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7.1/10
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A greedy Polish mercenary helps a mine worker and a peasant girl lead a revolution against the Mexican Government, all while being pursued by an American rival.A greedy Polish mercenary helps a mine worker and a peasant girl lead a revolution against the Mexican Government, all while being pursued by an American rival.A greedy Polish mercenary helps a mine worker and a peasant girl lead a revolution against the Mexican Government, all while being pursued by an American rival.
Álvaro de Luna
- Ramón
- (as Alvaro De Luna)
José María Aguinaco
- Ramirez
- (uncredited)
Simón Arriaga
- Simón
- (uncredited)
José Canalejas
- Lerkin
- (uncredited)
Juan Cazalilla
- Mayor
- (uncredited)
Remo De Angelis
- Hudo
- (uncredited)
Alejandro de Enciso
- Juan
- (uncredited)
Tito García
- Garcia's Cousin
- (uncredited)
Featured reviews
I recently got hold of the Japanese DVD print via ebay. This is of really high quality and I was amazed that this film is not more widely known or appreciated. What a brilliant film. In many ways it is similar to Companeros and if you liked that wonderful film you will also love this. The story is somewhat far-fetched but is very enjoyable and fast paced in a 'boys own' way. The machine gun makes its familiar appearance. Franco Nero, as always, delivers a superb performance and Jack Palance gives a very good performance as a very unpleasant killer. The music is brilliant and the duel in the bullring is incomparable and is perfectly choreographed to the wonderful music. If you are interested in westerns you have to see this film.
A Spaghetti-Paella Western directed by Sergio Corbucci, one of the most representative directors of the genre, including an international cast and many supporting Spanish family members. This is an entertaining Zapata/Spaghetti Western set in Mexico during the confrontation between Madero and General Huertas, which includes communist revolutionaries and evil bandits. A Pole named Sergei Kowalski (Franco Nero) is a mercenary, working for the highest bidder. While Paco Román (Tony Musante), who is a laborer who works in a silver mine owned by Elías García, rebels against his boss and humiliates him and his two brothers, including Colonel Alfonso García (Eduardo Fajardo). He is soon captured, but his friends save him from the firing squad. Kowalski is ordered to transport silver to a mine, but only finds that the Mexican rebel named Paco has formed a guerrilla group and taken control. Meanwhile, Kowalski makes a deal with Elias and his brother to get their money safely across the border. However, Sergei is hired by Paco and teaches the revolutionary leader how to put his idealistic fervor into practice. They are pursued by Curly (Jack Palance), a gay gunman dressed in white. Fate brought them together, greed made them inseparable, violence made them companions!.
The picture mingles violence, thrills, shootém up, comedy with tongue in cheek and it's fast moving and that's why it's quite amusing. It's a thrilling western with overwhelming and violent shootouts between the protagonists Franco Nero and Tony Musante and the enemies Jack Palance and Eduardo Fajardo. Tony Musante, such as Tomas Milian, puts faces, laughing, crying and overacting, but he plays splendidly. Agreeable intervention of an italian beauty as Giovanna Ralli. Furthermore, here appears usual secondaries from Italian Western as Franco Ressell, Raf Baldassarre, Jose Canalejas, Alvaro De Luna, Simon Arriaga, Lorenzo Robledo, Tito Garcia, and of course Eduardo Fajardo, Corbucci's ordinary. The highlights of the film are the Tony Musante's burying edge neck similarly to Franco Nero's ¨Corbucci's The Professional ¨, the confrontion at the bullfighting square and the Polish wielding a machine gun and shooting though with anachronism because is a modern model, in fact this is a fictional machine gun similar to the one used in Django (1966): Hotchkiss Mle 1914. This film belongs to the numerous group that are set during the Mexican revolution, called ¨Zapata Western¨ , like are the Italians: ¨Leone's Duck you sucker¨, ¨ Corbucci's The professional¨ ,¨ Giulio Petroni's Tepepa¨ and the Americans : ¨Peckinpah's The wild bunch¨, ¨Buzz Kulik's Villa rides ¨, and ¨Richard Brooks' The professionals¨. There are many fine technicians and expert assistants as the cameraman Alejandro Ulloa who makes an excellent photography with barren outdoors, dirty landscapes under a glimmer sun shot on location in haunted town of Cuenca and of course Almeria, Spain. The musician Ennio Morricone composes a classic Spaghetti soundtrack and well conducted by his habitual collaborator Bruno Nicolai. Well produced by Alberto Grimaldi -PEA productions- famous producer of ¨The trilogy of the dollars¨ filmed by Sergio Leone, along with the Spanish priction 'Copercines' . Sergio Corbucci's direction is adequate , he made several classic Italian western : ¨ Django¨, ¨The great silence¨, ¨Hellbenders¨ , ¨The specialist¨ and the ¨Compañeros¨, the latter bears special resemblance to ¨ The mercenary ¨ and along with ¨ ¨What am I doing in middle of the revolution¨ belongs a Corbucci's trilogy about Mexican revolution. Rating : 6,5/10. Good Spaghetti Western.
