The Magnificent Seven

Synopsis
Given the reins of a Seven Samurai remake, John Sturges turned out his own modern Western classic with The Magnificent Seven, a tale that re-imagines Akira Kurosawa’s hired-swordsman masterpiece as a saga of guns-for-hire cowboys employed to defend a poor Mexican farming town from Eli Wallach’s ruthless bandit. Sturges’ direction is subtly evocative throughout, using a variety of low-angled medium shots to accentuate the nobility of his heroes, led by no-nonsense Yul Brynner, and including laid-back Steve McQueen and quietly gallant Charles Bronson and James Coburn. The Magnificent Seven marries multi-character drama and gunfight thrills to rousing effect, all while respectfully attuning itself to its source material’s way-of-the-samurai codes of honor. That element is best expressed through Brynner’s belief-evoked early on, when he risks his life to bury a Native American with the rest of his Caucasian scoundrel mates-that a man is defined not by race or class, but by his actions.- A.V. Club
Year Released
1960
Running Time
128 minutes
Date Released
May 8, 2001
Publisher
MGM
Country
United States
URL
Chronology
Region
Subject
Rating
0
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