The Magnificent Seven
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Description
Even though John Sturges is one of the most underrated directors of all time, remaking Seven Samurai could have turned out to be a big mistake if it failed. Instead, The Magnificent Seven is fun, cool and exciting...and it has a layer of sadness too. Sadness and desperation have been unintentional themes in our movies this month, actually. Still, it's hard not to make your western cool when you've got names like Yul Brynner, Steve McQueen, James Coburn and Charles Bronson in the cast. Who's your favourite of the Seven? What's your favourite broad gesture by a member of the cast? We discussed those things and we discussed how Mag Seven is revered now, but wasn't the blockbuster that it seems like it should have been when it came out. Perhaps the straightforward "good guy vs bad guy" western was a dying genre in 1960, even though this is similar to the greatest horse-and-gun movies in that it has more complications and angles than it seems at first. So go on location down in Mexico and do the right thing for a bunch of farmers who are just trying to avoid being killed by a bandit's henchman as we present a crackerjack episode here in Have You Ever Seen #551. We like to shout-out our sponsor, Sparkplug Coffee. Use our "HYES" promo code and you'll get a one-time 20% discount. Go to "sparkplug.coffee/hyes". Drop us a tweet-ex or two. We're @moviefiend51 and @bevellisellis. Also, feel free to email us ([email protected]). And check out our YouTube page (@hyesellis). You'll get our episodes in full there. Please rate, review, comment, subscribe and follow all our talky ventures.
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