Works crafted by film masters

Clay 2022-04-21 09:01:17

Many people say it is lengthy, because modern people are adapting more and more quickly, and they can no longer calm down and experience the shock of Sergio Leone's epic movies. When I first watched "Once Upon a Time in America," I couldn't stand the director's rhythm, and I got used to it.
What makes me applaud the most is the appearance of Shane. This scene is so well designed. The location is the inn, with the heroine and the coachman as the subjective lens. After a burst of gunfire, the inn door floated into the dust, and then Xia En entered the door, and the music sounded, shocking and powerful. Xia En shocked everyone in the station, and then with the harmonica playing, Xia En and the hero's rivalry also paved the way for the whole play. After Xia En left the inn, the inn boss went on to chat up the heroine, who was very individual.

View more about Once Upon a Time in the West reviews

Extended Reading
  • Adell 2021-10-20 19:02:09

    When American Westerns in the 1950s and 1960s were gradually declining, it created the miracle of "Italian Westerns" and to a certain extent revitalized the "Westerns", which Andre Bazin called "born at the same time as movies." Type piece".

  • Wilfred 2021-10-20 19:02:10

    There are two kinds of movies that can leave me speechless, one is a terribly plain movie, and the other is just like this movie...

Once Upon a Time in the West quotes

  • Cheyenne: By the way, you know anything about a man going around playing the harmonica? He's somebody you'd remember. Instead of talking, he plays. And when he better play, he talks.

  • Cheyenne: Listen, Harmonica, a town built around a railroad - mm mm mm mmm - you could make a fortune, huh? Hundreds of thousands of dollars. Hey, more than that. Thousands of thousands.

    Harmonica: They call them "millions."

    Cheyenne: "Millions." Hm.