Kill him, Django

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Movie
German title Kill him, Django
Original title Vado… l'ammazzo e torno
Country of production Italy
original language Italian
Publishing year 1967
length 98 minutes
Age rating FSK 16
Rod
Director Enzo Girolami
(as Enzo G. Castellari )
script Tito Carpi
Enzo Girolami
Giovanni Simonelli
production Edmondo Amati
Maurizio Amati
music Francesco De Masi
Alessandro Alessandroni
camera Giovanni Bergamini
cut Tatiana Casini Morigi
occupation

Put him down, Django (original title: Vado… l'ammazzo e torno , alternative title: Glory, Glory Halleluja ) is a spaghetti western from 1967; in Germany it was released in cinemas on March 28, 1969.

content

Three strangers ride into a city. A Pistolero following three coffins shoots them down. Django searches for Monetero, who is on the run because of a robbery, and whose bounty is sure to rise after the robbery. Monetero is imprisoned in a fort. The bank clerk Clayton, victim of the robbery, would rather have Monetero alive. Django frees Monetero, who turns out to be not very grateful. Clayton plays an opaque role and teams up with Django. All three meet for the final decision.

criticism

“Parodic accents predominate in this film, although concessions are made to the cliché again and again. Style breaks are the result. "

- Bernd Deck : Filmecho / Filmwoche 29–30, 1968.

"The film contains numerous very well-made action sequences, but also a longer brawl that could have been done without any problems."

- Ulrich P. Bruckner: For a few more corpses.

“Well-known patterns (are) satirized in a less than imaginative way and (fall) victim to a certain degree of confusion. Acceptable after-work entertainment with solid craftsmanship. "

- Christian Keßler : Welcome to hell.

“(...) the dialogues are essentially contested by the arsenal of weapons. (Rating: 1 star - weak) "

- Adolf Heinzlmeier , Berndt Schulz : Lexicon "Films on TV"

Others

The three riders at the beginning of the film are lookalikes of Django, the Man Without a Name (Clint Eastwood) and Colonel Mortimer (Lee van Cleef).

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Adolf Heinzlmeier, Berndt Schulz: Lexicon "Films on Television" (extended new edition). Rasch and Röhring, Hamburg 1990, ISBN 3-89136-392-3 , pp. 487-488.