The picture mingles violence, thrills, shootém up, comedy with tongue in cheek and it's fast moving and that's why it's quite amusing. It's a thrilling western with overwhelming and violent shootouts between the protagonists Franco Nero and Tony Musante and the enemies Jack Palance and Eduardo Fajardo. Tony Musante, such as Tomas Milian, puts faces, laughing, crying and overacting, but he plays splendidly. Agreeable intervention of an italian beauty as Giovanna Ralli. Furthermore, here appears usual secondaries from Italian Western as Franco Ressell, Raf Baldassarre, Jose Canalejas, Alvaro De Luna, Simon Arriaga, Lorenzo Robledo, Tito Garcia, and of course Eduardo Fajardo, Corbucci's ordinary. The highlights of the film are the Tony Musante's burying edge neck similarly to Franco Nero's ¨Corbucci's The Professional ¨, the confrontion at the bullfighting square and the Polish wielding a machine gun and shooting though with anachronism because is a modern model, in fact this is a fictional machine gun similar to the one used in Django (1966): Hotchkiss Mle 1914. This film belongs to the numerous group that are set during the Mexican revolution, called ¨Zapata Western¨ , like are the Italians: ¨Leone's Duck you sucker¨, ¨ Corbucci's The professional¨ ,¨ Giulio Petroni's Tepepa¨ and the Americans : ¨Peckinpah's The wild bunch¨, ¨Buzz Kulik's Villa rides ¨, and ¨Richard Brooks' The professionals¨. There are many fine technicians and expert assistants as the cameraman Alejandro Ulloa who makes an excellent photography with barren outdoors, dirty landscapes under a glimmer sun shot on location in haunted town of Cuenca and of course Almeria, Spain. The musician Ennio Morricone composes a classic Spaghetti soundtrack and well conducted by his habitual collaborator Bruno Nicolai. Well produced by Alberto Grimaldi -PEA productions- famous producer of ¨The trilogy of the dollars¨ filmed by Sergio Leone, along with the Spanish priction 'Copercines' . Sergio Corbucci's direction is adequate , he made several classic Italian western : ¨ Django¨, ¨The great silence¨, ¨Hellbenders¨ , ¨The specialist¨ and the ¨Compañeros¨, the latter bears special resemblance to ¨ The mercenary ¨ and along with ¨ ¨What am I doing in middle of the revolution¨ belongs a Corbucci's trilogy about Mexican revolution. Rating : 6,5/10. Good Spaghetti Western.
The second collaboration of Sergio Corbucci, the Italian Western's most important director besides Sergio Leone, and Franco Nero, one of the genre's greatest actors, after the ingenious "Django" from 1966, "Il Mercenario", a movie set in the time of the Mexican revolution, and therefore late for a Western, is a must-see for every fan of the genre.
Sergei Kowalski (Franco Nero) gets hired by short-tempered revolutionary Paco Roman (Tony Musante), in order to help his squad of unexperienced rebels with their campaign for a free Mexico. While Paco is a crook, but also an idealist, becoming more and more idealistic after his troop is joined by beautiful and idealistic Columba, a woman whose father was a revolutionary , the Polish is a typical anti-hero, witty and cool and somehow sympathetic, but mainly concerned on his own benefit.
