-outs. the Conqueror is supposed to be one of these, but held up against contemporaries like the aforementioned The Robe, this tale of the young Khan's rise to power plays like a cut-rate wannabe that lacks even the cheap exotic opulence of some of the lesser peplum films of the 1960s.

The blame for this seems to fall almost squarely on the shoulders of actor-turned director Dick Powell, who fails completely to capture any of the magnificence such a film demands. Powell was best known as a TV actor, and it's probably his experience with television production that lead to The Conqueror seeming like such a small-time affair when held up against a film like The Egyptian. It was only Powell's second job as a director (he would only have three more, before dying in 1963), and there's absolutely nothing in his filmography to suggest that he had any idea how to film an epic. Making matters worse, the film had four cinematographers, none of whom were able to capture the grand scale the film needed. On the one hand, the fact that this was one of the first CinemaScope widescreen movies meant that you couldn't really expect the guys (Joseph LaShelle, William E. Snyder, Leo Tover, and Harry Wild) to have experience photographing a widescreen movie. On the other hand, they should have spent a lot more time studying silent era epics and the Cecil DeMille films from the 1930s. They managed to look more sweeping and vast than The Conqueror despite their lack of widescreen, color, and in many cases, sound. At the very least, they should have closely studied Leon Shamroy's work in 1953's The Robe to see what the new widescreen format was capable of delivering.

On the other hand, they may have shot tons of sweeping vistas and realized that it was easier to pass off the limited number of cast members as a horde if they just stuck with medium shots. As such, despite the fact that The Conqueror was shot widescreen, there's not much point to the format. Its ambition falls far short of its execution, and like director Dick Powell, the cinematographers ultimately turn in a film that feels like it was made for television despite the wide scope.

Made at an expense of $8 million -- no small sum in 1956 -- the Conqueror plays like a high school adaptation of an epic. Nothing ever clicks. Epic battles are promised, but they never really materialize, and in wide shots (the bread and butter of early CinemaScope films) you can see that the cast of thousands is really a cast of about forty or fifty. The rugged Utah exteriors are never photographed in a way that captures their grandeur as John Ford would with the same lead actor in countless other films. And as a stand-in for Mongolia, the deserts of Utah are a pretty questionable choice anyway. But then, I figure in 1956, the look of Mongolia was still pretty foreign to most Americans, so no one was really going to nitpick the red rock and dirt standing in for grasslands and the Gobi Desert.

When the action shifts indoors, and fans of epics expect huge sets draped in every piece of glittering finery the art department could stitch together, the film still fails to conjure that epic feel. Through the whole thing, all I could do (besides laugh myself silly at Wayne's acting) was think to myself, "They spent $8 million on this?" even the costumes look cheap and goofy. While other epics were putting a huge amount of effort into the perception (if not the reality) of realism, trying to create something that looked authentic even if it wasn't (the representation, rather than presentation, of history), everyone in The Conqueror rambles about in costumes that look like something a kid throws together the day before Halloween. I'm pretty sure Wayne's Genghis Khan outfit was assembled by the costume designer out of whatever was left over at the catering table. A metal bowl, a couple forks, and a tablecloth do not transform The Duke into a mighty 12th century Mongol warlord.

In place of world conquest, or even very much Mongolian conquest, the movie spends most of its time on the "I hate you I love you" relationship between the tempestuous Tartar princess and her would-be conqueror. Once again, a crummy script is saved by the mind-blowing acting that takes place between Hayward and Wayne. You guys know I much prefer to compliment a movie that fall back on, "So bad it's good," but if ever there was a movie besides Zombie 3 that fit the "so bad it's good" bill to a T, this is it. Words can scarcely describe it, and suddenly, whatever apprehensions you may have had about Hayward and John Wayne being cast as Mongolians are dismissed. Given the poor script, the lack of action, the threadbare attempts at epic sumptuousness, the remarkable miscasting and hammy acting of John Wayne suddenly looks like the film's one stroke of pure genius. It's the only thing that makes the movie tolerable.

Well, not the only thing. There are dancing girls, and some of the supporting cast -- though no more Mongolian than John Wayne -- are actually pretty good. Pedro Armendariz, beloved as Turkish secret agent Karim Bey from From Russia with Love, puts in a wonderful performance as Temujin's blood brother, Jamuga. He seems to be one of the only members of the cast that understands how to act in an epic. Epics demand that you ham it up a little and take things over the top. Witness Richard Burton in the previous year's The Robe. Charlton Heston had yet to come along and show everyone definitively, "THIS is how you act in an epic!" but Burton's performance was certainly not lacking in its lack of subtlety. It worked perfectly for the material and the colossal scale of the film. Wayne overacts, but not quite in the correct way. Armendariz nails it, but then, that's what he does with pretty much each of his characters. Lee Van Cleef doesn't really do much other than hang out by the campfire, but his presence is always welcome. And William Conrad is always all right. The rest of the cast, however, seems determined to give John Wayne a run for his money in the stilted delivery department.

Yet again, we find that the screenwriter -- Oscar Millard -- is, like the director and the cinematographers, far more experienced with television than movie making. For all his billions, you'd think Hughes could have hired a core film crew with more cinema than television experience. Had he done that, it's likely that The Conqueror would have looked and read a lot better than it does.

The only thing more notorious about this movie than Wayne's casting as Genghis Khan is the fact that it was shot in Utah's Escalante Desert, which in 1956 was the very recent site of atomic bomb testing. Exactly why producer Howard Hughes was so determined to use this location is something I don't know -- but then remember the guy did eventually start wearing Kleenex boxes on his feet -- but it was disastrous for the cast and crew of The Conqueror. Some ninety members of the cast and crew -- including Hayward, Armendariz, Agnes Moorehead (who plays John Wayne's mother and is best known as the meddlesome mother from television's Bewitched), director Dick Powell, and John Wayne himself -- died of cancer. High radiation levels at the locations for this film are one of the leading suspects, and with ninety people involved in this movie dying of cancer, it's hard to argue against the hypothesis. It's a damn goofy movie to have given your life for, even if you didn't know you were doing it at the time.

Producer and eccentric billionaire Howard Hughes didn't get cancer, but he did go batshit insane not too long after this movie. The $8 million he spent producing the film pales in comparison to the reported $12 million he spent to buy up all the prints and take it off the market. It was the last film he would ever make. Although the movie was soundly panned by pretty much everyone, the spectacle of widescreen and bright colors and the mighty Mongol Horde of a couple dozen guys was enough to snare curious viewers, especially on the global market (though Wayne's plan to either repair or destroy relations with the USSR by premiering the movie there was given the "nyet thanks" by the Russians once they previewed the movie), and The Conqueror managed to turn a profit for Hughes' dying RKO Pictures. Hughes himself apparently loved the movie as much as I do (and make no mistake -- I love this movie), even arranging frequent screenings of it at his estate. Eventually, I guess that cost him his friends, so he became increasingly protective of the movie and would only watch it by himself, reportedly while in the nude -- though given his maniacal dedication to reclusiveness at this point, I'm not sure how anyone knew what he was or was not wearing while watching the movie. I know I watched it in the nude, so I could get a better feel for Howard Hughes' thought process, and I am a better man for it. Thus began his $12 million campaign to remove it entirely from the global marketplace. Anyone who sat in on one of these screenings probably should have recognized his adoration of the Conqueror as Hughes' mental tipping point. In 1974, Paramount Pictures secured the rights to the movie, and John Wayne and his mighty Mongol hordes could once again be unleashed upon the world.

What the world discovered, or rediscovered, is that the movie is sort of cheap looking and kind of dull. It never delivers the majesty or thrills that people expected from an epic. It preoccupies itself with a chemistry-free but laugh-filled romance, and then it ends right as Temujin becomes Khan and starts thinking about conquering the world. In an era of mammoth sets, casts of thousands, and spectacles the likes of which no one had ever witnessed onscreen before (!), The Conqueror just looks sort of, well, half-assed. The fat that American icon John Wayne was cast as Genghis Khan, while initially the main thing that turns this film into a laughing stock, ends up being the only thing that really makes it tolerable, and luckily, Wayne's turn as the Khan is so phenomenally awful that it makes it pretty easy to coast through the movie. I don't think real Asians would get overly upset about a Caucasian being cast as one of the greatest figures in Asian -- and world -- history since the movie that results is so absurd. I would imagine they get as much of a kick out of watching The Duke swagger (actually, though no one wants to admit it, Wayne's trademark walk is actually more of a flamboyant sashay than a swagger) his way through such a mess of a film.

You could really stitch yourself together a fine "history of the Mongol peoples" if you sit down for a day full of nothing but movies about Mongols in which white people play all the Mongolian leads. The peplum films from the 1960s produced several Mongol/Tartar themed adventures. Jack Palance, who starred as Attila the Hun in the 1954 epic The Sign of the Pagan gets to paste on a fake Fu Manchu moustache for 1961's The Mongols, in which he seems determined to teach John Wayne a thing or two about chewing the scenery. Palance, in his trademark style, hisses, spews, bellows, and blusters his way through this mini-epic as Ogatai, the ambitious son of Genghis Khan. Not to be outdone by Susan Hayward's red-haired Tartar princess, The Mongols features blonde Swedish beauty Anita Ekberg as Hulina. The Mongols tells the story of the Great Khan's attempts to forge a peace with the Polish knights with whom he has been warring. This irks his aggressive son Ogatai to no end, and Ogatai embarks on his own campaign or war-making and pillaging despite his father's softening. Lucky for Ogatai, Genghis was just a little ways away from falling off his horse and dying.

The Mongols serves as sort of a prequel to three later peplum adventures (two of them featuring scripts by the same guys who wrote the Mongols), and starting with The Conqueror, then continuing with The Mongols, and finally going all out with the triple punch of Samson and the Seven Miracles of the World, Hercules Against the Mongols, and Hercules Against the Barbarians, you'd get a pretty solid understanding of history. Well, at least history as told by drunken filmmakers. It's fitting, however, that The Conqueror fits in so well with these later Italian productions, because it has much more in common with them than with the contemporary American epics with which it was attempting to compete when it was released. Heck, even some of these peplum films, made for a fraction of the price, contain more spectacle and scope than The Conqueror. And in case you were curious, no. Anita Ekberg and assorted Italian actors are no more convincing in their fake eyelids and Mongol make-up than Hayward and Wayne.

In A.D. 1227, the mighty conqueror Genghis Khan was dead, leaving the bulk of his ever-expanding empire in the hands of his son Ogatai (who I assume is still Jack Palance, even though that movie technically has nothing to do with these -- I just like imaging that Jack Palance is the son of Genghis Khan). His other three sons were left squabble over the scraps and try to one up one another in hopes of hoarding another crumb from the vastly more powerful Ogatai. And that's when Hercules showed up to defend the honor of Poland after seeking wisdom from an oracle in China...

History. Peplum films are, by their very nature, packed to the rim with history - almost all of it wildly inaccurate. Oh sure, it's true that the big bad Khan died in 1227 and left leadership to Ogatai. And it is indeed historical fact that Ogatai's less accomplished brothers spent a lot of time trying to stab one another in the back. Where exactly B.C. hero Hercules fits into the equation is anybody's guess. But there he is, in two separate films mind you, stymieing the Mongolian advance into Europe during the 13th Century -- a feat filmmakers almost could have gotten away with if they'd set the films during the first invasion of Europe during the 4th Century A.D. under the leadership of Attila the Hun (also Jack Palance if we keep stitching all these separate movies together into one fun-and-fact-filled history), during which the horde clashed with Roman legionnaires and a myriad of Europe's own barbarian tribes. One could almost buy Hercules, or at least some muscular guy in a tunic, handing out beatdowns. But we're in the Middle Ages now, well beyond the classical period when one expected demi-gods and centaurs to be mincing about meddling in the affairs of humans.

