Django - crosses in the bloody sand

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Movie
German title Django - crosses in the bloody sand
Original title Cjamango
Country of production Italy
original language Italian
Publishing year 1967
length 90 minutes
Age rating FSK 16
(until 2009 FSK 18)
Rod
Director Edoardo Mulargia
(as Edward G. Muller )
script Vincenzo Musolino
(as Glenn Vincent Davis )
production Vincenzo Musolino
music Felice Di Stefano
camera Vitaliano Natalucci
cut Enzo Alabiso
occupation
synchronization

Django - crosses in the bloody sand is a 1967 incurred spaghetti westerns of Edoardo Mulargia that with Cjamango - presented a hero who was sent off in the German distribution Django series - so the original title. German premiere was on May 23, 1969.

content

Cjamango wins a sack of gold playing poker with a Mexican bandit, but he can't look forward to it for long as he is attacked by the gangs El Tigres and Don Pablos. He is seriously injured and is nursed to health by Perla and her little brother Manuel. The bandits are now fighting each other to secure the gold for themselves.

After Cjamango is well again, he picks up the trail of the criminals and continues to get them to kill each other. A black-clad whiskey seller named Clinton intervenes and plays an opaque role until he reveals himself to be a Pinkerton detective after the final battle, in which he takes the side of Cjamango against the remaining bandits.

Reviews

" The film is cool, well-done and works its way towards a satisfactory finale in a straightforward manner, " writes Christian Keßler , who describes the dubbing, which is aimed at non-stop puns in the German version, as a somewhat inappropriate “babbling”.

"Only moderately exciting, with some brutality and sometimes sentimental."

"Powerless and devoid of any originality, the film laboriously works its way forward and shows one situation that was to be expected from its numerous predecessors after another typical" Western all'italiana "."

- Segnalazioni Cinematografiche, vol. 63, 1968.

“Old scheme with many dead, rough men and sadistic killers. Modernist idioms are no salt in the Django porridge. Somewhat less cruel in the individual acts than its predecessor. For western fans. "

synchronization

Arnold Marquis lends Piero Lulli his voice.

Remarks

In 1970 the follow-up film Adios Cjamango, also known as Los rebeldes de Arizona, was made .

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Certificate of Release for Django - Crosses in the Bloody Sand . Voluntary self-regulation of the film industry , May 2009 (PDF; test number: 39 735 DVD).
  2. Keßler: Willkommen in der Hölle, 2002, pp. 58/59
  3. ibid.
  4. Django - crosses in the bloody sand. In: Lexicon of International Films . Film service , accessed March 2, 2017 .Template: LdiF / Maintenance / Access used 
  5. Evangelical Press Association, Munich, Review No. 238/1969