After abuse by men, Belle Starr becomes their equal in riding, shooting, and gambling, often in men's clothes. Her rocky romance with Larry Blackie leads to a failed robbery. She saves him, ... Read allAfter abuse by men, Belle Starr becomes their equal in riding, shooting, and gambling, often in men's clothes. Her rocky romance with Larry Blackie leads to a failed robbery. She saves him, but they part ways, hoping to meet again.After abuse by men, Belle Starr becomes their equal in riding, shooting, and gambling, often in men's clothes. Her rocky romance with Larry Blackie leads to a failed robbery. She saves him, but they part ways, hoping to meet again.
- Pedro
- (as Dan Harrison)
- Poker Player
- (uncredited)
Featured reviews
The screenplay by Piero Cristofani is merely passable: Belle Starr (Elsa Martinelli) meets Larry Blackie (a fine George Eastman) during a card game, commencing a love/hate relationship coming to a head when both try and steal a diamond shipment from right underneath the noses of the Pinkertons.
The middle of the film is taken up by long flashbacks to Belle Starr's past (which feature the ever reliable Robert Woods. He was originally going to have more screen time than he does, but he fell out with Wertmüller and thus his role was shortened); these are good scenes, but they rather unbalance the film and put the pacing off. The acting is mostly good, with Bruno Corazzari doing wonders in his small role. The direction is, like the cinematography and editing, solid but not inspired. Over all, an interesting oddity in the harsh desert of Spaghetti Westerns that aficionado's will want to watch.
What I just saw instead was a fourth generation analog video recording burned to an American Pop Classics DVD with no closed captioning. With such poorly dubbed English audio that about every third word was unintelligible. The video resolution and contrast was hopeless and the only clear images were the extreme close-ups.
The film was jointly made by Piero Cristofani and Lina Wertmüller, both essentially second unit directors, what with Lina just starting out and a few years away from her 1970's masterpieces.
Unlike the standard busty and fleshy Italian actress of the 60's, Elsa Martinelli was tall, thin, and classy. Somebody for which you could effortlessly suspend disbelief just to adore and lust after. And from the promotional photos you can appreciate how sizzling she was in her tight black leather outfit and gun belt. And she wears that trademark costume for much of the film although the spectacle suffers considerably from the poor video quality. For some reason they made her into a Marianne Faithful clone with red hair and freckles. Surprisingly it is a good look for her and she compares favorably with Faithful - coincidentally also clad head to toe in tight black leather in the 1968 release "The Girl on a Motorcycle" for which there are some decent quality DVD's available.
Otherwise "The Belle Star Story" is basically a cross between "The Legend of Frenchie King" (1971) and "The Doom Generation" (1995); both stylishly incomprehensible.
Did you know
- GoofsMany men AND women smoked cigars then. It has been documented the women smoked openly and nobody thought anything about it. But nobody at all smoked plastic-tipped cigars since they did not come out until the 1950s.
- Quotes
Pinkerton Man: You think you're a brave man, don't you. Resisting all this pain, all this torture. I hope you haven't got to the stage when you don't feel it. It doesn't usually happen so quickly, but we can wait until you get your strength back again, Larry, so you get the most out of this experience. We don't want you to miss anything, do we. It would be a pity, don't you agree? Ready for more?
- How long is The Belle Star Story?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- Mein Körper für ein Pokerspiel
- Filming locations
- Plitvice Lakes, Croatia(romantic scenes and shootouts)
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime
- 1h 43m(103 min)
- Sound mix