Not that it's worth quibbling over. If we accept Hercules, or Maciste, or any of these mythological heroes as men so heroic that no single era in time could possibly hope to contain their derring-do, then accepting a guy in out-of-era garb helping out the Poles or popping up in any other epoch becomes less worrisome, if indeed anyone was worried about Hercules showing up in the Middle Ages. We can then turn our minds away from the trivialities of historical particulars and focus our thoughts on more important matters, like how much hell raising the peplum films managed to pack into their history.

The historical hellraiser flavor of sword and sandal films fell into two basic categories - gladiator adventures and "hero liberates the masses" low-budget epics -- both of them more "realistic" than their more fantastical counterparts like Hercules, insofar as you consider a guy hurling around chariots and shaking the ground to cause an earthquake realistic. It's a relative term, after all. These films eschewed the world of gods and basilisks, harpies and magic spells. Although supernaturally strong, the heroes were never presented as anything other than mortal. Their enemies, likewise, were not demons and vampires, but regular men, often with some tenuous basis on actual people from history. Still, even within this subgenre, filmmakers liked to blend things together, resulting in plenty of "gladiators liberate the masses" type movies.

The cheaper films, many of them coming at the tail end of the peplum genre's popularity, when the Italian film industry suffered a crippling blow when several extravagant big-budget costumed epics flopped at the box office -- among them Hollywood co-productions like Cleopatra starring Elizabeth Taylor and Sodom and Gomorrah -- were the gladiator films that drew inspiration, but not necessarily scale, from films like the 1959 epic Ben Hur starring Charlton Heston and the 1960 Stanley Kubrick epic Spartacus with Kirk Douglas. Because of the impact of the major flops, the b-level gladiator films found themselves harnessed with increasingly tiny budgets, though the lack of means to achieve their imagined scope didn't stop many of the films from being action-packed fun and often looking better than the relatively giant-budget The Conqueror. Italian directors mastered reducing the proverbial cast of thousands into a cast of a few dozen shot to look like a cast of thousands, which was more than Dick Powell was able to do. Many of the actors were extras and background characters with few, if any, lines and could thus be cast and recast in a variety of roles to save time and money. Take off that Roman helmet, slap on this mustache, and you're a whole new character. Directors didn't even need to hire professional actors. Since many of the scenes were high on fight scenes and stunts but low on talking and drama, they could flesh out the cast with stuntmen in various roles.

"Hero liberates the masses" films were usually a tad more lavish, though even they could be on the sparse end of detail from time to time. These films compensated for rote plots by transporting the hero to exotic, far-away lands, though they were still lands more or less grounded in reality. Once again, the story was almost always the same: a tyrant brutally oppresses a population, often with some situation involving a forced marriage to a noble princess in order to legitimize his usurping of the throne, until the beefcake hero walks up, usually out of nowhere and completely at random, and joins the struggle against the villains even though he himself has no personal stake in the battle. In the words of Gordon Scott from Samson and the Seven Miracles of the World, in which our loincloth-sporting peplum hero liberates China from Mongol occupation of Kublai Khan, "I am not Chinese, but it doesn't matter anyway. I will always fight against injustice wherever it may be." The hero is motivated purely by a sense of altruism, a desire to oppose villainy and release the masses from the shackles of oppression. For the hero in these movies, the desire to do good and combat totalitarianism is motivation enough. Of course, the films usually threw in a love interest -- most likely the princess - to give the hero that extra push.

Whatever historical accuracy might slip into the peplum films was still nothing more than a backdrop for the muscleman action, and famous names and places were bandied about wit the same disregard for reality as the mythological names had been thrown around without consideration for their actual role in the original stories. Hercules Against the Barbarians, for example, features Genghis Khan (John Wayne, remember) being murdered by his treacherous son, Kublai. In reality, Genghis died from injuries sustained after he fell from his horse, and Kublai was his grandson. But what can you do? Treachery in the Mongol throne room can't be bound by facts, and the Mongols seemed a particularly popular opponent for the hero in the historical hellraiser peplums. And while they may indeed have invaded both China and Eastern Europe, there seems to be a lack of verifiable evidence that their schemes and dreams of conquest were thwarted time and again by a glistening bodybuilder in a loincloth - twice by Mark Forest alone!

Hercules Against the Mongols (1963) picks up the action immediately after the death of Genghis in 1227 and focuses on the backstabbing lesser sons of his who have to deal with Maciste as he comes to the aid of an embattled people, engages in a little Mongolian style wrestling, and swats a lot of people with tree trunks. It can also be seen as an almost legitimate sequel to The Mongols since the same writers -- Alessandro Ferrau and Luciano Martino -- penned both films. We first meet Maciste (yes, despite the title, the hero is Maciste) as he is strolling through 13th century China. In an opening that is pretty much de rigueur for a peplum film, he meets a woman, this time a cute Chinese fortuneteller, who informs him that he has long and difficult journeys ahead of him. Frankly, if Maciste has been trekking for over two thousand years, going from one arduous situation to the next, and he still needs an oracle to tell him that bad times are a-brewin', then he really is kind of dense.

Genghis Khan's sons are busy trying to oppress the masses while, at the same time, secretly backstab each other to get more power. And then along comes Maciste, who I guess walked over from China or wherever he was. It would seem like a long walk, but maybe, you know, being muscular and all, he could do that thing like the Incredible Hulk used to do where he could jump really high and far to cover long distances in a short amount of time. Maciste kicks some Mongolian tail, and then befriends the beleaguered population of white people. The sons of the Khan are annoyed that this beefy Greek has strolled thousands of years into the future and across the largest continent in the world in a matter of days, but they are torn asunder over what to do with him. The obvious answer is "kill him." But going with the obvious answer is why you won't ever rule the world like the Mongols. One of the sons of Genghis, Sayan (played by Caucasian Ken Clark in the usual fake eyelids and wig) , decides it would be better if he tried to be all buddy-buddy with Hercules and get him on his side. After all, no one really ever failed to benefit from having a demigod behind their cause. Plus, you know, they're just two beefy tough guys with a lot to tell each other about protein shakes and the various "ab roller" type machines, which of course, is a subject that causes the mighty Maciste to stand with arms akimbo and laugh heartily. Real men don't use AbFlex. Real men do leg lifts and pull-ups.

So they manage to capture Maciste, or rather, he sort of just walks up to them and gets captured after his tactic of going, "Hey, why not call off the conquest of the world?" doesn't pan out the way he planned. Of course, at this point in the life cycle of the peplum genre, we have a pretty good idea of what a brilliant strategist he was. If it's more complicated than hurling boulders or doing that stunt where a guy jumps at you really high and you just sort of help him arc over you and into his buddies, well then it's probably too complex for Maciste. Why do those guys always jump a foot above their target's head? I mean, even if Maciste didn't lift his arms up and sort of help them on over, they still weren't even close to hitting him.

Sayan puts Maciste is chains but is generally pretty nice to him, hoping that Maciste will join him after the hero learns a little more about traditional Mongol puppet theater and throat singing. Maciste gets to fight in a tournament, because all peplum films must have a tournament. If he wins, he gets to choose either his own freedom or the freedom of a captured European princess, who of course, instantly falls madly in love with Maciste. Sayan's plan was for Maciste to kick ass on the first two evil brothers but then throw the fight for his friendly captor, thus making the others look like dolts while the other one looks all cool and tough. Maciste gets carried away though and just kicks everyone's ass, thereby winning the freedom of the princess but not winning any points with Sayan.

It all results in a lot of spear throwing, hearty laughing a-plenty, and Maciste kicking a lot of Mongol tail and then strutting around heroically. There's plenty of action, and for once, Maciste's foil isn't a sniveling king who uses brains and cunning to thwart the forces of good. Ken Clark as Genghis' son, Sayan, is an imposing figure that looks every inch the match for Mark Forest. Likewise for Renato Rossini and his shaved head (looking sort of like that guy jean-Claude Van Damme fought in Kickboxer). Mark Forest movies, in fact, made a habit of casting their star against equally powerful looking villains rather than following the tried and true path of keeping everyone scrawny in order to make the hero look that much bigger.

Everyone must have had a good time filming Hercules Versus the Mongols, because practically the entire cast, along with director Domenico Paolella, returned for Hercules Against the Barbarians. This film begins more or less where the previous one left off, with the Mongols in retreat and Mark Forest standing victorious over all. Since this isn't an actual sequel, a few things are out of place between the two films. For one, instead of the big shaggy guy being one of the naughty sons of Genghis Khan, he is now Kublai (is it possible that no famous Caucasian has ever played Kublai Khan? I must have just missed the movie). Second, Genghis is still alive and kicking, or at least alive and looking kind of old and gray. Kublai is now the son of Genghis rather than grandson, but that makes sense seeing how those Mongolian warlords were always ambitious and trying to move up in the ranks. Rather than have Genghis just fall off his horse and die, here he becomes the victim of the usual sword and sandal throne room scheming that requires men with beards to grab one another by the shoulder and whisper while lurking in the shadows. But if we ignore the names and pretend that, oh let's say the guy called Kublai is called Ogatai and the guy called Genghis is, I don't know, Steve, then it just about works as a sequel to Hercules Versus the Mongols, even if the history is still dubious.

Ostensibly this film is about the Mongol plot to get revenge on Hercules (Maciste, as usual) by kidnapping his main squeeze, who also just happens to be the princess of the realm, and Maciste's quest to rescue her, perform impressive feats of strength while touring with a troupe of acrobats and magicians, and throw guys across the room. However, much of the film focuses on the machinations within the Mongol court as Kublai and his brother plot to overthrow their father. In case you were getting worried, yes there is indeed a treacherous princess who will be swayed by Maciste's manly charms, and yes there is a midget.

Coming as it did in 1964, Hercules against the Barbarians was a relative latecomer to the peplum game, and the genre had just about run its course. Sets are a bit sparser, though the Mongols manage to drape themselves and their court in lots of fur. At the same time, however, being near the tail end of the parade means the film sports a lot of seasoned players. Mark Forest is really in the swing of things, and while this isn't his best film, he seems to be having fun. The action scenes continue to impress as once again, Forest squares off against opponents more or less his own size. Ken Clark and Renato Rossini both reprise their roles from the previous films, more or less. Technically they're different characters, but since they look, act, and dress the same as they did in Hercules Versus the Mongols, we can just let it slide. Gloria Miland, who stars as the lovely Arias, had already been in peplum such as Atlas Against the Czar, Goliath and the Rebel Slave, Fury of Achilles, and Goliath and the Giants. Hercules Against the Barbarians was her final sword and sandal film (as it would be for many of the cast). She spent the latter half of the 1960s appearing in a variety of spaghetti westerns, including 1967's Hate for Hate, which was directed by Domenico Paolella. Paolella himself turned in a final few peplum films before also making the switch to westerns, spy films, and a brief stint in the sexy nunsploitation arena in the early 1970s.

