Django and Sabata - like bloody vultures

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Movie
German title Django and Sabata - like bloody vultures
Original title C'è Sartana… vendi la pistola e comprati la bara!
Country of production Italy , Spain
original language Italian
Publishing year 1970
length 92 minutes
Age rating FSK 18
Rod
Director Giuliano Carnimeo
(as Anthony Ascott )
script Tito Carpi
production Sergio Borelli
Franco Palaggi
music Francesco De Masi
camera Stelvio Massi
cut Ornella Micheli
occupation

- Django and Sabata like bloody vultures (Original title: ! C'è Sartana ... vendi la pistola e comprati la bara ) is a spaghetti western from the heyday of the genre. Giuliano Carnimeo directed the film with George Hilton and Charles Southwood ; it came to German cinemas on November 26, 1970 and appeared in later publications under the titles Django - die greed for gold and Django - shoot me the song of dying .

action

After he unseen an attack by a group of Mexicans led by manta rays on a carriage that allegedly carried gold, but in fact only sand, Sartana (in German dubbing: Django) sets out to investigate the background of the mysterious incidents to enlighten.

Disguised as a Mexican, he meets the mine worker Samuel Spencer in the Trixie saloon in Appaloosa, who works with mantas and commissioned the raid. There is also the Pistolero Sabata, who is also after the gold. After a failed assassination attempt on Sartana, Spencer tries to play the two gunslingers off against each other by means of a fake gold coach so that he can escape to Mexico himself.

His plan fails because of Mantas' intervention, who shoots him, but in turn is killed by Sartana; the gold finally found is given to Trixie and the miners.

criticism

Segnalazioni Cinematografiche found that the cleanly staged film opposed the conventionality of the story with rich exploding and shooting. Christian Keßler judges that the film offers decent entertainment and that the final duel is quite exciting; He particularly praised the camera work, which brings in some gifted optical delicacies.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Vol. 69, 1970
  2. Christian Keßler: Welcome to Hell. 2002, p. 53