IMDb RATING
5.8/10
305
YOUR RATING
On his own wedding day, sheriff Pat Garrett must leave and try to arrest two bank robbers.On his own wedding day, sheriff Pat Garrett must leave and try to arrest two bank robbers.On his own wedding day, sheriff Pat Garrett must leave and try to arrest two bank robbers.
Ángel Aranda
- George Clanton
- (as Angel Aranda)
Mimmo Palmara
- Santero
- (as Dick Palmer)
Andrea Aureli
- Manuel
- (as Andrew Ray)
Vivi Bach
- Agnes Goddard
- (as Vivy Bach)
Kai Fischer
- Helen
- (as Kay Fischer)
Tito García
- Miguel
- (as Paul Smith)
Giulia Rubini
- Martha Coogan
- (as Judy Robbins)
José Manuel Martín
- Ramon
- (as Joseph Martin)
Simón Arriaga
- Santero Henchman
- (uncredited)
Juan Cortés
- Banker
- (uncredited)
Gonzalo de Esquiroz
- Comisario
- (uncredited)
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaMimmo Palmara (Santero) was Sergio Leone's first choice to play Ramon Rojo in "A Fistful of Dollars" (1964). He passed on the offer to appear in this film.
- ConnectionsReferenced in Django, Prepare a Coffin (1968)
- SoundtracksLonesome Billy
Performed by Peter Tevis
Featured review
This is the film that Jolly Films of Rome and the other producing companies were putting their hopes and money into while tossing a bone to an unknown director named Sergio Leone, giving him film ends and minimal financing to shoot a movie called The Magnificent Stranger which featured a little-known American TV actor named Clint Eastwood. BULLETS DON'T ARGUE starred Rod Cameron, a bigger name, as Pat Garrett, with Horst Frank and Angel Aranda as Billy and George Clanton, thus mixing two old west legends into a very typically American spaghetti western. It kind of reminded me of the Budd Boetticher/Randolph Scott westerns of the late fifties, with Cameron as the stoic, older authority figure bringing in the wild, younger outlaws, and is pretty darned good, doing what it sets out to do. Oddly enough the highlight of Morricone's score is the song Lonesome Billy, about the elder of the outlaw brothers. BTW I think this is the film that did so poorly at the Italian box office that it prompted Variety to report that spaghetti westerns were dead, a week or so before the Leone/Eastwood film, retitled A FISTFUL OF DOLLARS, turned the film world on its ear.
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