The acting is great, specially Franco Nero as the Polish, and Jack Palance's performance as one of the villains. Another villain is played by Eduardo Fajardo, who played the villainous Major Jackson in Django. The score of this movie, composed by Ennio Morricone, is just brilliant (how couldn't it), the cinematography is great as well as the locations. My favorite film by Corbucci is still the incomparably brilliant "Il Grande Silenzio" ("aka. "The Great Silence") of 1968, "Django" of 1966 being my second-favorite due to its immense entertainment- and cult-value. Maybe not quite as brilliant as "Il Grande Silenzio" and not quite as influential as "Django", "Il Mercenario" is nonetheless an exceptional Spaghetti Western with a great sense of humor that I would recommend to everybody, not only genre fans. 9 out of 10!
Sergei Kowalski (Franco Nero) gets hired by short-tempered revolutionary Paco Roman (Tony Musante), in order to help his squad of unexperienced rebels with their campaign for a free Mexico. While Paco is a crook, but also an idealist, becoming more and more idealistic after his troop is joined by beautiful and idealistic Columba, a woman whose father was a revolutionary , the Polish is a typical anti-hero, witty and cool and somehow sympathetic, but mainly concerned on his own benefit.
The acting is great, specially Franco Nero as the Polish, and Jack Palance's performance as one of the villains. Another villain is played by Eduardo Fajardo, who played the villainous Major Jackson in Django. The score of this movie, composed by Ennio Morricone, is just brilliant (how couldn't it), the cinematography is great as well as the locations. My favorite film by Corbucci is still the incomparably brilliant "Il Grande Silenzio" ("aka. "The Great Silence") of 1968, "Django" of 1966 being my second-favorite due to its immense entertainment- and cult-value. Maybe not quite as brilliant as "Il Grande Silenzio" and not quite as influential as "Django", "Il Mercenario" is nonetheless an exceptional Spaghetti Western with a great sense of humor that I would recommend to everybody, not only genre fans. 9 out of 10!
Franco Nero is as cool as he's ever been, in the role of the title character. Sergei Kowalski is a Polish scoundrel who tends to only look out for number one - and make a couple of dollars in the process. He makes the acquaintance of Paco Roman (Tony Musante), a peasant tired of mistreatment who assumed the role of revolutionary. They are subsequently united in many episodic adventures as they scheme to rob a bank of silver to fund Pacos' movement. Working against them are characters such as Alfonso Garcia (Eduardo Fajardo), and Curly (Jack Palance), a rival who turns bitter and vengeful.
"The Mercenary" is considered by some to be one of the finest Spaghetti Westerns ever made, and this viewer would have to agree. It manages the neat trick of combining action, comedy, and drama, without ever getting too maudlin, silly, or gory. Both Musante and the fiery, incredibly sexy Giovanna Ralli supply the necessary humanity in a story often hinging on the differences between the Pollack and the freedom fighter. Paco has found a cause bigger than his own personal comfort, but Kowalski remains mostly concerned with financial gain. Special guest star Palance is very funny; sporting an appropriately curly, ridiculous looking wig, he's good for a number of chuckles. He also bares his backside for the camera, in a comic dose of nudity. Nero is priceless as a man who always uses what's available to strikes matches for his cigarettes, and who continues "billing" Musante for services during a gun battle.
The fact that this story uses the Mexican revolution as a backdrop allows for some political / social commentary, as it did for various other Italian oaters that did the same thing. It also boasts typically wonderful Ennio Morricone music and splendid widescreen photography by Alejandro Ulloa.
A fine film with subtly poignant moments and a resolution that will leave a smile on ones' face.
Eight out of 10.