Of course, the fact that so many people had so much experience with the genre by 1964 also means that Hercules Against the Barbarians can feel more than a tad paint by numbers at times. Most obvious among its many conventional moments and cut corners is the fact that they chose to take the same cast in the same costumes as the production everyone just finished. It's a move almost worthy or Roger Corman, like they wrapped Hercules Versus the Barbarians a few days early and decided to keep everyone around for those last few days under contract and make a new movie. Luckily, paint by numbers can still be fun. While the movie may not offer up much to the viewer in terms of originality or twist, it ably if unspectacularly handles the conventions and delivers on all the expectations. Forest has a natural charisma that makes you want to keep watching even if the events themselves are overly familiar.

Although made before the two Mark Forest films, 1961's Samson and the Seven Miracles of the World takes place after them historically speaking. It also marks the debut sword and sandal mini-epic for Gordon Scott, perhaps the genre's most versatile performer. The action finds our hero Samson, who is of course originally called Maciste, wandering for no good reason through China, where he must join with the rebels to overthrow the right evil Mongols. Once again and as always, Maciste/Samson shows up in the thick of things completely at random. Some Mongolian soldiers are beating on some Chinese peasants, and Maciste simply walks up and starts kicking ass. Where did he come from? How did he get there? Wasn't he in Peru last week, battling the Sons of the Sun? These questions will never be answered with anything more than vague references such as, "I have wandered long and far." Maciste walks the earth forever in search of injustice, and he makes pretty good time.

The Mongolian history as rulers of China was short and far from sweet. Marco Polo, who made his famed journey along the Silk Road with his father and arrived in the court of Kublai Khan during the days of the Yuan Dynasty, documented their one unified time of dominion over China in the West (though he failed to include any accounts of Maciste, which makes his work historically dubious). Marco Polo's account of his years in China is short on details regarding the actual Chinese. Keen to woo allies and trading partners in the West, Kublai kept his visitors steeped in the pageantry of upper echelon court life, so much so that in his entire exhaustive tome on the experience, Marco Polo hardly mentions the ethnic Chinese at all, leaving that particular historical avenue to be explored by Chinese scholars and Samson and the Seven Miracles of the World.

While the Yuan Dynasty may have been short-lived, the role of China's rowdy neighbors to the north as perpetual thorns in the side of the Middle Kingdom stretches for centuries, and that wall they kept working on was only slightly more successful a deterrent to trouble-making than Hadrian's idea to construct a wall to contain those rambunctious Celts that were giving the Romans such a hard time up in the northern reaches of Britain. The later Sung Dynasty of China, dedicated as they were to the pursuit of art and intellectualism and the betterment of the human mind and soul, found their superior intellect no match for Mongolian weaponry. After losing bits and pieces of their country for so long and constantly attempting to control the Mongol hordes through acts of appeasement, the Chinese finally lost the whole enchilada with the sacking of Beijing and establishment of the Yuan Dynasty, the first foreign force to occupy the whole of the country and also the shortest dynasty in Chinese history, lasting only from 1271 to 1368.

Ironically, it was the successful conquest of China that initiated the unraveling of the Mongolian empire thanks in part to the undermining of the Khan's standard operating procedure. The Mongolian approach had always been to slaughter the vanquished en masse, raze their cities, and transform everything into grazing lands for the vast Mongolian herd. You don't become the world' fiercest cavalry without a few horses, after all. Some people take over the world to increase their wealth and tax their base, others their power and sense of security, and still others as a way of obtaining a vast workforce of slaves. The Mongols, on the other hand, saw the world as one big pasture.

China was a different creature, however, than say the steppes of Russia and chunks of Eastern Europe populated by disconnected fiefdoms and tribes. It was too vast, too populous, and though defeated on the field of combat, too crafty to allow itself to suffer such a fate. China couldn't be turned into grazing land, and to run China the Mongols would need the Chinese. As the Chinese official Yeh-lu Ch'u-tsai once told Genghis Khan when captured during one of the many Mongol raids into the country, "You can conquer China on horseback, but you have to dismount to rule her." Yeh-tu thus helped save Peking from the same slice-n-slaughter approach that decimated other cities, though some would also call him a collaborationist and traitor. It was his influence over the Khan, however, that convinced the warrior the Chinese were more valuable if spared, as their role as skilled craftsmen and taxable subjects would be of greater benefit to the Mongolian empire than any kicks they might get out of burning everything down and beheading all the people.

When Kublai completed the conquest of China between 1272-1279 and established the Yuan Dynasty in 1277, he unwittingly set into motion a series of events that would prove to be the undoing of the whole empire. He moved the imperial capital from Karakorum to Peking. His own brother, hungry for power, conspired against him at every turn. Upon Kublai's death in 1295, the expanses of the empire refused to take orders from the new leader in Peking. Khanites in the west near Iran and Turkey, the officials of which had converted to Islam, regarded the Peking Khan as a religious infidel, himself having recently converted to Llamist Buddhism. With an empire so great and no particular religion of their own that they felt like imposing on people, the Mongols were famously cosmopolitan when it came to tolerance of foreign religions. It was simply easier not to give a damn. The adoption of certain "official" religions however, meant that the religious diversity of the empire was starting to work against itself, as one faction refused to be ruled by another of a different religion. In 1368, after an uprising by Chinese peasants who sensed Mongolian power was faltering, the Yuan Dynasty came to an unceremonious and bloody end. Mongols and their collaborators were chased out of the country or executed, and the newly formed Ming Dynasty, much like Warren Harding's campaign for U.S. president in the wake of World War I, promised a return to normalcy. The Mongols were then occupied with stitching together their homeland, giving the world a respite from their lust for territory until another Mongol leader arose, this time named Timor. He would forge a new Mongolian empire as vast as anything seen before, piling up the heads of his enemies in great warning towers, but since he never locked horns with Hercules, we'll leave it up to the history books to tell Timor's story.

This whole era of turmoil serves as the backdrop for Samson and the Seven Miracles of the World starring a primed and fresh off his Tarzan movies Gordon Scott as Samson, a.k.a. Maciste, who has strolled to China in order to help put an end to the oppression. If we use this film as a basis for reality, and I can see no reason why we wouldn't, then the downfall of the Mongolian Empire was actually caused when Samson, after being buried by a dwarf, started punching the ground until he caused an earthquake, burst forth from his tomb, then lead the Chinese in revolt against their cruel masters. And oh yeah, he also rescued a beautiful princess, because that's what he does, and what's the point of overthrowing tyrants if you don't also get to liberate a beautiful princess?

The princess in this case is Eurasian Yoko Tani (an actual Asian???), a familiar face to many fans of European fantasy and spy films from the 1960s. She had been working in film since 1953, primarily in French productions but also with one Japanese movie (Women in Prison, 1956) and the Eastern European sci-fi adventure First Spaceship on Venus (1959) and a couple scattered English language productions on her resume, including a small role in the 1958 version of The Quiet American. Although she'd gotten some sword and sandal-esque experience in France while making a comedic version of Ali Baba and the Forty Thieves, Seven Miracles is her first turn in a true peplum. Her only other sword and sandal credits include 1961's Marco Polo directed by Witch's Curse director Piero Pierotti, and 1962's Ursus and the Tartar Princess directed by Remigo del Grosso, who went on to direct a whole slew of enjoyable spaghetti westerns and spy films during the remainder of the decade. Both films, as you might guess, deal in one way or another with more Mongolians (the Tartars being a particular tribe in Mongoila who endlessly irked and warred with Genghis Khan, getting the guy so mad that he eventually decided to conquer the world). I'[m sure I can fit them into the history of Mongolia as told by Caucasians in fake eyelids that I have managed to stitch together so far, but until I actually get to see those two movies, they'll remain missing links in my shockingly accurate look at Mongolian history.

Tani herself made the transition to Eurospy films and starred in a number of slick mid- to low-budget espionage thrillers, including turns in two British espionage series: the obscure but interesting Man in a Suitcase and the highly acclaimed Patrick McGoohan show Secret Agent. She was active on and off through the decades until her death in 1999 after a bout with cancer.

Also on hand are a slew of peplum regulars. Helene Chanel makes as convincing a Mongol princess as Susan Hayward and Anita Ekberg, but she carries herself with grace and beauty, so it's not worth complaining about. Considering her filmography contains some of the weirdest sword and sandal films ever made, including Witch's Curse and Conquerors of Atlantis, passing herself off as Asian is the least of her stretches.

Eventually, Samson must tackle a careening chariot (a scene later used as a flashback in Witch's Curse) and, after seeking the counsel of a Buddhist monk, perform the seven miracles, some of which have apparently already been performed. It's never really made clear exactly what the miracles are, and I'm not certain even the monk remembers them all correctly. Thus is just sort of rambles on for a spell then says, "And umm, yeah. So the main miracle is to go ring the bell of freedom. If you do that one and, oh say, shake a mountain, then we'll just say all seven miracles have been performed." Samson rings the bell, gets buried alive beneath a mountain by a midget, and then causes an earthquake as he unleashes all his might and fury to break free!

Samson and the Seven Miracles of the World benefits greatly from top-notch action scenes anchored by Gordon Scott, skilled direction by old hand Riccardo Freda (Giants of Thessaly, The Witch's Curse), and beautiful sets that look far more lavish than the budget should allow. The medieval Chinese towns and the mountain temple look thoroughly authentic, or at least as authentic as something you'd find in a Shaw Brothers kungfu film. Of course, there are a few missteps, the most obvious one being that there are apparently very few Asians in China, and there's not much attempt to hide he shortage of Chinese looking actors. A few Asian extras are sprinkled here and there amid a slew of Italians with Fu Manchu mustaches pasted on, which at least makes this more authentically Asian than The Conqueror. Actually, some of the mustaches don't even look like stereotypical Fu Manchu mustaches, leading one to wonder not so much why Maciste is in China, but instead why so many people in China look like Pancho Villa. Gabriele Antonini (last seen as Temujin alongside Jack Palance's Ogatai, though he wasn't the Temujin who became Ghengis Khan) plays our nominal local hero, Cho. Never has a Chinese hero looked so much like a cross between Frankie Avalon and Ray Romano. Someone apparently thought that people might find all these Caucasian looking Chinese to be a bit suspicious, so they threw in a line for Cho where he sort of off-handedly says, "You know, I'm only half Chinese." They didn't even spring for fake eyelids.

There's almost an historical excuse for the film's lack of authentic Asians, however, since the Yuan Dynasty of the Mongolians surrounded itself with foreigners and employed officials from all over their empire. The film seems unconcerned with such trivialities, however, a disregard that is not all that important and is best exemplified by the scenes in which Maciste, towering over everyone else, clad in a loin cloth, and looking huge and Caucasian, "blends in" with the locals.

As enjoyable as it is, and despite some names sounding familiar, I'd not depend entirely on this quintet of films to learn about the historical events depicted within (I think you'll have to see Ursus and the Tartar Prince and Marco Polo starring Yoko Tani before you can be fully informed about history). Whatever the case, you can't really, consider yourself to have in your possession a well-rounded knowledge of the Mongol invasions unless you watch The Conqueror starring John Wayne, The Mongols with Jack Palance, and the trio of peplum Mongol adventures. Get all of these under your belt, and then you can impress your pipe-smoking, spectacle-wearing intellectual friends in their tweed jackets with the suede patches on the elbows. Being the slaves to traditional learning that they are, those pointy-headed Poindexters are probably completely ignorant of the role Samson, Hercules, and Maciste played in liberating China and Eastern Europe from the iron grip of Mongol tyranny.

