Django - his last greeting

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Movie
German title Django - his last greeting
Original title La vendetta è il mio perdono
Country of production Italy
original language Italian
Publishing year 1967
length 82 minutes
Age rating FSK 18
Rod
Director Roberto Mauri
(as Robert Johnson )
script Tito Carpi
Francesco Degli Espinosa
Roberto Natale
Luciana Ribet
production Aurelio Serafinelli
music Franco Bizzi
(as B. Giancarlo )
camera Franco Delli Colli
Mario Mancini
cut Nella Nannuzzi
occupation
synchronization

Django - his last greeting (Original title: La vendetta è il mio perdono ) is a spaghetti western from 1967. Roberto Mauri staged Tab Hunter in the title role of the film, which had its premiere in German-speaking countries on 11 September 1970th The alternative title is Django - Song of Death .

action

Sheriff Durango is pretty good at the little town where he tries to enforce the law. He brings down the crooks and then rewards herself in the saloon, whose owner Jane is in love with him. He does, however, love his fiancée Lucy McLaine. One day the farm of Lucy's father is attacked by bandits; her trousseau is stolen. When McLaine succeeds in tearing off his mask from one of the gangsters, the men kill him, his wife and Lucy. When Durango arrives at the scene of the crime, he finds a pocket watch that belongs to one of the criminals. With her and Jane's help, he finds the murderers of his fiancées and takes revenge by cruelly killing everyone involved.

criticism

Verrisse everywhere: The lexicon of the international film attested the film "raw disposition" and "selected cruelty". N. Simsolo noted that the revenge of the original title is a dish that can be enjoyed cold, lukewarm or hot, but here it is clearly overheated. The "stomach of the viewer chokes on all the lead with which the actors are constantly peppered". Christian Keßler called the work a “dull exercise in minimal vendetta”. He criticized the lack of passion, the expected plot and the unsympathetic demeanor of the protagonist. The Protestant film observer succinctly notes that the film is “a third-rate spaghetti western in every respect that can only be described as repulsive”.

Remarks

The piece of music Canzone per Jane is dominated by Michele Lacerenza's trumpet .

The film received very limited cinemas in Italy.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Django - his last greeting. In: Lexicon of International Films . Film service , accessed March 2, 2017 .Template: LdiF / Maintenance / Access used 
  2. ^ N. Simsolo, in: Saison 71 . Paris 1971.
  3. Christian Keßler: Welcome to Hell . 2001, p. 269
  4. Evangelical Press Association Munich, Review No. 494/1970
  5. ^ Roberto Poppi, Mario Pecorari: Dizionario del cinema italiano: I film Vol. 3 . Gremese, 1992, p. 590