A meal for Django

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Movie
German title A meal for Django
Original title W Django!
Country of production Italy
original language Italian
Publishing year 1971
length 95 (German v. 83) minutes
Age rating FSK 16
Rod
Director Edoardo Mulargia
(as Edward G. Muller )
script Nino Stresa
production Pino De Martino
music Piero Umiliani
camera Marcello Masciocchi
cut Cesare Bianchini
occupation

Two Mules for Django (original title: ! W Django ) is a spaghetti westerns of Edoardo Mulargia which in German has been shortened by 12 minutes at the 15 September 1972 premiered.

action

After a group of evil bandits raped and killed Django's wife, he went on the trail of the murderers. In La Puerta, he rescues a loud-mouthed horse thief , Carranza, from the lynch mob by taking the place of the priest and finds out that he knows the identity of the bandits. Carranza himself was released from prison two days after the crime, according to a newspaper report. Both men set out together to find the perpetrators one by one and kill them. The first is the arms dealer Thompson, whom Django can fool by faking Carranza's death; other participants are the local gang leader Jeff and the Mexican Capitan Gomez. With the help of a load of guns sent by Thompson, Django and Carranza can cause enough confusion to get there. Eventually it turns out that Carranza was also part of the gang; the newspaper had a misprint. Django completes his revenge.

criticism

"In the script and direction of simple-minded, cynical spaghetti westerns, who stylized killing into a ceremony," was the dictionary of international films . Christian Keßler comes to a more positive result : “W Django! is the last Western Mulargias, and it is a worthy conclusion. The film doesn't start too much with the noir atmosphere at the beginning, but the plot marches from minute zero at a breathless pace that is held up to the end ”.

Remarks

The original title reads like "Eviva Django" ("Django live high"!).

The film is now available in full on DVD.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. A meal for Django. In: Lexicon of International Films . Film service , accessed March 2, 2017 .Template: LdiF / Maintenance / Access used 
  2. Keßler: Welcome to Hell. 2002, pp. 278/279