At this point, one almost starts to wonder if a movie other than Bill and Ted's Excellent Adventure has ever been made that fills the role of Genghis, Ogatai, or Kublai with an Asian. From John Wayne's cowboy Khan to Ken Clark's muscleman antics, from red-headed and blonde Tartar and Mongol princesses, to a lone actual Asian in Yoko Tani, all of these movies are so silly that there's no point in getting in a huff about the casting of Caucasians as Mongols. What's more shocking is that cheap Italian muscleman movies manage to be far more interesting, action-packed, sumptuous, and "epic" than the supposedly epic Howard Hughes-John Wayne fiasco.

And so Genghis waits, sitting on his big-ass fur-covered throne, waiting for a proper movie to be made about his conquests (though I guess Al Leong in Bill and Ted's Excellent Adventure came pretty close). If nothing else, he can breathe a sigh of relief (just as we fans of bad movies mourn) that, although he was once portrayed by John Wayne, it seems the proposed modern epic about his life has died a quiet death before ever entering pre-production. And just as Hughes could imagine no one better than John Wayne to play Genghis Khan, whoever it was that was going to produce the new movie had a similar dedication, a vision of the one man in the world who could finally do the magnificent Khan justice. That man?

Steven Seagal.

Labels: , , , , , , , , ,

posted by Keith at | 6 Comments


Thursday, December 18, 2003

Colossus and the Amazon Queen

1960, Italy. Starring Ed Fury, Rod Taylor, Gianna Maria Canale, Dorian Gray, Alberto Farnese, Ignazio Leone, Adriana Facchetti, Alfredo Varelli, Gino Buzzanca, Marco Tulli, Renato Tagliani, Daniela Rocca, Paola Falchi, Carla Dody, Nadia Bianchi. Directed by Vittorio Sala.

People unfamiliar with genre films have this weird idea that the movies all carry themselves with an air of complete seriousness, that a particular type of film can't possibly be aware of its own clichés and pitfalls until some smarmy mainstream director steps in and makes a spoof. The fact of the matter is that genre films are far more aware of their own short-comings and trappings than most mainstream films (do Meg Ryan or Julia Roberts ever spoof how trite and predictable their own movies are). Genre films - science fiction, horror, sexploitation, action, and so forth - have been self-referential and satirizing themselves since the early days.

The Italian sword and sandal films that were so popular during the first half of the 1960s were no exception. They were pretty light-hearted fare to begin with, despite what some less astute critics might think. No one making a Maciste adventure thought they were recreating Ben Hur. Well, most of them didn't anyway, even if the hyperbole storming across the screen during the trailer claimed it was the biggest epic since God, his son Jesus, and a few friends collaborated on a book. They knew they were making a shallow, somewhat ham-fisted but good-natured and rousing action film that appealed to a matinee audience who didn't demand too much beyond what the films offered. Not everything can be a heavy, soul-searching work of art. Sometimes, you have to take a break from genius and watch a guy in a loin cloth throw a rock at a rubber monster.

Since peplum films were a blend of all sorts of ingredients, including comedy, doing a satire of the genre seems somewhat redundant. What's the point of spoofing something that isn't meant to be all that serious to begin with? Well, redundancy never stopped anyone - especially in film - from doing it anyway. While the peplum comedies are not as plentiful as, say, the peplum horror or peplum sci-fi films, there's still a couple out there that tried to up the yuks while delivering a solid action outing. Maciste against Hercules in the Veil of Woe gave it a try in 1961 with good-natured sport Kirk Morris and a plot about pro wrestling promoters who travel back in time. Unfortunately, the movie stars two of the foulest creatures in the history of cinema, the comic duo (and I use the word "comic" as in "painfully and profoundly unfunny") of Franco and Ciccio. For me, watching one of their movies is akin to inviting Roberto Benigni around to do three hours of improv while he boils your scrotum in a tub of sulfuric acid.

More palatable for the distinct lack of Franco and Ciccio is the peplum spoof Colossus and the Amazon Queen. Instead of a comedy team whose shtick is about as funny as your average Hee-Haw hillbilly comedy act, you get a load of gorgeous women and, for the ladies themselves, Rod Taylor and peplum pretty boy Ed Fury. Like most peplum stars, he was a body builder, but he took beefcake to hear cheesecake levels with lots of saucy "naked haunches" type photos with him being caught up in fishing nets and other goofy scenarios. I always wondered what must have been going on for a naked bodybuilder to get tangled up in someone's fishing net, but then I quickly realize such quandaries are best not dwelled upon for too long, at least in a public forum.

Plus, it only gets more disturbing when Fury shows up in this movie all tangled up in rope. Still fully clothed (well, as fully clothed as anyone can be in one of those little tunics), but still the nightmare surfaces.

Fury brought the same sense of goofiness to a lot of his sword and sandal roles, which include such films as Ursus (1961), Ursus in the Land of Fire (1963), Samson Against the Sheik (1962), Ursus in the Valley of the Lions (1961), and The Mighty Ursus (1961). Obviously, the guy was really into Ursus. But what young man doesn't go through an Ursus phase? It was Fury's somewhat silly approach to the muscleman character that makes some people love him while other can't stand him. Personally, I figure I like some his movies, and I don't like others, so I have no strong feelings toward Ed Fury other than thinking he picked himself a name that is every bit as cool as Alan Steele or Slab Hunkchest.

Born Edmund Holovchik in June of 1928, Fury gave himself the tough sounding name and went on to a successful career as a fitness model during the 1950s. His acting career started on the stage, and he later moved into small roles in films like Athena (alongside Steve Reeves), Abbot and Costello Go To Mars, and Wild Women of Wongo. So, you know, serious stuff. In 1960, he packed his bags and set sail for Italy, where he made his sword and sandal debut in the wild peplum comedy Colossus and the Amazon Queen. It was the first of the peplum comedies out of the gate, and it manages to balance the humor and the action fairly well, without excelling at either one. Certainly there are more exciting sword and sandal adventures out there, and funnier comedies. But it's not a bad blend, and the movie is all the funnier if you are a fan of peplum movies, or at least know enough about them to recognize the movie's attempts to exploit the genre's growing reputation for homoeroticism and rather limited roles for women. Not that it takes a brain surgeon or a trained master of film criticism to recognize homoerotic undertones in films full of naked, sweaty men wrestling with each other and doing that Spartacus "gripping the forearm" handshake.

Many people have analyzed the homoeroticism of the sword and sandal genre then patted themselves on the back for their clever insight and reading of homosexual tendencies boiling just below the surface of the film. Given that many of these films contain greased-up, stripped-down muscleman heroes bent over a table covered in spikes while being whipped mercilessly by some foppish henchman, revealing to people that there may be some homoerotic shades to the films is about as insightful as revealing that Pink Floyd's The Wall is about a guy going insane. Of course, none of the heroes were expressly homosexual. They still lusted heartily after the ladies, even if they also loved a good grappling session with the lads. One can only imagine, then, if instead of "the Masked Avenger" (as in Hercules and the Masked Avenger, a film that combines muscleman heroics with Zorro swashbuckling) Hercules had teamed up with Zorro The Gay Blade.

Since you can't really expect subtlety in the action of a peplum film, you shouldn't expect any subtlety from the comedy or the self-referential jokes. Taken for what it is within the confines of the peplum world, this is a clever film that plays off the gender clichés already emerging in the genre. The ladies of sword and sandal films almost never do anything other than get rescued, swoon, faint, engage in erotic tribal dancing, or make strange proclamations and predictions. The important stuff, like throwing rocks at monsters, plotting dastardly schemes in the throne room, and pushing over columns, is left up to the men. Well, I take that back. Women -- you know, the evil ones with black hair and black hearts -- sometimes get to take part in throne room scheming. In Colossus and the Amazon Queen it's the women who perform tasks like hunting and fighting and belching while the men all run around like a bunch of howling fops. It's also one of the only peplum films to feature a hero who shouts, "Yahoo!" in a high-pitched girlie voice.

It' a ground-breaking story, at least for a sword and sandal film, for this inversion of the sexes if not for the plot (which is pretty much the same plot used in every Amazon exploitation movie). The film decided to have some fun with things by turning everything upside down while also delivering the sexiest -- yet most feminist (as feminist as these movies could be) -- peplum adventure there had been. The city of the Amazons is a subversion of everything people expected from peplum. Effeminate men prance around and swap tips on getting the whites whiter when doing laundry. When the women return from hunting and killing, the men all giggle and run home to engage in arguments with their wives in which the wife complains that the men don't understand the value of a hard day's work while the men whine, "You think cooking and cleaning all day isn't hard work?" Eventually, some marauding pirates threaten to upset the Amazonian society, and the two sexes must unite on equal ground in order to combat this common enemy. Luckily, Ed Fury and Rod Taylor are there to help the dames know their roles. All things considered, I bet the ancient Greeks would have loved it. It's a classic farce (well, maybe not classic), and it would have given everyone a break from The Frogs or that dreary Antigone.

Like I said, that's the plot for just about nine million movies in which a society of strong women dominate a bunch of men. Almost every one of them involves a strapping hero and his men who arrive and upset the balance of things, with the women eventually admitting the equality (or superiority) of the men when they all have to team up and fight some band of brigands. It's a way to have your feminist cake and eat it too. Oh sure, you have your strong females, but they're still drop dead sexy. And sure they boss around the men, but in the end a man has to come to their rescue. That way, the men in the audience don't feel emasculated, and the women can be pleased by a well-placed wink that says the movie's "men to the rescue" finale is just part of the camp appeal. It's the same thing on a far less sleazy level as those rape-revenge movies that relish every nude shot they can get of a woman, then try to pass themselves off as a feminist movie by claiming that since the bulk of the running time involves the wronged woman getting violent revenge, they are somehow sending out a positive message.

Whatever makes them happy. Frankly, people who debate the social merits of They Call Her One-Eye and other such films are wasting a lot of time. For me, gender politics has never been an interesting subject. I don't see the world in terms of gender or sexual orientation, and whether or not someone is male or female, gay or straight, couldn't interest me less. It's the quality of the person that counts, and things like gender don't really seem to be a deciding factor in whether or not someone is an asshole. So as shallow as it may sound, film as a crusade is not nearly as interesting to me as film as art and entertainment. Similarly, I don't think anyone is honestly going to go into Colossus and the Amazon Queen with a big interest in how the film handles the reversal of classical gender roles. That's the kind of crackpot essay a sophomore year film studies student dreams up, or the way academic culture has been going these days, a doctoral candidate who has somehow conned the university into thinking that studying the role of gender in cheap 1960s Italian muscleman adventures is the film studies equivalent of discovering a cure for Parkinson's Disease or inventing the Flowbie.

Honestly, I can't believe some of the crap people get to "study" in college these days, and this coming from someone who obviously enjoys writing about these sorts of films. One university even has a course about the films of Quentin Tarantino. What the hell? I mean, regardless of your opinion of Tarantino's work, the man's only made a couple films. Jess Franco has made something like eleven thousand films, but no one studies his work in college classrooms. And let's be real -- who's worthier of study: the man who gave us Uma Thurman foaming at the mouth and convulsing with a syrynge sticking out of her sternum, or the man who gave us Lina Romay naked one more time (one too many times, actually, since they're still at it even at their rather advanced current age)? Not to pass judgment on anyone, but I think academia needs to re-evaluate its policy of letting the whim of damn near anybody become an entire field of study. I love Godzilla toys and Airstream trailers, but I didn't try to turn it into a major.

