BARQUERO 1970
Lee Van Cleef (Travis), Warren Oates (Remy), Forrest Tucker (Mountain Phil), Kerwin Mathews (Marquette), Mariette Hartley (Anna), Marie Gomez (Nola), Armando Silvestre (Sawyer), John Davis Chandler (Fair)
Directed by Gordon Douglas
The Short Version: It's a Fistful of Sweat featuring an unusually oiled up Lee Van Cleef as a pipe-smoking ferryman butting heads with Warren Oates essaying a rousingly sadistic, pot-smoking outlaw. Massacring an entire town, Oates wants to cross the river to Mexico before the army arrives. Van Cleef is the title boatman who refuses to cooperate. Highly machoistic, both Van Cleef and Oates take turns gobbling up the scenery while Forrest Tucker, as an ant-eating, pseudo demented mountain man steals a few of his own before the two leads complete their celluloid mastication.
Jake Remy and his dirty band of sadists rob a town of its money and 360 repeater rifles to start a revolution in Mexico. Killing everybody in the process, the only thing between them and the border is a river. Wishing to cross over before the Army catches up with them, Remy doesn't count on Travis, the bargeman. He refuses to give them passage to the other side, setting into motion a war of wills that builds to a showdown between the two men.
Jake Remy and his dirty band of sadists rob a town of its money and 360 repeater rifles to start a revolution in Mexico. Killing everybody in the process, the only thing between them and the border is a river. Wishing to cross over before the Army catches up with them, Remy doesn't count on Travis, the bargeman. He refuses to give them passage to the other side, setting into motion a war of wills that builds to a showdown between the two men.
Beginning and ending with a bang, the middle portion is centered more on the psychological warfare of the two lead combatants and their interplay with the supporting cast.
At one point, Remy becomes so enraged at "That damn bargeman", he wastes his bullets by firing them into the water--the source of his problems, as well as the vessel through which his enemy consistently shows him up. Based on these two men alone, regardless of how haphazard the script is in handling them, attitude keeps their characters afloat. Western fans are in for a treat.
Kerwin Mathews, late of THE SEVENTH VOYAGE OF SINBAD (1958) and THE 3 WORLDS OF GULLIVER (1960), and JACK THE GIANT KILLER (1962), is almost unrecognizable as Frenchman, Marquette. Remy's closest partner, he's the sane conscious that (barely) holds the man together. Without Marquette, Remy likely wouldn't have lasted as long as he has. We see how the two met in a vague flashback during one of Remy's pot sessions.
Of all the R rated westerns from this time period (late 60s-early 70s), BARQUERO is one that is conspicuous in its Italian roots. The name alone sounds like it would fit right in with the Django's, the Cjamango's, and the Garringo's. Further, Dominic Frontiere's score has its American beats, but at times shows its heart lies in Italy. One of the cues will be recognizable to kung fu movie fans, as it was reworked in a number of Hong Kong fist and kick films.
Douglas helmed some fine westerns such as the dusty, muddy, road oater RIO CONCHOS (1964) and the character heavy CHUKA (1967); but is probably best known for the SciFi classic THEM! (1954) about mankind threatened by giant ants. Among his other credits include spy flick IN LIKE FLINT (1967), the obscure SciFi-Adventure SKULLDUGGERY (1970), and black action favorite SLAUGHTER'S BIG RIP-OFF (1973).
It doesn't ride with the best westerns, but it's not for a lack of trying. BARQUERO stands out for the grimacing, macho posturing of Lee Van Cleef and Warren Oates; and for its watery setting and dynamite opening and closing sequences. Oozing with machismo and drenched in sweat, fans of Van Cleef's Italian six-shooter cinema should see him in one of his few Stateside western lead roles.
This review is representative of the Kino Classics blu-ray. Extras and Specs: 1080p 1.85:1 anamorphic widescreen; original trailer. running tim: 1:49:23 (box states 115 minutes).