Source spokes anime dannate

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Movie
Original title Source spokes anime dannate
Country of production Italy
original language Italian
Publishing year 1971
length 94 minutes
Age rating FSK 12
Rod
Director Luigi Batzella
(as Paolo Solvay )
script Aldo Barni
production Gino Turini
music Elsio Mancuso
camera Giorgio Montagnani
cut Piera Bruni
occupation

Quelle sporche anime dannate is an italo-western from 1971, staged by Luigi Batzella on a minimal budget and not shown in German-speaking countries .

action

Gunslinger Tom Carter learns of the death of his brother, who was shot and killed by Ringo Brown during a robbery. To avenge him, he rides into the town of Green Waters, where the greedy landowner Shannon tries to get everything into his possession. His right hand, Rast, puts the farmers who have previously been unwilling to sell under a lot of pressure. Tom manages, together with the prospector Jack Buchanan, whose life he saved, to avoid numerous attacks on his life until the criminal elements of the town found all the people they could find on the Carter for the siege of Buchanan's Rach has to send. Meanwhile, the local doctor brings Tom to a man who has been fatally wounded after a snake bite, who identifies himself as Ringo Brown and claims to have acted on Shannon's orders. Tom and Buchanan manage to shoot Rast and all of his people; Shannon also finds its just end. Tom, on the other hand, can stay in town; together with Cora, whom he loves.

criticism

Merciless reviews wherever you look: A stupid spaghetti western, badly staged and without any original element, write Segnalazionic Cinematografiche The film is terrible, which did not prevent Batzella from using much of it again, in La colt era il suo Dio ., says Christian Keßler .

Remarks

The film was only distributed in Italy by regional distributors.

The planned title was His Colt gave the answer ; the film was shot in parallel with Django's head too, has its price .

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Segnalazioni Cinematografiche , Vo. 73, 1972
  2. Keßler: Welcome to Hell. 2002, p. 204
  3. The film at comingsoon.it
  4. Ulrich P. Bruckner: For a few more corpses. Munich 2006, p. 635