Allegri becchini… arriva Trinità
Movie | |
---|---|
Original title | Allegri becchini… arriva Trinità |
Country of production | Italy |
original language | Italian |
Publishing year | 1971 |
length | 85 minutes |
Rod | |
Director |
Ferdinando Merighi (as Fred Lyon Morris ) |
script | Ferdinando Merighi |
production |
Giulio Giuseppe Negri Gino Turini (as John Turner ) |
music | Marcello Gigante |
camera |
Pasquale Fanetti Giorgio Montagnani |
cut |
Luigi Batzella (as Paolo Solvay ) |
occupation | |
|
Allegri becchini ... arriva Trinità is not listed in the German-speaking world, produced with modest financial means spaghetti westerns -Komödie, the Ferdinando Merighi staged under a pseudonym 1,971th
action
Swanee rules a group of bandits who are assigned to kidnap a woman in the nearby town. The first attempt fails; The shootings in the city leave many dead. When ex-sheriff Chad Randall (also called Trinità) comes back there, he finds his sister - she was the woman - shot dead by bandits. As a self-proclaimed bounty hunter, he goes on the trail of the gangsters and hunts them down one by one. The bandit's client wears a black hood and communicates with his people by hand signals, which an Indian translates. Randall can not only satisfy his thirst for revenge, he also brings peace back to the village.
criticism
Christian Keßler judges in his lexicon on the genre that this is one of those films "which are so incredibly bad that you can hardly believe your eyes". Everyone is "completely helpless, entangled in the wild fantasies of a script full of hidden nastiness."
Remarks
The year of production is sometimes given as 1972 or 1973; the date of Italian censorship is September 5, 1971. The film was not distributed nationally or regionally, only locally. Most of the scenes were shot in Gordon Mitchell's Cave Studios .
Web links
- Allegri becchini ... arriva Trinità in the Internet Movie Database (English)
Individual evidence
- ↑ Christian Keßler: Welcome to Hell. 2002, p. 22
- ^ Entry in the Archivio del Cinema Italiano
- ^ Roberto Poppi, Mario Pecorari: Dizionario del cinema italiano, I film vol. 4th vol. 1 A / L. Rom, Gremese 1996, p. 31