La pazienza ha un limit… noi no!

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Movie
Original title La pazienza ha un limit… noi no!
Country of production Italy , Spain
original language Italian
Publishing year 1974
length 90 minutes
Rod
Director Franco Ciferri
(as Frank Farrow )
script Fabio Carboni
Armando Morandi
Amando de Ossorio
production Armando Morandi
music Franco Bixo
Fabio Frizzi
Vincenzo Tempera
(as Leonerbert )
camera Miguel Fernández Mila
Alessandro Cariello
cut Giancarlo Venarucci
occupation

La pazienza ha un limit… noi no! (literally: The patience is over, we do not ) is an Italian - Spanish Western - comedy from the year 1974 that are not in German-speaking countries was performed. The film, directed under the pseudonym of Franco Ciferri and sometimes incorrectly attributed to producer Armando Morandi as director, was consistently panned by critics.

action

Corporal McDonald, of Irish descent and a member of the 7th Cavalry, is stationed in the Wild West. One day he takes a valuable military shipment and hides it. After carefully recording the location of the hiding place, he decrees as a legacy on his death that his sons Bill and Duke each receive half of the plan that leads to the hiding place and lives with his wife on a farm in a godforsaken part from Texas . Twenty years later, Lieutenant Pollock, a former disappointed admirer of the now widowed Isabel, gets the two sons to search for the treasure. Persecuted and accompanied by numerous swindlers, crooks and fraudsters, they can unmask the hiding place after many detours. Deceiving all the robbers, they give the money back to the government. At home on the farm, an explosion causes a large oil well to bubble on their property.

criticism

“A new edition of the usual farce in the Western world. At least the authors are honest enough to make it clear from the start that the only intention of the film is to entertain a very modest and undemanding audience, ”said an unknown critic in“ Il Secolo XIX ”. "In a certain way, the work is admirable again in the almost unbelievable consistency with which it mercilessly persists in its style: a kind of minimal humor that does not shy away from being repeated a hundred times," said genre expert Christian Keßler .

Remarks

The songs in the film The Ballad of Bill and Duke and The March of the Scared are interpreted by Ed Tapton .

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ "Il Secolo XIX", September 28, 1974.
  2. Christian Keßler: Welcome to Hell . Terrorverlag 2002, ISBN 3-00-009290-0 , p. 181.