What Am I Doing In The Middle Of The Revolution... (99% DIRECT)
Critics often describe the film as a "misfire" compared to Corbucci's masterpieces like The Great Silence . While it boasts large-scale action sequences, some find the humor forced and the pacing tedious. However, for fans of the genre, it remains an interesting artifact of the era when the Spaghetti Western began to parody itself.
What Am I Doing in the Middle of a Revolution? (1972) - IMDb What Am I Doing in the Middle of the Revolution...
Released in 1972, this film serves as the final installment of Corbucci's "Mexican Revolution" trilogy, following The Mercenary (1968) and Compañeros (1970). It is a satirical "Zapata Western" that blends political commentary with slapstick comedy. Critics often describe the film as a "misfire"
The phrase "" (Italian: Che c'entriamo noi con la rivoluzione? ) primarily refers to a 1972 Spaghetti Western directed by Sergio Corbucci . What Am I Doing in the Middle of a Revolution
The story follows two Italians—an ambitious but untalented theater actor, Guido Guidi (Vittorio Gassman), and a priest, Don Albino (Paolo Villaggio)—who find themselves accidentally swept up in the chaos of the Mexican Revolution.
Caught between the Federales and the Revolutionaries , the duo must use their wits—and often impersonations—to survive a conflict they don't fully understand.