The Magnificent Seven

The Magnificent Seven

 

John Sturges’ The Mag­nif­i­cent Seven is Hollywood’s answer to Akira Kurosawa’s hugely pop­u­lar Seven Samu­rai (read The Dork Report review). It suf­fers in com­par­i­son, espe­cially if, like this Dork Reporter, one watches them in suc­ces­sion. The remake is quaint, chaste, and dated in ways the fairly frank orig­i­nal isn’t. To put it another way, Seven Samu­rai is a period piece of its 16th Cen­tury set­ting, while The Mag­nif­i­cent Seven is a period piece both of its 19th Cen­tury set­ting and its 1960 production.

A remake was inevitable con­sid­er­ing the dizzy­ing cir­cle of influ­ence. Kuro­sawa was a fan of the Hol­ly­wood west­ern and espe­cially of direc­tor John Ford, all of which directly informed Seven Samu­rai. Hollywood’s trans­po­si­tion of the story to the Amer­i­can West for The Mag­nif­i­cent Seven was fairly straight­for­ward. Its great suc­cess led to three motion pic­ture sequels, a tele­vi­sion series, and is to be remade again in 2009.

The orig­i­nal epony­mous seven samu­rai were actu­ally ronin, mas­ter­less mer­ce­nar­ies akin to the West­ern out­law: morally ambiva­lent drifters, killers with a per­sonal code of honor. The West­ern genre is usu­ally about out­laws, for the sim­ple rea­son that they’re more dra­mat­i­cally inter­est­ing than reg­u­lar plain folk. In both ver­sions of 3:10 to Yuma (1957 and 2007), for exam­ple, the vil­lain Ben Wade (Glen Ford and Rus­sell Crowe) is a far more appeal­ing and seduc­tive char­ac­ter than the good guy Dan Evans (Can Heflin and Chris­t­ian Bale). An excep­tion to the rule is the clas­sic High Noon, in which Gary Cooper plays an hon­est law­man who pre­vails under extreme duress. The biggest clue the mag­nif­i­cent seven are not clas­sic good guys: Yul Bryn­ner appro­pri­ately sports his trade­mark black hat. Upping the badass quo­tient and testos­terone lev­els are no less than Steve McQueen (here get­ting to drive a real mus­tang on screen), Charles Bron­son, and the very lanky James Coburn.

The Magnificent SevenThe meet­ing of the Badass Soci­ety is adjourned

The basic sce­nario is sim­i­lar: seven Amer­i­can gun­slingers accept a pit­tance in order to defend a Mex­i­can vil­lage besieged by ban­dits. But the many alter­ations beyond this all reflect some very “Hol­ly­wood” think­ing. In the orig­i­nal, it is enough for the samu­rai that there be an injus­tice they are capa­ble of address­ing. But in a Hol­ly­wood film, there must be indi­vid­ual moti­va­tions, which inter­est­ingly have the side effect of ren­der­ing some char­ac­ters less heroic. Harry Luck (Brad Dex­ter) is con­vinced Chris (Bryn­ner) has an ulte­rior motive, such as pil­fer­ing a non-existent gold mine. The dandy bounty hunter Lee (Robert Vaughn) is also along for self­ish rea­sons; he’s on the lam for an unspec­i­fied trans­gres­sion, and needs to dis­ap­pear for a while.

The orig­i­nal Seven Samu­rai is actu­ally tech­ni­cally com­prised of only five actual samu­rai and two pre­tenders. Kikuchiyo (Toshiro Mifune) is a peas­ant pos­ing as a samu­rai, and Kat­sushiro (Isao Kimura) is an earnestly roman­tic young boy seek­ing samu­rai train­ing and adven­ture. Per­haps to econ­o­mize the story, The Mag­nif­i­cent Seven com­bines these two char­ac­ters into Chico (Horst Buch­holz), a for­mer farmer that wor­ships the out­laws and attaches him­self to them in order to become one.

So that leaves Chris, Bernardo (Bron­son), and Vin (McQueen). In this remake’s best sleight-of-hand, we’re in the dark as to their moti­va­tions until near the very end. None of them are young men, and what dri­ves them turns out to be the fan­tasy of set­tling down into an agri­cul­tural lifestyle. The gruff Bernardo befriends a batch of scrappy kids, becom­ing a kind of pro­tec­tive older brother if not a father fig­ure. Chris and Vin seal their friend­ship with the mutual con­fes­sion that they both han­ker for a sim­pler life (a sort of admis­sion very dif­fi­cult for two very macho men).

The Magnificent SevenGo ahead and make our day

But many poor changes out­weigh these afore­men­tioned inter­est­ing ones. Being a prod­uct of Hol­ly­wood, it’s actu­ally less vio­lent, pro­fane, and sexy than the orig­i­nal Japan­ese film. The Mex­i­can vil­lagers are wise and saintly, com­pared to the more real­is­ti­cally flawed farm­ers in Seven Samu­rai. The threat of sex­ual vio­lence is white­washed away; the ban­dits are not inter­ested in the Mex­i­can women. We see too much of the vil­lains, and the chief ban­dit Calvera (Eli Wal­lach) is prac­ti­cally a fea­tured character.

But just as I was begin­ning to dis­miss the remake as infe­rior to the orig­i­nal in every way, and of his­tor­i­cal inter­est only, the movie dark­ens and becomes inter­est­ing again. The Mex­i­can vil­lagers, like their ancient Japan­ese coun­ter­parts, do reveal a dark side after all. Despite their ini­tial suc­cess in beat­ing back the ban­dits with the out­laws’ help, they have a cri­sis of faith and betray the out­laws in order to return to the com­fort zone of their par­a­sitic rela­tion­ship with the bandits.

In the old west, an out­law may very well find a home in a fron­tier town where no one knows his past deeds (a core theme of the HBO series Dead­wood and the sit­u­a­tion in which Clint Eastwood’s The Unfor­given opens). But in ancient feu­dal Japan’s caste sys­tem, a ronin could never take a step down and live among farm­ers. This also proves to be the case in The Mag­nif­i­cent Seven: Chris and Vin mosey on out of town and Chico stays behind, reject­ing his pre­ten­sions to being a rebel out­law, and revert­ing to his des­tined life as a farmer.


Buy the DVD from Ama­zon and kick back a few pen­nies to The Dork Report.