Once Upon a Time in the West Movie Review
Once Upon a Time in the West Review
"Once Upon a Time in the West" Overview

Rating: PG-13
1968
Cast and Crew
Director : Sergio LeoneProducer : Bino Cicogna
Screenwiter : Sergio Donati,Sergio Leone
Starring : Henry Fonda,Claudia Cardinale,Jason Robards,Charles Bronson,Gabriele Ferzetti
Long on looks and short on sense, Sergio Leone's celebrated spaghetti western
Once Upon a Time in the West is a remarkable achievement of cinematography but
comes across today as a more muddled story than ever.
Conceived and roughed together by Italian directors Dario Argento, Bernardo
Bertolucci, and Leone, the guts of West are some of the least likely of his
films. The story concerns a woman (Claudia Cardinale, who spends the entire
movie clenching her teeth) whose husband and family are murdered, leaving her
with a valuable plot of land. This land has the eye of one Frank (Henry Fonda
in his biggest villain role ever), and he's determined to be rid of the woman
in order to get it. A half-Mexican named Cheyenne (Jason Robards) ends up
accused of the murders, and a nameless bounty hunter (sound familiar?) who's
known due to his harmonica playing by the name Harmonica (Charles Bronson)
inserts himself into the mix. The film culminates with Harmonica turning in
Cheyenne for the reward money, then using that money to outbid Frank at the
public auction of the land... and then of course there's a showdown to be had.
Set aside the idea of Fonda playing a villain and Robards playing a Mexican --
the biggest huh? in the film is that a brutal killer will do anything in his
power to get his hands on some real estate. It ain't quite a fistful of dollars
that we're dealing with.
Bronson is good but hardly Eastwood-caliber as the quiet man with an agenda all
his own (and in fact Eastwood was originally desired for the part), but it's
still one of the greatest film roles of his career. Watching Fonda play the bad
guy -- and he's more than just the man in black, he's literally covered in what
looks like tar for the entire picture -- is a little too weird to work for the
nearly three hours of the film. We never quite get into his character, and
Robards is written too thinly to ever make much of an impact.
Rather, what really makes West a minor classic next to some of Leone's bigger
and better flicks is its masterful use of ultra-widescreen cinematography and
the absolutely glorious setups Leone manages to come up with. He cuts from a
majestic scene of the desert to a closeup of Bronson to a tensely-paced gun
battle to the invariable shot of Cardinale's teeth. When West is jumping, it's
impossible to turn away. But when it's trying to coax another hour out of its
threadbare and implausible plot, the eyes begin to wander. Or roll.
Aka C'era una volta il West.
Reviewer: Christopher Null