So aside from that one goofball film student who is trying to impress someone with his serious, academic reading of movies aimed at subliterate twelve-year-olds, most of us aren't looking to peplum films for any dose of intellectualism or an analysis of gender politics in the time of Plato any more than we look to Hercules Against the Moonmen for tips regarding astronomy. No, what we want to see is hot guys and gals in mini-tunics beating up ugly guys in furs. Harmless fun! And that's what we are going to get.

Part of the clue that this isn't going to be your standard peplum adventure vene if it still includes all the requisite ingredients is the fact that director Vittorio Sala wasn't among the "stable" of regular peplum directors. Not that the stable had fully formed by 1960, but most of the directors who were making peplum films made quite a few before moving on to westerns or spy films once the sword and sandal well dried up. Sala, however, only made the one peplum film, and as an outsider he probably found it easier to lampoon what he saw. Similar effects were achieved when Mario Bava was hired for Hercules in the Haunted World, but while Bava isn't known as a peplum director, he'd at least worked as a cinematographer on sword and sandal films before helming one himself. Sala never had nor ever would have again any experience with the genre, so his is a unique point of view. He also made a couple Funicello-Avalon inspired beach party movies, which helps explain the goofball festive feel surrounding most of what goes on in Colossus and the Amazon Queen. Beach party movies always have at least one bodybuilder character, anyway, so it makes sense that this movie possesses a very strong "beach party" feel.

Granted, this also somewhat negates that whole bit I started out with regarding a genre's ability to spoof itself without some outsider stepping in, but my point is still valid (in my head anyway) since beach movies don't exactly make for a respectable director. Sala was still a genre director, even if it was different genres. Unfortunately, expanding my theory to compensate for this means I have to also cut slack to Wes Craven and his rotten Scream movies. Oh well, it's a theory still in it's embryonic stages. I'll have it better defined by the time I have to present it for my graduate thesis.

Although more than a few fans of peplum films have been put off by Fury's slapstick approach to his heroic roles, within the confines of this movie it works remarkably well. He is a more human, more vulnerable sword and sandal swashbuckler. But everyone is outclassed by what may be the only case of an internationally famous and somewhat respectable actor fulfilling the role of the hero's little buddy. B-movie superstar (with some top notch A-list films to his name) Rod Taylor stars as the womanizing con-artist, Pirro. For the most part, he's quite happy to pretend he's a subservient male while he seduced young, impressionable Amazons behind the back of the ever-watchful queen. Taylor hams it up wonderfully, playing his role with all the hip-swaying subtlety of Robin Williams doing his "gay guy" routine.

Fans know Taylor best for his turns in films like The Time Machine, World Without End, and Alfred Hitchcock's The Birds. Interestingly, those last two films also feature similar themes of gender subversion - World Without End being about a futuristic post-apocalyptic society where the women are all fit and healthy while the men are all sterile old farts, and The Birds being Hitchcock's delightfully twisted absurdist answer to gender-obsessed filmmaking (notice how every time a women does something strong and independent, the birds are there to beat her down or peck out her eyeballs). I don't think Taylor is a crusader for the rights of women as much as he is a fan of roles that allow him to star alongside a cast of cuties in little togas (World Without End, Time Machine, and Colossus and the Amazon Queen all allow him to do so -- someone get me this man's agent!) Just as the presence of Christopher Lee in Hercules in the Haunted World gave that film an air of sophistication above it's contemporaries, Taylor's comical turn here makes the film seem more important that it really is. After all, he's mostly just goofing off and doing that "feminine man" walk where you swing your arms side to side in front of you a lot. I can't really describe the walk, but as I mentioned earlier, if you've ever seen any of the eleven billion times Robin Williams has invoked his gay guy character, you've seen the walk.

The requisite tribal dancing number is one that can only be described as fabulous. I'm guessing with that many dandy lads around, they must have one hell of a Broadway-esque production company going on the island of the Amazons, even if much of it's lost on their female masters, who prefer introspective folk rock about genitals. This particular dance number is possibly the weirdest, goofiest, and funniest of any peplum dance number. Golden men in loin cloths with little dangly bits up front start things off with some spriteful leaping about, after which the chicks sashay onto the floor for a saucy go-go number that culminates in all the scantily clad ladies writhing around on the floor while Rod Taylor reflects on his good fortune. If he has to be a slave, it might as well be a sex slave to women who go-go dance and writhe on the floor.

I won't even get into the guy who looks like a white Sammy Davis Jr. who, upon being chosen as a mate for a couple women, purrs "Y'all is my womens now," with a sassy Southern queen drawl.

So let's face the facts. This isn't a feminist movie, and while it's subversive within the peplum genre, no one is going to get away with an essay on how Colossus and the Amazon Queen was a major step toward advancing the rights of women. More than anything else, the flip-flopping of traditional gender roles gave the makers of the film a chance to show even more sexy women in tiny tunics while also packing in dozens of over-the-top gay man caricatures. No one walks out of Colossus and the Amazon Queen stroking their chin and going, "You know, it really made me think." If you have to come up with any one thing that truly epitomizes this movie, it wouldn't be anything about a bold challenging of genre conventions. It would, instead, be Ed Fury howling "Yahooo!" as he graces the world with a staggering buffalo shot while swinging from the rafters.

While you may be disappointed that this isn't the important arthouse exploration of sexuality you were hoping to get from a movie called Colossus and the Amazon Queen, it delivers the goods in every other way. The action is fast and furious, and Ed Fury handles himself very well in the stunt sequences. Like Gordon Scott (but less serious) or Kirk Morris, Fury is leaner than Steve Reeves or Reg Park, which means he does less strongman type stuff and more flipping and jumping about. No one is going to mistake him for Jackie Chan or Fred Berry, but he moves well and executes the action with panache.

The supporting cast is pretty good. The women are there to kick ass and look good doing it, while the men are there to screech and worry about their hair. The guys playing the pirates who bring the sexes together are there to look hairy and pasty. Things sure must have been simpler back in the days when you could tell a villain simply by seeing if he was pasty-skinned and clad in fur-trimmed duds. One of our favorite peplum/historical hellraiser actresses, the gorgeous Gianna Maria Canale from Hercules, Goliath and the Vampires, and I Vampiri which was co-directed by Mario Bava (with his peplum credit being Hercules in the Haunted World) and Riccardo Freda (whose peplum fim credits include the spectacular Samson and the Seven Miracles of the World and The Witch's Curse).

For those who find the peplum genre a little much to swallow, this may be a good action-packed way to still get a taste of the fun without watching a movie that handles itself with Spartacus-like seriousness. Everything is played for laughs, but it's not played so over-the-top that it becomes shrill and annoying. No Franco and Ciccio here. It's kind of similar in spirit to In Like Flint - it delivers all the goofs on the genre you want, but without disrespecting anything or forgetting that it still needs to be a good genre film. Fury's shtick may have ruined more serious films, but it's right at home here amid this world of dominant female warriors and the men who do their washing.

Labels: , , , ,

posted by Keith at | 0 Comments


Thursday, December 13, 2001

Colossus and the Headhunters

1963, Italy. Starring Kirk Morris, Demeter Bitenc, Laura Brown, Frank Leroy, Alfredo Zammi. Directed by Guido Malatesta.

You just can't keep a good son of Hercules down, and you can't keep a bad actor in the role of the son of Hercules. I think more beefy men have played Maciste than I can even count, although to be honest, it gets to the point where it's pretty hard to tell them apart anyway, and they all become sort of interchangeable. About all you can do is rank them as "bearded" or "smooth as a baby's bottom." Some Maciste's are bulkier than others, but in the end, they're all pretty much one guy.

This time around, Maciste is played by Kirk Morris, who has a long string of sword and sandal credits to his name, including Maciste in Hell, Samson Against the Pirates, Hercules Samson and Ulysses, Devil of the Desert Against the Son of Hercules, and the always puzzling Conquerors of Atlantis in which Hercules leads the Arabs in a laser gun battle against people from Atlantis (you bet you're tight buns we'll be reviewing that one). As far as beefcake goes, he's about par for the course. Not too spectacular to behold, like Reg Park, Steeve Reeves, or Reg Lewis, but certainly not the worst of the bunch. He stole the frizzy hair off Carmichael from Laverne and Shirley! However, since Kirk ain't the biggest man to play Maciste, his sidekicks and supporting cast are scrawny (as usual) so as to make him look bigger. Really, all it does is make everyone else look sickly. Mayhaps if Maciste were a true hero, he would share some of his Joe Weider Ultra Bulk Up 3000 weight gain powder (French vanilla flavored).

The movie opens with scenes from the end of Fire Monster Against the Son of Hercules in which cavemen flee an erupting volcano. This led me to believe that this would be a direct sequel to that film, only with a different actor in the title role. However, no sooner do the cavemen run by than we see them boarding a giant raft, at which time they have magically transformed into Greeks in the standard issue mini-tunic. I guess this is what they mean with that "stress and emergency" model of evolution in which an evolutionary step occurs very rapidly in response to a drastic environmental change. Sort of like if you were dropped out of a plane and could suddenly evolve into a flying person, only these guys, upon leaving their home, are able to evolve into ancient Greeks by the time they hit the water. I'm trying that next time I go to the beach!

Leading the retreat is Maciste, who goes ahead and dispenses with any notion about this being a sequel by spinning a whole new pre-story for us. The civilization of these people was destroyed by the volcano, and now they must set sail for a new home. Since Maciste is a show-off, rather than just sail a few miles away to another city, he has to go all the way across the ocean to a strange new land that may or may not be South America, or possibly New Guinea. Somewhere with headhunters I guess, because eventually he's gonna have to go against them.

Upon arriving in the promised land, Maciste and some pals lead an expedition into the jungle while everyone else gets captured by some very Greek looking natives. Maciste soon learns they are not all that bad as far as jungle folk go, and in fact are the people of a noble king who Maciste has heard of. They are in a pickle because another tribe is bullying them around and trying to force a marriage between the evil leader and the good queen Amoa so they can control the whole territory, whatever territory this may be. I guess it's not really South America because there are a lot of Greeks running around, and I don't think it was a hot spot for Mediterraneans until Colossus and the Amazon Queen and Hercules Versus the Sons of the Sun. Man did these beefcake guys ever get around!

Anyway, Maciste runs into the good natives in his usual way. He's out farting around in the woods when he happens upon a beautiful woman who just happens to be the queen. Man alive this guy can't go ten minutes without randomly meeting beautiful queens and princesses out in remote jungles.

They ask Maciste to help, and although Maciste feels their pain he says he is too busy to help, as he must first help his own lot of people find a new place to live. Maybe he should try, I don't know, Athens or something instead of sailing all over the world. It's only the birthplace of modern civilization and government and all. But hey, what do I know? I'm not a son of Hercules. Well, when the good tribe hears this, they get pissed off, sort of like "Maciste helps everyone in the world, but he won't help us." I guess I'd feel a bit burned too. It's not like he's doing a lot to help his own people, just sort of leading them around at random on the high seas and in remote jungles. Perhaps they'd be better off without him.

