Why is it that Italian westerns get "R" ratings when they do the same thing that American westerns do? Does it really matter if you kill 10 or 12, or if you kill 50 or 60. Is it because the bad guy wins instead of John Wayne or Randolph Scott? Just wondering.
The bad guy in this film, Alex Cord, did a lot more TV than movies, but he did a good job in this film as an outlaw who thought he had epilepsy. When ids the last time you heard that in a western? Another thing you probably won't hear in American westerns is references to the Catholic Church with words like excommunication and ordained.
Yes, lot of people get killed, and the bad guy rides off into the sunset, but it was still worth the time.
Also featured five-time Oscar nominee Authur Kennedy, Oscar nominee Robert Ryan, a hot Nicoletta Machiavelli, and lots of Italians.
The bad guy in this film, Alex Cord, did a lot more TV than movies, but he did a good job in this film as an outlaw who thought he had epilepsy. When ids the last time you heard that in a western? Another thing you probably won't hear in American westerns is references to the Catholic Church with words like excommunication and ordained.
Yes, lot of people get killed, and the bad guy rides off into the sunset, but it was still worth the time.
Also featured five-time Oscar nominee Authur Kennedy, Oscar nominee Robert Ryan, a hot Nicoletta Machiavelli, and lots of Italians.