1970 film
The Deserter (Italian: La Spina Dorsale Del Diavolo), also known as The S.O.B.s and The Devil's Backbone is a 1970 Italian-Yugoslav American international co-production Western film produced by Dino De Laurentiis. It was directed by Burt Kennedy and written by Clair Huffaker.
Scripted during the Vietnam War in the style of The Dirty Dozen (1967) with a party of professional or misfit soldiers going into an enemy sanctuary, it was designed as a vehicle for Yugoslavian theater and film matinee idol Bekim Fehmiu. The film featured an ensemble cast of well-known American actors.[1] Noted as the boy in Shane (1953), actor Brandon deWilde appears in his last Western film before his death in 1972.[2][3]
Plot
A United States Army cavalry unit returns from a two-week patrol to find the inhabitants of a Christian mission near its home fort have been killed by Apache Indians. The savagely tortured wife of the patrol's leader, Captain Victor Kaleb, is still alive after being skinned alive. Kaleb has to kill her to end her pain.
Kaleb believes part of the fault lies with the passive fort commander, Major Wade Brown, and loudly criticizes him in front of his command. Brown responds by asking whether it was the Apaches or him who shot his wife. Kaleb responds by shooting Major Brown in the leg and arm, then deserts. He wages a private one-man war of revenge against the Apache.
Two years later, General Miles arrives at the fort with criticism of now Colonel Brown's military command and an offer of pardon for Kaleb. Scouts Natchai and Tattinger, old friends of Kaleb, are sent out to entice him (and his pet wolf-dog) back to the fort. With a bit of trickery they succeed.
General Miles tells Kaleb that Apaches led by Chief Mangus Durango have gathered in Mexico, intending to cross the border and attack at any time. As the Army is prohibited from entering Mexico, the general, over Brown's objections, promises Kaleb amnesty in exchange for leading a select band of soldiers in plain clothes across the border to wipe out the Apache stronghold known as La Spina Dorsale Del Diavolo (the Devil's Backbone).
In a reversal of The Dirty Dozen, Kaleb has his pick of the soldiers at the fort for his mission. Those willing to go include dynamite expert and Army chaplain Reynolds, knife-fighting expert and military prisoner Corporal Jackson, Gatling gun expert Captain Robinson, grizzled Quartermaster Sergeant Schmidt and young Lieutenant Ferguson. A blustery Englishman, Crawford, sent by the British Army to study frontier tactics is selected by Kaleb's wolf dog. Kaleb also selects the post's surgeon Dr. Robinson. Most of the men hate Kaleb, especially Trooper O'Toole.
Kaleb trains them in the desert for the mission. It is severe, and results in a death of one man. The band also encounters Apaches, whom they kill. On their return to the fort, Major Brown reveals that, despite the general's amnesty offer, he intends to arrest Kaleb for having shot him. In response the general orders Brown to accompany Kaleb on the mission. Natchai and Tattinger go along as well.
They infiltrate the Apache stronghold by bringing their mounts and equipment up hazardous cliffs. After a successful smaller attack on part of the Apaches, due to one man's sense of morality the rest of the Apaches are alerted, leading to a fierce battle. Kaleb's elite force wins, in large part due to the advantages proffered by dynamite and machine gun fire. The survivors return to the fort, where an embarrassed General Miles explains that he has been ordered to arrest Kaleb. Colonel Brown suggests the resolution: they will all say Kaleb was killed in action. Kaleb rides away.
Cast
Production
Bekim Fehmiu who had starred as Ulysses in Dino De Laurentiis' 1968 television miniseries L'Odissea had recently starred in Paramount's The Adventurers (1970).
The film was shot largely on location in Italy, Spain and Yugoslavia. Many exterior scenes were filmed at the Fort Bowie set built in the Province of Almería, Spain, where the desert landscape and climate that characterizes part of the province have made it a much utilized setting for Western films, among those A Fistful of Dollars (1964), The Good, the Bad and the Ugly (1966) and later 800 Bullets (2002). This same set was also used in the films Blindman (1971) with Ringo Starr and A Reason to Live, a Reason to Die (1972).[4]
Reception
In his investigation of narrative structures in Spaghetti Western films, Fridlund writes that The Deserter mainly follows the "Professional Plot", as described by Will Wright in his analysis of American Westerns, that is the cooperation of a group of professionals fulfilling a mission.[5][6]
Video
The Deserter was originally released on VHS in the United States by Paramount Home Entertainment, on September 9, 1992. Paramount has not released the film as a DVD in North American Region 1. It was available at one time in DVD Region 0 by East West Entertainment LLC in standard non-widescreen VHS conversion and Region 4 by Reel Corporation, Australia.
Soundtrack
The score for The Deserter had music composed and conducted by Piero Piccioni. Originally a practicing lawyer securing movie rights for Italian film distributors, he was eventually credited with scoring over 300 films. Piccioni was influenced in his use of jazz by 20th century classical composers and American cinematography and this is apparent in The Deserter soundtrack.[2]
Piccioni's score was released on CD in Italy in 1997 on the Legend label, as CD 28, 14-tracks under the title Piero Piccioni: La Spina Dorsale Del Diavolo. Recent discovery of the stereo master tapes of the original session, with an extra 25 minutes of music, is featured on the limited 1500 unit special edition Legend CD 32 DLX, released July, 2010, as a 26-track 74:34 CD.[2]
See also
References
External links