Maciste eventually feels pangs of regret for not lending a hand when he could, so he decides to return and help out after all. Well, too late, Mr. Maciste, because the evil tribe has already attacked and slaughtered a bunch of people! I hope you're happy. This is actually a bit of the film that is fairly accurate to the greater Hercules mythos. One of Herc's defining characteristics was that he would often do stupid things and make dumb decisions, then spend a lot of time trying to redeem himself and make up for it. On the one hand, it taught us that Hercules was a bit of a lunkhead; on the other, the fact that he willingly did his penance and took his punishment when he was easily powerful enough not to do it if he didn't wanna, showed that he was genuinely interested in learning to do the right thing.

Like father, like son I suppose. When Maciste returns to find Amoa under more pressure than ever to surrender to the evil king, he decides to lead them in battle. To do this, he must first crusade with his skinny pal Arial to a giant stone fortress, where he discovers, among other things, that Amoa's father is still alive and has been a prisoner all this time. I should also mention, since they are in the title, that the evil king has struck up a bargain with some headhunters, and they serve as his foot soldiers even though it's never really clear exactly what they get out of the deal. But then again, it's not really clear why controlling this rather useless area of land is that important in the first place. I mean one tribe has about fifty people, and the second ain't much bigger. Maciste seems to have about twelve people with him. So I don't really see all the fuss in fighting to create an evil empire of about a hundred people.

Discovering the old man seems a good thing at first, like he's going to pull one of those scathing indictments out of his hat and turn everyone against the evil king, or possibly whip out some Essence Absorbing Stance a la the long-imprisoned Wicked Wu in Swordsman II and start flying all around shooting magic thunder and laughing maniacally. No such luck though. All the guy does is putter on home, see his people being picked on, and promptly he surrenders and gives his blessing to the coerced marriage of his daughter to the evil king. Thanks, pops. Luckily Maciste is locked, cocked, and ready to rock and the only thing he's going to bless is a serious ass whuppin' for the evil-doers. With the help of his own little band of people, Maciste leads the rather small-scale battle against oppression and injustice.

Despite the promising set-up of Italian beefcake ancient heroes clashing with headhunters, Colossus And the Headhunters is a much better surf guitar band name than it is sword and sandal movie. I'm pretty liberal with my assessment of these films, or maybe it's just that I'm easily amused. Whatever the case may be, even on my relatively lax scale, this movie comes in at average. It's certainly not awful, but there are a lot better sword and sandal films to watch before you come to this one. It's Kirk Morris' second best film (Conquerors of Atlantis is his best), but compared to the imagination that went into the Reg Park films, the sheer manliness of the Steeve Reeves films, and the wild monsters and beasties that were littered throughout several other sword and sandal epics, this one seems a tad flat. Like when you get some weight gain powder that smells like it's going to taste really good, but then it's just sort of like drinking clumpy, powdery water.

The problems are sundry. For starters, the main villain is about as imposing as Charles Nelson Reilly. even Sigfried and Roy get a bigger chill out of me than this guy. Everyone can tell it's going to take Maciste about five seconds to beat this guy down. Why do the headhunters even listen to this guy? I mean, it's like in those shitty 1980s horror films were "the town punks" are always led by this incredibly dorky twerp of a juvenile delinquent (usually named Ricky for some reason), like that goofball big hair guy in Zombie Nightmare. I guess those guys can only lead multi-ethnic gangs full of people named "Ratso" and "Skeever" and "Hedgehog." You know, I've run into a few gang leaders in my day, and they were always the scariest guys in the gang, not the littlest guy with the poofiest hair like it is in the movies.

Secondly, Kirk Morris, although a regular fixture in sword and sandal films, is really not my favorite actor. He lacks the imposing physique of Reg Park and Steeve Reeves, and he lacks the goofy charm of guys like Reg Lewis. He's a middle of the road hero, the Millard Fillmore of the beefcake world, being outstanding in no single department but passable in all. These days he could be President of the United States, but as a sword and sandal hero he leaves me a bit unimpressed.

What is lost as a result of these weaknesses is made up for in other areas. Director Guido Malatesta, who directed a slew of sword and sandal films during the 1960s (including the far superior Fire Monster Against the Sun of Hercules), makes up for the lack of charisma on behalf of his main players by throwing a wild script at us full of two-fisted gusto. Give the evidence from this film and Fire Monster, coherence and historical accuracy are not not his strong suits, but for all the utterly baffling scenarios the guy comes up with, he at least makes them entertaining. This is one of the bloodier entries in the Hercules/Maciste film series, though we're not talking Cannibal Ferox here. It was still the early 1960s, and Italian cinema wouldn't plumb the depths of outlandish gore for several more years. I guess it's hard to make a movie about headhunters and not have it be a little bloody. That's why you don't really see too many Disney cartoons or Lifetime original movies about headhunters.

The wild spirit behind the film lifts it a couple notches, making my final judgment on this particular Maciste excursion a positive one, but it's not one of my favorites of the genre. Still, it's worth checking out because it's not every day you get to see a son of Hercules stick it to a bunch of headhunters and their foppish leader.

Labels: , ,

posted by Keith at | 0 Comments


Monday, November 05, 2001

Conquerors of Atlantis

1965, Italy. Starring Luciana Gilli, Piero Lulli, Kirk Morris, Andrea Scotti. Directed by Alfonso Brescia. Available on DVD (Amazon).

Oh man, this one is really going to make your head hurt in the most glorious way. By this point, we've pretty much established that if you are looking for historical accuracy, or even mythological accuracy, the Italian peplum films of the 1960s are not the place to turn, though they are certainly better than relying on Hercules: The Legendary Journeys. But up until now, minus a few minor details like having Greek legends battling prehistoric cavemen or helping 13th century Christians combat the Mongol hordes, the offenses have been relatively minor, and are certainly no different than an ancient Greek playwright inventing his own Hercules stories for the stage. At no point did anyone have Hercules fighting space aliens. Oh wait, they did that in 1983 with Lou Ferigno. Well, then at least they never had anything where Hercules scares little old ladies as he flies by their airplane window en route to modern-day New York. Oh wait, that happened too, didn't it?

Well, if you are thinking to yourself, "Sure all that may be true, but Hercules never fired a laser beam at an army of bronze robots commanded by an evil Ming the Merciless wizard from Atlantis," well brothers and sisters, you are wrong.

Conquerors of Atlantis takes the Hercules myth to its most illogical extremes and clocks in as the most absurd, yet also one of the most entertaining entries into the sword and sandal genre. The film sees a returning Kirk Morris, star of Colossus and the Headhunters, still looking a little too GQ for my tastes, but I'm beginning to soften to the guy. I found him terribly bland in Headhunters, but he's better this time around, probably because he's surrounded by such an outlandish scenario. The director, Alfonso Brescia, would later go on to make a string of science fiction movies in the 1970s, and his predisposition toward that genre is already evident here in what was one of his only sword and sandal films. Rather than rely on the age-old blend of muscles and fantasy, Brescia opts to make use of his position as a resident of the latter half of the 20th century, invoking elements of sci-fi that look like something straight out of an old Flash Gordon serial adventure, complete with subpar special effects.

This time around, Morris is referred to as Hercules, or Heracles rather, but it's all the same beefy guy. As usual, it's doubtful the character was meant to be Hercules in the original version, but since he seems to be the only Greek hero anyone can remember, there you go. The ancient Romans really dug Hercules anyway, even moreso than the Greeks who invented the guy. In Greek stories, Herc is generally a moron who blunders his way through a series of adventures and tragedies caused by his own stupidity and bull-headedness. For the more satirical Greek writers, Hercules became a frequently used comic character, and they reveled in using his idiocy as an example of the foibles of relying solely on might to make right.

When they moved in and took over all the ancient Greek ideas, the Romans were much kinder to ol' Herc, transforming him into a far more respectable and capable hero with a strong sense of justice. He was admired for his strength, and it was used as a tool for victory rather than the source of his folly. Obviously the Hercules of the movies is much closer to the Roman version than the original Greek version, but hell, it was Romans making the movies, so what do you want?

The movie begins with what seems to be a never-ending caravan of horses and camels walking across the desert as the credits roll. Just when you think you've seen the last camel, a couple more will trot by. It's sort of like waiting for a Bruce Springsteen song to end. Just when you think things are winding down and you start to applaud, suddenly he's swinging his arms again and has a whole new verse to get through. Listen to "Dancing in the Dark" if you need an example. I think Adam Sandler even spoofed this in a skit somewhere. Not that I'm all that familiar with the work of Adam Sandler. I did see Shakes the Clown though.

The caravan, which is of course led by a stunningly beautiful princess, discovers Hercules passed out on the beach. A night of Bacchanalian revelry that leaves you waking up on the beach going, "Am I wearing a little leather loincloth?" Lord knows I've had nights like that. Or perhaps we're actually seeing some sort of continuity between Hercules films. After all, if Kirk's last film, Colossus and the Headhunters, we see him setting sail on a little raft to parts unknown. Could it be this opening is actually related to the end of the last film? Well, I fell for that old trick once, coincidentally at the beginning of Colossus and the Headhunters, which seems at first to be directly related to the end of Fire Monster Against the Son of Hercules. A mere fool was I, and like Roger Daltry, I wasn't going to get fooled again.

Sure enough, as soon as Hercules wakes up, he explains that he was leading a ship either to or from the Peloponesian War, and the thing sank. So yet again, Hercules has the good fortune to stumble upon a remote corner of the world where he just happens to meet a gorgeous princess. What is it with this guy? The princess he meets is the daughter of the leader of one of the two big-time groups battling for control of the region, which is mostly arid, sandy desert. She talks about what a cool guy her dad is, which means he has a pretty good chance of being exposed as right evil, and how a band of brigands are giving him a hard time, which means the brigands will probably turn out to be pretty noble after all.

Hercules and the princess part company, but not before he notices she has dropped an earring. Is it a golden earring? Looks like it, and Herc's radar love targets her immediately. Unfortunately, she and her band have disappeared far into the desert. Given that they only left about thirty seconds earlier, I have to assume they are simply squatting behind a dune waiting for Hercules to go away.

He trots off after her and quickly stumbles upon a skirmish between a caravan and some raiders. Using his keen powers of perception, Hercules instantly figures out who is good and who is evil and joins the fray. Hooray! His side wins. The leader, who he discovers is the leader of the aforementioned bandits, greets him in a hearty, manly way. They have a test of strength which literally brings the tent down, and the two of them laugh heartily and roll around with each other in the sand. Sword and sandal movies never did shy away from homoerotic imagery. Hell, how can you when your entire film focuses on a beefy, oiled-up man in a loin cloth wrestling with other men in loin cloths? I mean, through a gay cop mustache and a leather cap on these guys, and you have a Tom of Finland story.

When the bandit king explains that his people are not bandits, and it is the princess's people who are doing all the raiding and oppressing, Hercules decides to get to the bottom of things, or least get to the bottom of the princess. You know, he may be all homoerotic and he may like to wrestle with other men on a plush carpet, but at the end of the day, 'tis the firm buttocks and ample bosom of a curvaceous female that doth light aflame the loins of Hercules. And if she's dressed like a belly dancer, so much the better for all of us. Hercules trades in his loin cloth for a Lawrence of Arabia outfit and bounds across the desert to settle this whole mess. Along the way he stops at the Oasis of Exposition, where a couple grizzled old Arabs tell him a story about strange desert phantoms attacking people, then disappearing into the sands. Even a blockhead like Hercules starts to put two and two together and come up with three, as in there are actually three groups operating in the desert, with the third one being a phantom group no one knows about and is manipulating the attacks to frame the other groups in each other's eyes.