"The Mercenary" is considered by some to be one of the finest Spaghetti Westerns ever made, and this viewer would have to agree. It manages the neat trick of combining action, comedy, and drama, without ever getting too maudlin, silly, or gory. Both Musante and the fiery, incredibly sexy Giovanna Ralli supply the necessary humanity in a story often hinging on the differences between the Pollack and the freedom fighter. Paco has found a cause bigger than his own personal comfort, but Kowalski remains mostly concerned with financial gain. Special guest star Palance is very funny; sporting an appropriately curly, ridiculous looking wig, he's good for a number of chuckles. He also bares his backside for the camera, in a comic dose of nudity. Nero is priceless as a man who always uses what's available to strikes matches for his cigarettes, and who continues "billing" Musante for services during a gun battle.
The fact that this story uses the Mexican revolution as a backdrop allows for some political / social commentary, as it did for various other Italian oaters that did the same thing. It also boasts typically wonderful Ennio Morricone music and splendid widescreen photography by Alejandro Ulloa.
A fine film with subtly poignant moments and a resolution that will leave a smile on ones' face.
Eight out of 10.
Revolution, repercussion, robbery, shootout, greed, treachery, cynicism, retribution, all comes together in this fervently crafted, stylishly filmed and unabashedly violent spaghetti western flavoured with Mexican spices. The Mercenary is fun, amusing & thrilling from start to finish, and is laden with political underlinings that provide more depth & richness to its plot & characters.
Directed by Sergio Corbucci (Django & The Great Silence), while there is a playful, adventurous vibe to how the events unfold and are presented, the film doesn't hold back on brutality when the occasion calls for it. Corbucci's direction isn't as precise as in aforementioned classics but he nonetheless exhibits sufficient control over all aspects to give us another satisfying extravaganza.
Franco Nero plays the eponymous opportunist with charisma & pizzazz as he aids an idealistic peasant, finely acted by Tony Musante, in leading a rebellion in return for monetary gains. The on-n-off collaboration & fluid rapport they share with each other is what keeps the drama flowing. And then there is Ennio Morricone's terrific score that effortlessly elevates certain moments to new heights.
Overall, The Mercenary is a fascinating combination of skilful direction, solid acting & spirited soundtrack, and is easily amongst the finest examples of zapata western. A spicy mix of action, humour & violence that delivers the desired goods and also serves as a critique of Hollywood's handling of Mexican revolutions, Corbucci's film is engaging & entertaining in equal measure and comes thoroughly recommended.
Directed by Sergio Corbucci (Django & The Great Silence), while there is a playful, adventurous vibe to how the events unfold and are presented, the film doesn't hold back on brutality when the occasion calls for it. Corbucci's direction isn't as precise as in aforementioned classics but he nonetheless exhibits sufficient control over all aspects to give us another satisfying extravaganza.
Franco Nero plays the eponymous opportunist with charisma & pizzazz as he aids an idealistic peasant, finely acted by Tony Musante, in leading a rebellion in return for monetary gains. The on-n-off collaboration & fluid rapport they share with each other is what keeps the drama flowing. And then there is Ennio Morricone's terrific score that effortlessly elevates certain moments to new heights.
Overall, The Mercenary is a fascinating combination of skilful direction, solid acting & spirited soundtrack, and is easily amongst the finest examples of zapata western. A spicy mix of action, humour & violence that delivers the desired goods and also serves as a critique of Hollywood's handling of Mexican revolutions, Corbucci's film is engaging & entertaining in equal measure and comes thoroughly recommended.
Did you know
- TriviaDuring filming, the crew caught sight of what appeared to be a UFO. They filmed it and sent photos to NASA, who were impressed with the findings, but nothing further came of the discovery.
- GoofsSergei Kowalski uses a Spanish Astra 400 pistol. The pistol was not introduced until 1921, after the Mexican Revolution.
- Quotes
[last lines, after Kowalski has saved Paco from a surprise attack from Colonel Garcia]
Kowalski aka the Pole: Good luck, Paco! Keep dreaming... but with your eyes open!
- ConnectionsFeatured in Car ils sont sans pitié (2006)
- How long is The Mercenary?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Release date
- Countries of origin
- Languages
- Also known as
- El mercenario
- Filming locations
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Gross US & Canada
- $25,000
- Runtime
- 1h 50m(110 min)
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 2.35 : 1
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