The temple of bloody gold

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Movie
German title The temple of bloody gold
Original title Yellow Hair and the Fortress of Gold
Country of production USA , Spain
original language English
Publishing year 1984
length 102 minutes
Age rating FSK 16
Rod
Director Matt Cimber
script Matt Cimber
John Kershaw
production Cihangir Gaffari
(as John Ghaffari )
Diego Gómez Sempere
music Franco Piersanti
camera John Cabrera
cut Claudio Cutry
occupation

The Temple of Bloody Gold (original title: Yellow Hair and the Fortress of Gold ) is a US-Spanish co-production adventure film with western accents , which was directed by Matt Cimber . The German-language premiere took place on November 21, 1985.

action

The soldiers of Mexican troops, who are commanded by the effeminate Colonel Torres, are after a treasure of gold that is hidden in a temple of the Tulapan Indians. The intrusion kills some of the Mexicans; Torres kills an old Indian woman in revenge. Several years later, their daughter Yellow Hair and her loyal and courageous friend Pecos Kid set about securing the gold treasure. The unscrupulous bandits led by Chef Flores, a saloon owner named Tortuga and a wild tribe of Aztec warriors led by the hesitant Shayowteewah are also interested in gold. The courageous warrior who was raised by the Comaniac and Pecos Kid manage to prevail against all enemies and finally to get the gold.

criticism

The lexicon of international film wrote devastatingly : “A film attempt that rolls out its few ideas excessively and mixes unnecessary hardships with rude jokes; Staged in a bumbling manner and played pitifully. "Michael R. Pitts also came to the unflattering conclusion:" Stupid, sadistic, overly long "

Remarks

The version published on DVD with the FSK approval for ages 18 and over is uncut; the old cinema version was cut by several minutes.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. The Temple of Bloody Gold. In: Lexicon of International Films . Film service , accessed March 2, 2017 .Template: LdiF / Maintenance / Access used 
  2. Michael R. Pitts: Western Movies: A Guide to 5,105 Feature Films. 2nd edition, 2012, p. 407
  3. The film for sectional reports