Hmm, a sword and sandal version of the James Bond film? Ahh! But Conquerors of Atlantis came years before You Only Live Twice in which an evil phantom organization with an underground lair attacked both the Russians and the Americans and tried to make it look like Americans were attacking Russians and vice versa. So obviously, the entire Bond franchise was stolen from sword and sandal films. Actually, I think that whole manipulating the superpowers plot has been used about a billion times, but they always fall for it. Suckers.

Sure enough, Hercules shows up at the princess's tent at about the same time weird "weee-ooo-weee" electronic sounds of the future make everyone wonder who's listening to the Forbidden Planet soundtrack. This is, of course, the futuristic sounds of the desert phantoms, who use them for no real reason other than to fuck with everyone. I mean, it's not a death ray. It doesn't really initiate anything, nor is it followed by the echoing "Surface dwellers! We shall crush you!" speech that you'd be expecting. No, they pretty much just have this machine that makes woo-weee-wooo tones, and they use it to mildly annoy their enemies. It sort of like if you attacked your enemy with a copy of Raymond Scott's "Soothing Sounds for Baby, Volume One."

Well, as the fates would have it (and it is "the fates" instead of the singular "fate," as there were a lot more fates back then), the noble leader of the other tribe shows up, everyone sorts out the whole business about the desert phantoms, and they all become friends. This precious moment is interrupted when the princess is kidnapped by the desert phantoms, something that actually once ruined a fairly touching moment in my own life. That's what I like most about Hercules; I can relate to him.

Hercules and his manly pal decide to launch an expedition into the desert's "Forbidden Zone," where they hope to either discover the true nature of the planet of the apes, or simply go kick some desert phantom tail. I'll let you figure out which one. Fans of the genre may be worried about the inability of Hercules to perform his most famous feats of strength, which include boulder hurling and the pushing over of columns. After all, boulders and columns are both hard to come by in the open desert. Luckily, they soon stumble across some ruins, which will give Herc ample opportunity to ply his shtick.

After stumbling around the ruins for a spell, Herc and the Arabic guy fall into a trap door and are immediately held at spearpoint by a squad of beautiful subterranean ladies with blue hair. They also meet a crazy evil wizard who looks like a cross between Ming the Merciless and the dotering old wizard portrayed by Ralph Richardson in Dragonslayer. It's at this point the fashion really kicks into high gear. Gold lame, shiny blue spandex, glittery silver, massive, ornate headdresses, and more mind-altering sparkle, glitter, and sequins than even Sigfried and Roy could handle. Kinda makes you wonder how these guys went unnoticed for so long. I mean, it's like an army of Rip Taylors coming at you. Effective, maybe, but certainly not discreet or subtle.

Herc and his toned but not so toned as to make Herc look smaller pal are led around the underground kingdom revealed to be Atlantis. They are as surprised as I am given that Atlantis supposedly sunk into the ocean hundreds of thousands of years ago. How the hell did it wind up in the middle of the Sahara Desert? Must be some of that continental drift we hear so much about. Almost as surprising as finding Atlantis in the desert is the discovery that the Arab princess has been brainwashed and will become the next queen of Atlantis. Hercules is, of course, heart-broken.

Our two heroes are placed in a prison cell and watched over by a video camera. In one of the most ridiculous bits in the whole film, Hercules devises an ingenious plan to obscure the eye so he and his friend can search for weaknesses in the cell. The plan consists primarily on the Arabic guy standing in front of the camera and talking loudly while Hercules frantically searched for any possible means of escape. Strategies like this might explain why Hercules sunk his ship and ended up here in the first place. I bet when he shoplifts he wears a big overcoat and walks around looking at the ceiling and whistling.

The Mad Wizard then takes our heroes on a sight-seeing tour of his underground kingdom, including showing how they turn dead warriors into scrawny bronze robots with gingerly prances and shiny blue body stockings. Now here's a reaaaalllly long stretch. The bronze men are, for those in the know, a pretty common element in a lot of Hong Kong kungfu films, usually as Shaolin bronzemen who are sort of the last test before a student can become a real bad-ass. Curiously enough, director Alfonso Brescia would direct one of the several rather awful Italian/Hong Kong kungfu co-productions of the 1970s, Supermen Against the Amazons, a kungfu/superhero/spy comedy sequel to 1974's Supermen Against the Orient, which starred kungfu big-wig Lo Lieh. So what we have here are Italians really exploring the proto Shaolin bronzemen.

Sorta. The only difference is that these bronzemen are not undead Shaolin monks, nor are they very good at fighting though several were obviously dancers or professional acrobats at some point. As far as henchmen go, they're pretty fruity looking, but I guess no one can look tough painted gold and wearing a metallic blue spandex body stocking.

The Mad Wizard also shows Hercules his special brain controlling machine, which allows him to control all the bronzemen and the princess. he then goes on to explain how, if the machine was ever destroyed or its rays reversed, all the soldiers, princess, and all the slaves would regain their free will and revolt, so please don't go fiddling with the controls. Yet another graduate of the Bond Villain School of Evil.

The brawn of Hercules and his pal overcome a couple slave girls, who slip everyone a mickey so they can have a night of pleasure with the surface dwellers, promptly proclaiming their eternal love for two men they met mere seconds before. This is another pretty standard thing in a sword and sandal film. Women fall hopelessly in love with the hero in a matter of seconds, even if all he's done is walk across the room. To be fair, the hero is usually a pretty big sap himself, but this is something even more extreme than love at first sight. It's like primitive love.

Unfortunately, the girls seem as good at planning as Hercules himself. After pulling their little stunt, they simply take the heroes back to the regular quarters, and are caught about five minutes later. For loving a man, the Queen of Atlantis kills the two women with the laser or whatever it is. Seems a bit drastic, but then the evil queen in these movies is always pretty casual about murdering her minions. Hercules doesn't care for her attitude and stages an escape during which he manages to unbrainwash (braindirty?) the princess, steal the laser, shoot the queen dead with it, and lead his trio back to the surface for a big fight with the bronze robot men. All in all, this is a pretty damn good fight, with lots of acrobatics, flipping around, and lackey tossing. It's among the more exciting, better choreographed hand-to-hand fight scenes in any of the peplum films.

The Arab guy and the princess escape, and just as Hercules is about to plod after them, out come the sexy female archers. Hercules grabs one of the the robot men as a shield, which is good since the guy is like half the size of Hercules and leaves plenty of wide-open target for the women, who promptly shoot Hercules in the shoulder. In a way, this buffoonery is pretty on target with a lot of the characterization of Hercules in ancient Greek plays. No one ever said he was the brightest bulb in the sign.

Luckily, the women don't seem much brighter than Hercules. They leave him lying there with the idea that they will "pick him up later." Why? I mean, what else do they have to do? Sure enough, Hercules wakes up, grimaces and clutches his shoulder, and then in the next scene, presto! The wound is gone, and Hercules is as strong and healthy as ever. He invades the inner sanctum of the mad wizard guy while the Arabs mount a full frontal assault and battle the bronzemen, who are suddenly a lot harder to beat than they were in the last fight. So Hercules, the strongest man in the world goes after the frail old scientist while the weaker mortals have to fight the well nigh invulnerable army of robotic bronze men. Maybe Herc isn't so dumb after all.

Of course we all know that the righteous will prevail and the evil will be vanquished. You don't go to these movies hoping to see everyone fail. All in all, it's a pretty wild ride with lots of great fights, a fast pace, and a completely insane plot. The set designs and costumes are colorful and outlandish, Kirk Morris does a decent job, and you get lots of heroic Arabs for once instead of treacherous ones. Conquest of Atlantis is definitely the weirdest and most far-out of all the old sword and sandal films, but it's also one of the most energetic and fun. You may not believe what you're seeing, which is all the more reason to make sure you see it.

Labels: , , , ,

posted by Keith at | 0 Comments


Monday, August 13, 2001

Fire Monster vs the Son of Hercules

1963, Italy. Starring Reg Lewis, Andrea Aureli, Birgit Bergen, Fulvia Gasser, Miria Kent, Margaret Lee, Luciano Marin, Nello Pazzafini, Ivan Pengow, Rocco Spataro. Directed by Guido Malatesta.

Ahh, Hercules. Heracles to some of you. The mere name conjure up myriad different mental images. Some of us immediately picture a beefy bearded Mediterranean in a little itty bitty loin cloth. Others might think of the luscious flowing locks of TV's Kevin Sorbo doing kungfu on Aries, the God of War. And still others reach further back into the dusty annals of history and picture a bulked-up unnaturally red-faced man in bikini briefs manhandling Hulk Hogan in the mighty WWF empire of the 1980s.

Yes, Herc is indeed many things to many people, but all of them are strong and have a tendency toward hurling boulders every opportunity they get. Hercules. Just as the name spawns sundry mental images, so too did it spawn many films. So many films in fact, that even Herc himself couldn't be in all of them. Thus, the sons of Hercules launched their film careers with varying degrees of success, roaming the globe in search of adventures to be had, wrongs to righted, women to be wooed, monsters to be wrestled, and of course, boulders to be hurled.

The most successful of these many sons of Hercules, most of whom were probably sons only in that they were spawned by the popularity of Hercules films rather than by his loins in the many ancient Hercules stories of old, was a dapper lad named Maciste. During the glut of Italian muscleman sword and sandals films during the 1960s, Maciste films were second in popularity only to the films of ol' Herc himself, and sometimes it's hard to even tell them apart since Maciste films were often released as Hercules films in America, and Maciste often had his name changed in the dubbing to Hercules, Atlas, Colossus, and one time even Fred. But to be fair, there are probably just as many other guys who had their names changed to Maciste in order to cash in on that big Maciste fad of the 1960s. What? You don't remember the Maciste fad? Oh, you should have been there; it was positively cuckoo. We were all wearing gold loin cloths and hurling boulders. You kids really missed out.

Seriously, this whole Hercules, Maciste, Ulysses, Atlas, Colossus, Fred thing reminds of the Bruce Lee, Bruce Li, Bruce Le debacle that plagued kungfu films throughout the 1970s. But you don't see anyone talking about Hercusploitation. If I recall correctly, someone even had the bright idea of throwing Ulysses, Maciste, and Samson (how the hell did he sneak in there) all into the same movie, sort of like when Universal was hitting the end of their big horror boom and would throw Wolfman, Dracula, and the Mummy all into the same movie.

Reg Lewis, not to be confused with Reg Park who played Hercules in several similar films, stars as Maciste. Reg looks sort of like a beefcake version of Rick Moranis, if you can imagine such a thing. His goofiness makes him likeable, though, and somewhat charismatic, which was actually a rare trait in the Italian sword and sandal films of the era, all of which were bubbling over with brawny heroes who were utterly interchangeable and largely forgettable as performers. Reg Lewis looks like a guy who you would pick on in a bar if you were drunk and feeling boisterous. He'd try to calm you down, try to ignore you, do the ol' "Now, just take it easy, buddy" speech, and finally, he'd simply have to pound you a good one to shut you up. Afterward, he'd probably help you up, dust you off, and buy you a beer.

What makes Reg the coolest of all the Macisteseses is his boss rockabilly ducktail pompadour haircut. He looks as ready to kick your ass with a stand-up bass as he is ready to throw boulders at you. If I was evil, I could make a joke about how he really "rocks." And you know what? I am evil!

