Kill everyone and come back alone

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Movie
German title Kill everyone and come back alone
Original title Ammazzali tutti e torna solo!
Kill everyone and come back alone Logo 001.svg
Country of production Italy , Spain
original language Italian
Publishing year 1968
length 96 minutes
Age rating FSK 16
Rod
Director Enzo G. Castellari
script Tito Carpi ,
Francesco Scardamaglia ,
Joaquín Luis Romero Marchent ,
Enzo G. Castellari
production Edmondo Amati
music Francesco De Masi
camera Alejandro Ulloa
cut Tatiana Casini Morigi
occupation

Kill everyone and come back alone (original title: Ammazzali tutti e torna solo ) is a brutal Italo-Western filmed by Enzo G. Castellari in 1968 . The film received its German-language premiere on February 27, 1970.

action

Towards the end of the civil war, Clyde McKay and five convicts received from Southern Captain Lynch the order to break into a fort in the northern states and to steal the gold reserves there. The troops make their way through the enemy lines and have no idea that McKay has the additional order to kill all those who know about it after they have been dealt with. The task succeeds and the gold is looted; now the group must grapple with each individual's personal greed and the treacherous lynch. After Clyde has eliminated all opponents, it turns out that he has also outsmarted his clients and disappears with the gold.

Reviews

  • "The film consists almost entirely of action scenes and is staged so fast that you don't get to think about it" ( Christian Keßler )
  • "One of the best and most action-packed westerns by Enzo Castellari" (Ulrich P. Bruckner)

The Italian critics praised the passable film mainly because of its self-deprecating tones.

Remarks

The film songs "Gold" and "Come mia" are interpreted by Raoul . Exterior shots were taken in Almería .

The age rating of the film was downgraded from 18 to 16 years in March 2018 due to a re-examination by the FSK.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Keßler: Welcome to Hell. 2002, pp. 26/27
  2. Brucker: For a few more corpses. Munich 2006, p. 344
  3. Massimo Bertarelli, February 2, 2001, "Il Giornale"
  4. ^ R. Poppi, M. Pecorari: Dizionario del cinema italiano: I film Vol. 3. Gremese, 1992, pp. 31/32
  5. https://www.schnittberichte.com/ticker.php?ID=4806