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:32:03
The death-rattle song from The Alamo.
:32:07
Leone wanted to use the theme
from The Alamo and from Rio Bravo,

:32:11
which was the same theme,
but they discovered it wasn't a folk tune,

:32:15
it was written by Dmitri Tiomkin
in the 1950s, and was in copyright.

:32:19
So they made this adaptation.
:32:21
And here's the Baxter clan,
waiting to visit the Rojo clan.

:32:25
Is this peace plan
worth anything, or isn't it?

:32:32
Consuelo Baxter, the Madonna
who runs the Baxter clan, effectively,

:32:37
because her husband isn't strong,
is played by Margarita Lozano,

:32:41
a Spanish actor who had made
her name in Luis Buñuel's film, Viridiana.

:32:46
And Leone was very fond of Buñuel's
work, so he cast her as Consuelo Baxter.

:32:54
Some of the shots which are made
day-for-night in this film don't work well.

:32:59
Some work, where you have torches
and it's obvious that Massimo Dallamano,

:33:03
the director of photography,
filmed at night.

:33:07
But some are done with filters, and it
shows what a low-budget movie this was.

:33:12
This is the second sequence
which has nothing to do with Yojimbo.

:33:15
The scene in the cemetery, this subplot
:33:18
of taking the bodies of the massacred
soldiers from the Río Bravo canyon,

:33:23
putting them into a cemetery
and pretending they survived.

:33:26
This was the second of Leone's inventions
:33:29
which wasn't based
on the Kurosawa original.

:33:32
Inevitably, it's with coffins,
crosses, cemeteries,

:33:35
the iconography of death, with
which he appears to be obsessed.

:33:39
A lot of graveyards
appear in Leone's Westerns.


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