The movie actually begins with a tribe of cavemen marching across a field. Despite the fact that the weather seems pretty warm, they are all wearing the requisite furs and big boots. The leader of the cavemen is a rather scrawny guy by caveman standards, but this is a tradition in sword and sandal films. The good guys are always lead by a brave but skinny guy who can't get a damn thing accomplished without the help of Maciste or Hercules, or whatever beefcake Greek hero is helping them. It sort of makes you wonder how these guys got to be leader in the first place, let alone how they managed to bag the sexiest princess in the realm as their wife. I mean, if I use sword and sandal films as my model for reality, and Zeus knows I do, then I had a pretty good chance myself of leading a tribe and wooing a princess. I guess what I'm really missing is a glistening muscular hero as a best friend.

Anyway, Skinny the Troglodyte and his well-groomed cavewoman (damn, I want to start a band called "Skinny the Troglodyte and His Well-Groomed Cavewomen") fiancee are down at the lake for a romantic interlude when, wouldn't you know it, a googly-eyed sea serpent menaces them. Or rather, I guess it's a lake monster. Man alive, don't we all know what this like? I mean, I can't count the number of times I've been down at the lake romancing my cavewoman princess only to have the mood broken by a goddamned sea serpent (and sometimes by a policeman). It's something we've all experienced at some point in our lives.

The caveman sort of stumbles around, brandishing his quaint stone ax and failing to hit a giant sea monster mere feet away from him with his spear. Once again, if this guy can lead a tribe, then I'm a shoo-in. Luckily, must as things seem to be at their worst, up runs the bronze dreamboat Maciste, who promptly hurls a spear into the monster's eye and speaks in a noble, booming voice befitting all beefcake heroes.

I guess now is as good a time as any to address a particular problem with this film. Greek culture is ancient, not quite as ancient as Chinese culture, but it gets pretty far back there. The famous Oracle of Delphi, which plays a prominent role in just about every Greek myth ever, was established way back around 1200 BC, which means sometime between 1200 BC and the rise of the Macedonians under King Phillip II and his son, Alexander the Great, round about 320 BC, Hercules and his many sons did their deeds.

Now, 1200 BC is a long time ago, older even than Strom Thurmond, but even back then certain things had already happened. For instance, the Sumerians and Mesopotamians pretty much got all that reading, writing, and building stuff down. The Chinese were kicking out advanced astronomy, navigation, and other cool stuff. By the time Maciste must have been around, both the East and West had advanced systems of government, architecture, art, literature, music, what have you. Over in the new world, the Aztecs and Incas and Mayans were building big-ass step pyramids and having themselves some of the largest cities of the ancient world. Egyptians were in on the fun as well. Civilization, for the most part, was in high gear. Even the barbarians and nomads were pretty advanced.

And here we have this skinny dude who can't even beat a goofy sea serpent leading his caveman tribe that still thinks fire is magical and doesn't know how to make it. They still use Palaeolithic stone tools and do cave painting. I tell you something, if everyone else is building Parthenons and pyramids and shit, and these guys haven't even figured out fire, I think they need more help than Maciste can provide them. I mean, come on! When did the Bronze Age start? 2000 BC? Get with the times, man! I'm no historian, so maybe there were indeed bunches of no-fire-having caveman tribes around this time, in which case I stand corrected. But still, I don't have any sympathy for a big group of people who managed to miss out on all the advances from the time of the cavemen to the time of the Greek empire.

Of course, you could shake your head in shame that I would complain about historical accuracy in the context of a movie where the son of a Greek demigod fights hydras and sea serpents. You'd be right to do so.

So anyway, Maciste gets rid of the monster but refuses to come down off the craggy cliff where he stand majestically with arms akimbo, sun shining off his muscular build as chiseled as the very rock itself 'pon which he stands. Instead, he throws out some "free as a bird" type line, and I found myself suddenly imaging a sequence in which the loin-cloth wearing Maciste runs over hill and dale of the ancient world while "Freebird" by Lynard Skynard plays. It was disturbingly moving.

To be perfectly honest, I'm a huge fan of the ramblin' loner type of hero, the man who walks the earth with his sandled feet, helping people out along the way, but always walking off into the sunset by himself at the end. There's something melancholy and heroic about that archetype. Whether it's Maciste, Herc himself, Conan, Mad Max, or even Bill Bixby in the Incredible Hulk tv show, one of the closest approximations of a sword and sandal film the modern world ever saw. Every episode, our hero would wander alone into a new town. Sometimes, he'd meet friends, people who accepted him, and always he would encounter injustice, at which time he would have to call upon the green barbarian inside himself to battle the evil. And in the end, because he could just barely keep the beast inside in check, but primarily because it was his fate to walk the earth, he would have to hit the road again, alone, while the sad piano music played. The hero used and discarded. That got me every time. Now imagine Maciste doing that, only with "Freebird." Yeah, you feel the tears swelling up, don't you? I know I do.

No sooner does Maciste bound off into the sunset to seek adventure in the far corners of the globe than the good caveman tribe is attacked by the bad caveman tribe. The bad cavemen kick ass on the good cavemen and steal a lot of their women. What? You expected something different? I mean, come on. The leader of the good cavemen can't even figure fire out. You think he's going to be able to organize a fighting force?

The good cavemen gather around to whine and moan about how they are being picked on by the bad cavemen. There's actually quite a bit of sociology at play in this, though I am the first to admit very few people turn to Son of Hercules movies for their final college thesis. But remember that, however outlandish these movies may be, there is some kernel of historical truth to them. They are, after all, based at least in some part on ancient Greek and Roman stories, and just about everyone knows the Greek playwrights of yore packed tons of politics into their stories. Aside from being the sexiest empire in the history of the world (an historical fact proven by the many short little tunics and togas worn by men and women alike), the Greeks were also among the most politically aware. So it's not surprising that, even if it's unintentional, some degree of political meaning would slip into these sword and sandal epics.

The basic gripe between the tribes is that the nomadic good guys have decided to plant their roots in this valley that the bad cavemen consider part of their turf. After all, they were there first. However, the bad guys live in caves and consider agriculture to be wimp stuff. so the good guys don't see how their living off the land harms the bad guys, who don't even use the land but want to horde it and claim it anyway. Take what you will from that.

Maciste, realizing that these chumps aren't going to survive on their own, comes back to lend a hand. As an afterthought, he gives them the "goofy buncha cavemen" grin and teaches them how to make fire with a couple rocks. The bad gang, meanwhile, acts like a bunch of bikers in a bikersploitation movie. They holler a lot, listen to loud music, and do a lot of that stuff where the hairy main guys are all sitting around with various women lying in their laps or go-go dancing around the hang-out. With the big furs and general behavior, I swear for a minute I thought I was watching the requisite "partyin' scene" from any of two dozen 1960s/1970s biker films. I guess you could trace movie biker evolution back to these cavemen with their elderberry wine, furry vests, and gyrating women. In fact, when you combine the biker-esque appearance of the evil tribe with Maciste's rockabilly haircut, you half expect Maciste to challenge the evil caveman leader to a drag race at sunrise or a game of chicken in suped-up hotrods.

The fabled son of Hercules helps plan an attack on the main caves of the bad tribe, which will help the good guys get back their women and hopefully stop the bad guys from picking on them. Of course, they wouldn't call this movie Fire Monster Against the Son of Hercules if there wasn't a fire monster. So Maciste has to fight not just the surly cavemen, but also a hydra and a couple other monsters. Of course, he is a Hercules at heart, so whenever a monster pops up to menace him (and not to insult Maciste, but he sure is easy to sneak up on if a giant monster can do it, sort of like when Christopher Walken snuck up behind Tanya Roberts in a full-size blimp in the end of A View to a Kill), his initial reaction is to throw a boulder at it. This rarely kills the monster, or even slows it down, but hey, any chance a Hercules gets to throw a boulder can't be passed up.

Maciste also gets to woo the princess of the evil tribe, since she herself isn't evil. And he gets captured, because well, you know. No one ever accused any of these guys of being rocket scientists, although they at least know how to make fire. The bury Maciste up to his neck and throw spears at him, but he's Maciste, so you know he's gonna escape and kick some serious tail.

The finale has the good cavemen and the bad cavemen going at in an all-out war, when all of a sudden a volcano erupts. The hell? What kind of stupid tribe builds their home in a volcano? I mean, near a volcano sure, but inside it? So I guess the volcano is the real fire monster, devouring all those who have committed evil deeds as Maciste and the good cavemen make their escape back into the valley. The scenes of the erupting volcano destroying the evil caveman tribe would be recycled for the beginning of Colossus and the Headhunters, which is especially amusing in the context of that film since the people shown fleeing the volcano are cavemen from this film, but then when the new footage kicks in, they are all wearing traditional ancient Greek tunics and have much shorter hair. But, just as they say at the end of each Conan film, that is another story.

So we are left with the good tribe establishing the roots of civilization some couple thousands of years after everyone else. Hell, not everyone can be the Chinese or the Sumerians. Maciste is, of course, offered a position of power among the tribespeople, but his fate is to walk the earth in search of more battles to be fought and more people to help. He is, like Willie Nelson, like the Hulk, a ramblin' man. So off he goes to write more pages in the book of incredibly inaccurate history.

It's easy to sit back and laugh at sword and sandal films, and certainly some of them deserve such treatment, but they should also be admired for their scope and ambition. They are wild and full of action. Fire Monster Against the Son of Hercules is, above all else, a fun film. Reg Lewis is a likeable hero, and his daring-do and physical prowess is fun to watch. It gives us pretty much everything we could want from a movie about the son of a Greek hero helping out some stupid cavemen who haven't mastered metals, fire, or writing but do have advanced female grooming techniques. It has feats of strength, boulder throwing, a couple silly but imaginative monsters, tribal dancing, torture, violence, action, and men and women in loin cloths. Whether gay/lesbian, straight, bi, or undecided, this sword and sandal extravaganza has something to offer everyone!

If you are the type of person who is interested in expanding your knowledge of these films out beyond the more popular Hercules films of Steve Reeves and Reg Park, then this is a very fun, if not completely silly, place to start. It's too bad Reg Lewis really didn't have much of a career beyond this film. As far as musclemen go, he's one of my favorites. But so far, all I can find to his credit is this movie and some 1967 beach movie called Don't Make Waves starring Sharon Tate and Tony Curtis, in which he probably plays some bodybuilder who kicks sand in the hero's face. He also has a part in the abysmal movie Sextette, which among other things, cast an 80-year-old Mae West in a sexy role. Lewis plays "athlete," one of the many athletes during a scene set in a gym. Too bad they didn't allow him to simply hurl some boulders at the rest of the cast.

Ah well, much like the archetypal wandering hero, this film used Reg Lewis then cast him back into the wasteland. But at least you can catch him here in all his rock throwing, monster fighting glory. About the only thing he doesn't get to do is push over some columns, mainly because the damn cavemen can't even make fire. You think they know a damn thing about Ionic, Doric, and Corinthian columns? But regardless of their lack of architectural know-how, they all combine for one of the most entertaining, ludicrous, action-packed sword and sandal films around. Surprisingly, they would manage to get even sillier in films like Conquerors of Atlantis, in which Hercules helps the Arabs battle the space ray guns of Atlantian invaders.

But what did Conan teach us? That's right...

"But that is another story..."

(Cue barbarian music, or possibly "Freebird")

Labels: ,

posted by Keith at | 0 Comments