Sentences with phrase «spaghetti western feel»

Add in the admittedly precious conceit of overlaying the trailer with a spaghetti western feel, and I'm charmed and totally on board.
Francesco De Masi's score does nothing to hide his Italian background and occasionally gives the film a spaghetti western feel (some have noticed a striking similarity between De Masi's work here and Ennio Morricone's Once Upon a Time in the West music).

Not exact matches

The soundtrack for Django Unchained makes use of music from a number of spaghetti westerns in a mix with a few original songs and a splendid mash - up featuring James Brown and 2Pac but everything flows together and genuinely feels of a piece.
From characters like Wonder Woman and fake Gandalf to western spaghetti spoofs and Star Wars references, it sometimes feels a bit chaotic, but it is still weirdly engaging and entertaining.
There are ways that this story could have reached beyond spaghetti western to find real comedy and pathos; somehow it feels flat, constrained and stuck.
The graphics are very clean, the landscapes are fantastic (particularly at sunrise / sunset), a part of you feels like you're back in a classic Spaghetti Western when you play this, it's very authentic looking.
Inspired by the Spaghetti Westerns and celebrating the Western genre with an interesting twist, Good for Nothing follows an odd romance and the resulting emotional confusion of an outlaw who reluctantly develops strong feelings for a woman he has kidnapped.
It really submerges the player in the spaghetti - western feel.
For example, Spike Lee said of Django Unchained that slavery was «not a Spaghetti Western» and he wouldn't «disrespect his ancestors» by seeing the film; Denzel Washington had a long feud with Tarantino over what he also felt were the director's racists sensibilities.
However, once you get past the fact that Ted Post, who directed Eastwood in the spaghetti Western wanna - be Hang Em High, has chosen to mostly ignore the first film's visual appearance, it's easy to enjoy Magnum Force as a straight - forward action vehicle, with a tongue - in - cheek premise of the dirtiest cop on the force coming to terms with his own feelings as far as seeing known criminals get away with murder.
At times the film has a Coen Brothers or Wes Anderson feel, while at various other moments it recalls the Keystone Cops, Chocolat, a spaghetti western and a spoof of... well it's difficult to say whether it's a spoof or homage to numerous genres.
It may shock many that I was never a John Wayne fan (an actor I felt always played every part, the same way), but loved the classic films of Audie Murphy, Clint Eastwood's spaghetti - western series and of course THE MAGINIFCENT SEVEN.
A ruminative study in character and environment, writer - director Jared Moshé's debut feature, Dead Man's Burden, feels closer in spirit to Kelly Reichardt's Meek's Cutoff than Quentin Tarantino's flashy, namedropping spaghetti - western pastiche Django Unchained, even when Moshé goes out of his way to frame a doorway shot in overt homage to The Searchers, or include a rendition of John Ford's favorite hymn, «Shall We Gather at the River?»
In fact, the whole film feels like one big stand - off as each of the characters continuously suss one another out before it eventually culminates in true Tarantino fashion.With the opening landscapes and the poundingly effective score by Ennio Morricone you could be fooled into thinking that Quentin is out to emulate the classic spaghetti westerns of Sergio Leone but this is really where the comparison ends.
The graphics are very clean, the landscapes are fantastic (particularly at sunrise / sunset), a part of you feels like you're back in a classic Spaghetti Western when you play this, it's very authentic looking.
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