"1960 Charles Bronson Mag 7 Scene" and Two Others on the Mag 7 DVD
There are three deleted scenes on the "Magnificent Seven 2016" DVD:
ONE: The most interesting deleted scene is given to Manuel Garcia-Rulfo, the Mexican in the 7, who is given Charles Bronson's speech from the original in which he spanks and tells off a boy who calls his farmer father a coward. Rulfo yells, as Bronson once did(playing a HALF Mexican, half Irishman in the original): "He took on the responsibility of raising a family...it crushes him like a stone on his chest, and he didn't have to do it...THIS is bravery! I will never have this kind of courage." (This is paraphrased and more from Bronson's speech that Garcia-Rulfo's speech in the remake.)
It turns out that this scene is the most direct borrow from the original film and probably -- had to go. Because the new guy Rulfo (who I liked very much on his own for his charisma) just can't sell the speech like Bronson -- with his oddly sweet and lisping voice for such a muscleman badass -- did.
TWO: Vincent D'Onofrio was the bad guy in "Jurassic World" versus Chris Pratt, but I think the actors are pals, and Chris got Vince his charming role in the 7 as "the big bear-like guy with the high voice who is deeply religious but kills savagely." Well, Vince and Chris here do a scene together which has the charms of two old friends talking(even as the characters barely know each other.) The crux of the scene is that Pratt's character is NOT religious as Vince's character IS, but they agree to disagree. Pratt's key line: "You think God's here?" Vince's retort: "I think God sent US." Denzel Washington is a very religious man in real life, and likes to insert these things in his movies.)
THREE: A scene for Ethan Hawke's haunted, drunken but quite funny PTSD Civil War sharpshooter to -- play the piano and sing a song while a hooker looks on and collapses from drink. Its a funny scene and a showcase for the usually very serious Hawke but...easy to cut.