Djurado

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Movie
Original title Djurado
Country of production Italy , Spain
original language Italian
Publishing year 1966
length 88 minutes
Rod
Director Giovanni Narzisi
(as Gianni Narzisi )
script William Azzella
(as William Menzell )
Federico De Urrutia
Giovanni Narzisi
production E. Fegarotti
M. DiRienzi
Ricardo Sanz
music Gianni Ferrio
camera Miguel Fernández Mila
cut Eugenio Alabiso
occupation

Djurado is not listed in the German speaking spaghetti westerns , the Giovanni Narzisi 1966 staged. It has been reviewed as below average for the genre .

action

Djurado, also known as Golden Poker because he is unbeatable at the card table, comes to the town of Silvermine, where the peaceful residents are intimidated and terrorized by the wealthy, arrogant Tucan. After winning half the saloon, he met his co-owner Barbara Donovan and also Ricky, a guitarist who lived without violence. Barbara and her family represent the last obstacle for Tucan to finally seize power over the place; To prevent Djurado from joining, Tucan has a fire set, commit theft and blames Djurado for these deeds. He has the witness to Djurado's innocence, Mitzy, arrested. The summoned Marshall can only be convinced of his innocence slowly and only through a dramatic statement by Mitzy after Djurado's escape from prison. The angry Tucan sends his men out to do as much damage as possible; they devastate half the village and shoot Ricky. While Djurado takes care of Tucan's people, the boss himself is shot by Barbara.

criticism

"The tricky and varied story suffers from the imbalance of the staging."

- Segnalazioni Cinematografiche

Remarks

The film song Solo il vento so là is sung by Gianni Meccia , who also plays the role of Ricky.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Vol. LXII, 1967