Dos cruces en Danger Pass

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Movie
Original title Dos cruces en Danger Pass
Country of production Spain , Italy
original language Spanish
Publishing year 1967
length 92 minutes
Rod
Director Rafael Romero Marchent
script Enzo Battaglia
Eduardo Manzano Brochero
production Fulvio Lucisano
Eduardo Manzano's Brochero
music Francesco De Masi
camera Sergio Martinelli
Emilio Foriscot
cut Antonio Gimeno
occupation

Dos cruces en Danger Pass ( Spanish for "Two crosses in Danger Pass") is the title of a not shown in German-speaking spaghetti westerns of Rafael Romero Marchent from the year 1967th

action

In Danger Pass prison, one inmate does not believe in the guilt of the sheriff, who is being tried by the powerful, wealthy and unscrupulous Moran, whose gang has violently controlled the whole area. Moran finally kills several times: The prisoner, the sheriff and his wife - the children Alex and Judy Mitchell become eyewitnesses. Judy grows up as an employee in Moran's house, Alex is raised by a Quaker family. Despite his peaceful and forgiving environment, he grows up with the idea of ​​revenge. Eventually, because of these feelings, he is excluded from the family; his half-brother Mark, who always wanted to dissuade him from his revenge, feels responsible for him. This is also necessary, because Alex's path is lined with the fulfillment of his revenge, deception, violence and shootings, which ends with the destruction of the entire Moran family, but also Judy's death. In the final battle, Moran's son, Charley, and Alex face each other; the latter is saved.

criticism

Segnalazioni Cinematografiche saw a Western all'italiana "whose story lacks any credibility and whose scenes exist solely to depict violent violence and cynical killing."

Remarks

Movie songs are Without a Name , sung by Raoul and the two Bring Us Joy and Happiness and What Do You Think, interpreted by Giulia de Mutis alias July Ray .

Filming locations were Manzanares el Real , Colmenar Viejo and Hoyo de Manzanares .

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Vol. LXVI, 1968
  2. Ulrich P. Bruckner: For a few more corpses. Berlin 2002, p. 584