From Django - with the best recommendations
Movie | |
---|---|
German title | From Django - with the best recommendations |
Original title | Uno dopo l'altro |
Country of production | Italy , Spain |
original language | Italian |
Publishing year | 1968 |
length | 102 (German v. 93) minutes |
Age rating | FSK 18 |
Rod | |
Director |
Nick Nostro (as Nick Howard ) |
script |
Mariano De Lope Nick Nostro Giovanni Simonelli (as Simon O'Neil ) Carlos E. Rodriguez |
production |
Marco Vicario Bino Cicogna |
music |
Fred Bongusto Berto Pisano |
camera | Mario Pacheco |
cut | Renato Cinquini |
occupation | |
| |
Django - with the best recommendations (Original title: Uno dopo l'altro ) is a spaghetti western , the Nick Nostro 1968 staged. The film, also shown as Nine Coffins for McGregor , was changed in content in the German dubbing when it was first shown on December 5, 1969.
action
Ex-Colonel Jefferson robbed a bank trying to access the savings of local ranchers. Bank teller Bill Ross tries to prevent this, but is shot in cold blood. Some time later, Stan Ross appears in the village and is very interested in the circumstances of the attack and death. Jefferson makes him believe that the crimes were committed by the bandits around Espartero. However, when Ross takes care of this, he realizes that things are completely different. When an attack on Jefferson fails, he lets his people devastate a Mexican village in revenge. After Stan Espartero can convince of his innocence, he begins meticulously to exercise his retaliation on one of the participants after the other. In a duel he can finally shoot Jefferson and secure the stolen gold.
criticism
The Lexicon of International Films wrote that the film was “a primitive spaghetti western that offers violence and murder as entertainment. The plot is secondary: The focus is on killing in many ways. ” Segnalazioni Cinematografiche saw a film built according to the standard scheme for the large western market, which sometimes portrayed its events in a tiring slow manner. Christian Keßler writes about the "dark western" that it is very mediocre, albeit straightforward, and its blunt brutality hides some length. The Protestant film observer comes to a devastating verdict : “A punch and shooting orgy of a particularly brutal shape. We refuse! "
Remarks
Fred Bongusto interprets the film song "Maybe One, Maybe Nine".
The German version omits the entire ironic ending: In the original, the gold pieces turn out to be worthless stones.
Web links
- With the best recommendations - Django in the Internet Movie Database (English)
- The film at comingsoon
Individual evidence
- ↑ From Django - with the best recommendations. In: Lexicon of International Films . Film service , accessed March 2, 2017 .
- ↑ Segnalazioni Cinematografiche, Vol. 65, 1968
- ↑ Christian Keßler: Welcome to Hell . 2002, pp. 261/261
- ↑ Evangelischer Presseverband München, Review No. 544/1969
- ↑ Comparison of the comparison between the German and Japanese versions