“The Magnificent Seven” reimagined “Seven Samurai” in
a western setting and formed a team including Yul Brynner, Steve McQueen, and
Charles Bronson. The movie was enough of a hit that it become one of Hollywood’s
first movies to have a series of sequels, with Brynner returning for the rightly
titled “Return of The Magnificent Seven” in 1966. “Guns of the Magnificent
Seven” continued the franchise in 1969 with George Kennedy playing Brynner’s
character Chris – despite the two actors looking nothing alike. Cotter
mentioned, “The Magnificent Seven Ride closed out the series in 1972, while a
TV series arrived in 1998 starring Michael Biehn (Aliens) and Ron Perlman that
ran for two seasons.”
“The Magnificent Seven” remake starring Denzel
Washington and Ethan Hawke was released in 2016, but it was modestly grossed,
making a sequel unlikely. Lee Van Cleef plays Chris for “The Magnificent Seven
Ride,” with his performance and the movie, generally, having a much darker
tone. The movie starts with Chris having become a marshal and happily married
to his wife, Arrila, played by Mariette Hartley. This is one reason he refuses
an old friend Jim’s, played by Ralph Waite, request for help with defending a
Mexican town from bandits, with the odds being clearly against them. Arrila is
later kidnapped by a gang of teenagers after they rob a bank, who also damage
Chris.
Cotter said, “Chris recovers after a few days to give
chase, with The Magnificent Seven Ride firmly establishing its dark tone from
the off. He discovers Arrila was raped and murdered, and guns down two of the
robbers in cold blood after a curt interrogation.” He chases Donovan the
leader, played by Darrell Larson, which brings him to the Mexican border town
his friend Jim is trying to protect. Wanting vengeance, he again refuses to
help, and the next time he comes back to the village he finds it was attacked
by bandits, with all the men dead and the women were beaten and raped. Chris
finally decides to help after finding the bodies of Jim and Donavan, so he hires
five hardened prisoners (Luke Askew, James B. Sikking, Pedro Armendáriz Jr.,
William Lucking, and Ed Lauter) and his biographer Noah (Michael Callan) to
take the fight to the bandits in an epic finale.
Cotter mentioned, “The Magnificent Seven Ride is much
bleaker and dour than the previous movies. The first three entries still had
high bodycounts, but their tones were more hopeful and humorous. The final
movie, on the other hand, is harsh and unforgiving, and while this sets it
apart from the other Magnificent Seven movies, its also not nearly as fun.” Lee
Van Cleef’s Chris also feels very removed from the previous movies, but he’s
still a charismatic person.
This may not be as good as the other sequels, but I
still don’t think it would hurt if you checked this out on Tubi. See it for
yourself and see how you feel. Judge for yourself if you like this film or not.
How is the 2016 remake? We will be looking at that
next week in the finale of “The Magnificent Seven Month.”






