Two drifters meet and soon become travelling companions. But one of them, Tim (Gemma), is being chased by a crazed killer and his band of gunmen to settle an old score. The two (Adore being ... Read allTwo drifters meet and soon become travelling companions. But one of them, Tim (Gemma), is being chased by a crazed killer and his band of gunmen to settle an old score. The two (Adore being the other) are chased through the west, encountering scrape after scrape until the killers... Read allTwo drifters meet and soon become travelling companions. But one of them, Tim (Gemma), is being chased by a crazed killer and his band of gunmen to settle an old score. The two (Adore being the other) are chased through the west, encountering scrape after scrape until the killers catch up and the score is settled for good.
- Roger Pratt
- (as Rick Boyd)
- Fat man in stagecoach
- (as Chris Huerta)
- Samuel Pratt
- (as Anthony M. Dawson)
- Pratt's henchman
- (as Piero Magalotti)
- Card Player
- (uncredited)
- Mr. Lawrence
- (uncredited)
- Brawler in 1st Saloon
- (uncredited)
- Pratt's henchman
- (uncredited)
- Brawler
- (uncredited)
Featured reviews
Adorf and Gemma are great as the protagonists of this film, and I find them much more believable than Terence Hill and Bud Spencer. Federico Boido and Anthony Dawson are even better as the over-the-top father-and-son villains who are hunting for Gemma. They are very entertaining to watch. Boido's character is especially funny, and both are marvelously ruthless. The showdown at the end of the film is classic.
The music score by Ennio Morricone is great, as always, even though its far from being one of his best.
This is definitely a movie worth watching, especially for Euro-western fans.
This lightly comedic western is likable enough, though a little too loosely plotted. After awhile, one begins to wonder what exactly is the the point of all the duo's hijinks. However, the climax is definitely worth hanging around for.
The entire film hangs solely on the charisma of it's two stars, who don't disappoint. The score by Ennio Morricone is pretty good too.
Very unusual score from E. Morricone which underlines the low key mood of the story and good but not outstanding cinematography.
4 / 10. ( a weak 4 )
This is the most bi-polar Western I've ever seen. Morricone's soundtrack is heart wrenching and beautiful. The gunfights are violent. Women are beaten and tortured, and yet, in between all this, there's slapstick and one liners. Mood swings?
One stranger is Giuliano Gemma and he's the guy on the run from the psycho. The other guy is Mario Adorf and he's a miner with a bit of gold but not a lot of brains. Gemma is at first out to con Adorf which does over and over again, but then Adorf is so kind and big hearted the two of them just bond. However, there's still that crazy guy and is family to worry about.
It's kind of a road movie as the two characters head for Adorf's ranch and encounter various characters, like the fake Mermaid lady or the bank robbers. None of it should work but it all kind of does anyway as the man behind the camera is the guy who made Death Rides A Horse. Kind of weird to take though as people are still gunned down brutally ala a Spaghetti Western from 1968, but has huge bar fights and punch ups like a 1972 Spaghetti Western.
I was curious to watch it as I'd never seen Mario Adorf in a Spaghetti Western before. He does well as the slow miner guy. Gemma is the usual goofy charmer and a ladies man.
Did you know
- GoofsJesse James was 34 when he died.
- Alternate versionsGerman theatrical version was cut by ca. 10 minutes. This version was also released on VHS and DVD. Only in 2013 the film was released uncut on DVD.
- ConnectionsEdited into Spaghetti Western Trailer Show (2007)
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- Smrt bande Rogera Pratta
- Filming locations
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime
- 1h 40m(100 min)
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 2.35 : 1