I due figli di Ringo

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Movie
Original title I due figli di Ringo
Country of production Italy
original language Italian
Publishing year 1966
length 105 minutes
Rod
Director Giorgio Simonelli
script Marcello Ciorciolini
Roberto Gianviti
Amedeo Sollazzo
Dino Verde
production Vittorio Martino
Salvatore Scarfione
Augusto Silvestrini
Leo Cevenini
music Piero Umiliani
camera Tino Santoni
cut Giuliana Attenni
occupation

Two Sons of Ringo is not shown in the German speaking spaghetti western spoof that in 1966 by Giorgio Simonelli was staged.

action

Two incompetent wanderers spend their days trying to excel as alleged gunslingers or as bounty hunters. When Joe sees through her scam, he forces her to follow him on a mission to Auction Nueva. Once there, Franco and Ciccio pretend to be the sons of the famous different sniper Ringo. Cheered by the residents, they are attacked by Jack and Bear Trap, but rescued by Joe, who meanwhile looks after them together with the girls Dorothy and Marisol. Then the two impostors are supposed to deal with the terrible bandit Indio and his gang. In fact, they manage - secretly supported by Joe and the girls, of course - to deal with the gangsters and thus to expose the wicked machinations of the banker Simpson, whose crooked money is in a car; However, the bounty is not paid out to them, but to Ringo's real children: Joe and Dorothy.

criticism

Christian Keßler (not only) reminds the format of this Franchi / Ingrassia film "of old short films by Laurel & Hardy and the like: Every situation is maxed out to the best of my ability" and praised the director's timing of the funny situations.

Remarks

Gloria Paul sings the movie song Angel and the Brains .

The third fun wester of the comedian couple Franco & Ciccio with Giorgio Simonelli was also their last film; he died towards the end of filming, which was finished by Giuliano Carnimeo . The box office in Italy was a good 265 million lire .

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Keßler: Welcome to Hell. 2002, p. 83
  2. ^ Roberto Poppi, Mario Pecorari: Dizionario del cinema italiano: I film Vol. 3, dal 1960 al 1969. Gremese, Rome, 1992, pp. 179/180