Review: Sabata
Lee Van Cleef is the title character, who is investigating a bank robbery in a small Texas town. The bank was heavily guarded by Army soldiers, all of whom were gunned down. Sabata finds and kills the robbers and returns the money. What Sabata doesn’t yet realise is that the robbery was actually orchestrated by corrupt town officials like the effete governor Stengel (Franco Ressel). They’re not happy with this, and put up a reward for anyone willing to kill the man. William Berger plays a smirking banjo player whose instrument hides a deadly surprise, and whose allegiance is largely to himself. Ignazio Spalla plays the town drunk, essentially a chatty, chubby counterpart to the lithe, monosyllabic Sabata. One of Lee Van Cleef’s better spaghetti westerns, this 1969 film from director Gianfranco Parolini and co-writer Renato Izzo is pretty damn cool, just like its star. Cool from moment one, Van Cleef was truly versatile, able to play either side of the fence with ease and mach...