Django - the gun by the throat

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Movie
German title Django - the gun by the throat
Original title Chiedi perdono a Dio ... non a me
Country of production Italy
original language Italian
Publishing year 1968
length 88 minutes
Age rating FSK 18
Rod
Director Vincenzo Musolino
script Vincenzo Musolino
production Vincenzo Musolino
music Felice Di Stefano
camera Mario Mancini
cut Enzo Alabiso
occupation
synchronization

Django - the gun by the throat (original title: Chiedi perdono a Dio… non a me ) is an Italo-Western filmed in Rome in 1968 . Directed by Vincenzo Musolino , who also wrote the script. First performance in German-speaking countries was on March 24, 1970; Alternative titles are Django - He Came to Kill and Bloody Wrath .

action

In a Mexican cemetery in the border area, the young, revenge-driven Manuel and the older Cjamango meet. Cjamango tells about his life: Several years ago he was in a town to raise money for the ranch, which the father of his lover Virginia, Mister Stuart, demanded as a nominal fee. Meanwhile his family was murdered. The Mexican crook Barrica put him on the trail of the Smart brothers and their gang, who had been paid by old Stuart to settle old unpaid bills.

When Cjamango is able to shoot one of the brothers, Jack, the remaining one, Dick, kills old Stuart, who does not want to compensate him for the loss. In many skirmishes and bypassing numerous traps, Cjamango can bring down one bandit after the other, including Dick Smart. In the end, only Cjamango and Virginia remain.

additional

The rental video of this film was indexed from December 20, 1982 to November 30, 2007.

criticism

  • "Mediocre revenge westerns"
  • "Series Italo-Western that pleases itself in the pleasurable painting of its brutalities."
  • "A simple vendetta story with cowboy-typical rawness"

synchronization

For the German synchronous occupied Karlheinz Brunnemann that the book by Ursula Buschow transposed:

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Ulrich P. Bruckner: For a few more corpses. Schwarzkopf & Schwarzkopf 2006
  2. Django - the gun by the throat. In: Lexicon of International Films . Film service , accessed March 2, 2017 .Template: LdiF / Maintenance / Access used 
  3. Christian Kessler: Welcome to Hell. An overview of the spaghetti westerns
  4. The film in the dubbing files