Welcome to theBad.net Lee Van Cleef Blog! Here you will find information, photos, videos, and some of my opinions of the badman himself.
Many thanks to the wonderful fans of theBad.net for their contributions and continued enthusiasm!
Saturday, July 25, 2020
Saturday, July 18, 2020
VHS Flashback - Beyond the Law
Before streaming, blu-ray, and DVD, most LVC films were only available on home video cassette tapes, usually VHS (but also Betamax). Many of us discovered these films for the first time in these formats (usually cropped and edited).
Often times due to rights issues, these films were given new titles (some similar to the original, some not). Often the cover image of LVC was not from the actual film!
Here is a look back at the old VHS LVC video covers for Beyond the Law!
Often times due to rights issues, these films were given new titles (some similar to the original, some not). Often the cover image of LVC was not from the actual film!
Here is a look back at the old VHS LVC video covers for Beyond the Law!
Labels:
Beyond the Law,
VHS
Monday, July 6, 2020
Remembering Ennio Morricone
Of course Morricone's filmography does not end there. Over the past six decades, Morricone has composed music for over 500 film and television projects. Nominated for multiple Academy Awards, Morricone finally received his well deserved recognition in 2007 with an honorary Academy Award, as well as an Academy Award for his score to The Hateful Eight in 2016.
Below are a few of my favorite Morricone cues from his Spaghetti Western career.
"The Ecstasy of Gold" - The Good, The Bad, and The Ugly
Second to the main title of the same film, this is one of Morricone's most famous pieces. This classic drives the scene of Tuco searching Sad Hill for the grave of Arch Stanton. Even 50 years after it's composition this piece is played nightly at the Fountains of the Bellagio in Las Vegas, as well as the start of all Metallica concerts!
"l'Arena (The Arena)" - The Mercenary
The highlight of Sergio Corbucci's The Mercenary for me was the duel between Jack Palance and Tony Musante commanded by Franco Nero. Palance owns the scene, but it is Morricone's score that elevates it to the level of greatness that exceeds the rest of the film. Quentin Tarantino would seem to agree as he used this piece in Kill Bill.
"Morton" - Once Upon a Time in The West
While the above two cuts are a few of Morricone's more boisterous efforts (sopranos!, trumpets! whistling!), it is often times his quieter themes that are most effective. This simple track for the railroad tycoon villain, Mr. Morton, in Leone's masterpiece, Once Upon a Time in The West, makes us feel empathy for an otherwise despicable character, as he is slowly dying from tuberculosis while trying to reach the Pacific Ocean for the first time.
Of course Morricone scored four great LVC films; For a Few Dollars More; The Good, The Bad, and The Ugly; The Big Gundown; and Death Rides a Horse.
The Maestro may be gone, but his music will live on forever!
Labels:
commentary by Aaron,
obituaries
Saturday, July 4, 2020
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