Guns for Hire: The Making of 'The Magnificent Seven' (TV Movie 2000) Poster

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8/10
Influences
TBJCSKCNRRQTreviews16 November 2013
This is the only documentary on the DVD of The Magnificent Seven, and is, indeed, a making of, on said movie. It consists of interviews(new and older) with surviving(R.I.P.) cast(and their relatives) and crew(as well as some within the business who were inspired by it), film clips, behind the scenes stills and narration. We are taken from pre- to post-production in 44 minutes(45 if you count the end credits).

Covered is how this was the end of the Western, settling some very Kurosawa-esque conflicting accounts of who's on (board) first, legal problems, a Mexican censor(!), Wallach's "adoption" into the bandit gang, the ensemble's rivalry, and of course the lasting impact it made.

This is well-paced, keeping it moving, and everyone it cuts to has something to say. More than delivering cold facts(many of them in the Trivia section on here), this gives you a tenable feeling of what the off-camera relationships were like, why it meant so much to several big names in Hollywood to be in or watch.

There is some disturbing content in this. I recommend this to any fan of the picture and/or anyone involved in creating it. 8/10
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Must see for all fans
bob the moo21 July 2002
Made 40 years after the film, this documentary uses interviews with some of the cast and the team that made the film, along with some famous fans, to repiece the history of the making of this film.

Too many `making of' documentaries are little more than featurettes to fill 20 minutes of TV or as poor DVD add ons. Many have the most tenuous links with the original makers and cast and offer little except second hand stories and observations. However this film sees many of the cast return (barring death) and plenty of the writers, producers etc. The story is told from many points of view and follows the casting through the shoot to the release.

The film had plenty of nuggets for me. From how people were cast and the legal fights over the film at pre-production stage through to how the cast got on. Most of it is very honest and we're told of how everyone wanted to steal the show from Brynner – I'd never noticed how McQueen would always be doing something (waving his hat or playing with something) to try and get attention in any shot! This has plenty of nuggets but also nice observations and stories from cast and crew.

I'm glad all the remaining cast did this as it adds interest to this film. The justification for having both Chazz Palminteri and John Carpenter comment is questionable – but both have brief and insightful comments to make.

Overall this is a welcome companion to the film. It isn't just an exercise in back slapping and plenty of stories emerge that only serve to enrich the film's history.
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9/10
The farmers and the gunmen should be friends 2
charlytully9 June 2009
Warning: Spoilers
Compared to the dreck of which many "Making of's" consist, the 47-minute version of GUNS FOR HIRE included on the MGM Special Edition MAGNIFICENT SEVEN d.v.d. release stands head and shoulders above most. It features new interviews of five of the six lead actors alive 40 years after the feature was filmed, plus a new interview with the lead actress, plus portions of an archival interview with Yul Brynner (who died in 1985), plus new interviews with the 1960 wives of both Brynner and Steve McQueen (who died in 1980), plus new interviews with assistant director Robert Relyea, associate producer Lou Morheim, executive producer Walter Mirisch, script doctor Walter Bernstein, and Oscar-nominated composer Elmer Bernstein. Only Charles Bronson is largely overlooked in this behind-the-scenes expose. Other minor quibbles include narrator Bob Benecke labeling MAGNIFICENT SEVEN as the second most ubiquitous movie on American television without providing 1)a source for this "fact," 2)what time period is alluded to, and 3)which film tops M7. However, GUNS FOR HIRE includes a half dozen industry talking heads NOT directly involved in M7, as well as a generous and aptly placed number of clips from the feature. GUNS is fairly seamlessly edited together, has tons of interesting trivia, and does a great job of placing M7 in its appropriate historical niche then and now.
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essential viewing for fans...
Chevington10 September 2001
A fascinating documentary made 40 years after the film.It is essential viewing for fans and anybody interested in american westerns. By far its best feature is the up to date interviews with the surviving members of the cast, many of whom have been out of the public eye for several years (Eli Wallach, Horst Buchholz, Robert Vaughn, Brad Dexter, James Coburn and Rosenda Monteros appear) along with composer Elmer Bernstein, executive-producer Walter Mirisch, associate producer Lou Morheim and assistant director Robert Relyea. The documentary includes archive footage of the film itself and footage of Yul Brynner and director John Sturges. Fans of the picture, directors John Carpenter and Lawrence Kasdan contribute their thoughts as to why "The Magnificent Seven" is such an enduring film. If I had to criticise this valuable document I would have preferred a longer running time, hired a different narrator and included some archive footage of Steve McQueen. Charles Bronson curiously does not appear in the documentary, but these are small criticisms. Paul Kerr and Louis Heaton have done the public a service with this film.
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