This week on “Picture Perfect,” get your Lee Van Cleef on. We’ll have an hour of distinctive scores from spaghetti westerns – westerns originally released in Italy, starring multinational casts, heavily dubbed in post-production.
Spaghetti westerns frequently turned the conventions of American westerns on their head. At any rate, the morality of the conventional western was made much murkier, with antiheroes cast as protagonists, usually motivated by greed and revenge. Especially greed.
As with the American film industry, only more so, when the Italians found something that worked, they went into overdrive, churning out literally dozens of knock-offs and imitations a year, until a given genre had run its financially lucrative course.
To this end, over 600 European westerns were produced between 1960 and 1980. The most influential of these were those directed by Sergio Leone, especially those of the so-called “Dollars” Trilogy – “A Fistful of Dollars,” “For a Few Dollars More,” and “The Good, the Bad and the Ugly.”
These, of course, featured then-“rising star” Clint Eastwood. His co-star in the second and third films was Lee Van Cleef, who in American westerns like “High Noon” and “The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance” had bit parts as one of the villain’s henchmen, but became an international superstar as the spaghetti western’s most reliable – and bankable – heavy.
We’ll sample from new releases of music from the “Dollars” Trilogy, composed by Ennio Morricone, and the “Sabata” Trilogy (which also starred Van Cleef), composed by Marcello Giombini.
Beat the heat with ultra-cool music from spaghetti westerns this week, on “Picture Perfect,” this Friday evening at 6, with a repeat Saturday morning at 6; or listen to it later as a webcast at http://www.wwfm.org.
