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If You Meet Sartana Pray for Your Death

Original title: Se incontri Sartana prega per la tua morte
  • 1968
  • Not Rated
  • 1h 35m
IMDb RATING
6.3/10
2.1K
YOUR RATING
Gianni Garko in If You Meet Sartana Pray for Your Death (1968)
A cabal of dignitaries hire Mexican and American gangsters to steal their bank's shipment of gold as part of an insurance scam, but master gunfighter Sartana interferes with their plans.
Play trailer2:50
1 Video
65 Photos
Spaghetti WesternActionDramaMysteryWestern

A gadget-laden gunfighter and gambler interferes with the complex schemes of gangsters and dignitaries hoping to steal a bank's gold and obtain the insurance payout for its theft.A gadget-laden gunfighter and gambler interferes with the complex schemes of gangsters and dignitaries hoping to steal a bank's gold and obtain the insurance payout for its theft.A gadget-laden gunfighter and gambler interferes with the complex schemes of gangsters and dignitaries hoping to steal a bank's gold and obtain the insurance payout for its theft.

  • Director
    • Gianfranco Parolini
  • Writers
    • Luigi De Santis
    • Fabio Piccioni
    • Adolfo Cagnacci
  • Stars
    • Gianni Garko
    • William Berger
    • Sydney Chaplin
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.3/10
    2.1K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Gianfranco Parolini
    • Writers
      • Luigi De Santis
      • Fabio Piccioni
      • Adolfo Cagnacci
    • Stars
      • Gianni Garko
      • William Berger
      • Sydney Chaplin
    • 21User reviews
    • 29Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 nomination total

    Videos1

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    Trailer 2:50
    Trailer

    Photos65

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    Top cast38

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    Gianni Garko
    Gianni Garko
    • Sartana
    • (as John Garko)
    William Berger
    William Berger
    • Lasky
    Sydney Chaplin
    Sydney Chaplin
    • Jeff Stewal
    • (as Sidney Chaplin)
    Gianni Rizzo
    Gianni Rizzo
    • Alman
    Fernando Sancho
    Fernando Sancho
    • Jose Manuel Mendoza
    Klaus Kinski
    Klaus Kinski
    • Morgan
    • (as Klaus Kinsky)
    Andrea Scotti
    • Perdido
    • (as Andrew Scott)
    Carlo Tamberlani
    Carlo Tamberlani
    • Rev. Logan
    Franco Pesce
    • Dusty
    Heidi Fischer
    Heidi Fischer
    • Evelyn
    Gianfranco Parolini
    • Gambler
    • (as J. Francis Littlewords)
    Maria Pia Conte
    Maria Pia Conte
    • Jane
    Sabine Sun
    Sabine Sun
    • Girl at the Saloon
    Sergio Jossa
      Antonietta Fiorito
      Ugo Adinolfi
        Rossella Bergamonti
        • Meggie Sam - Stagecoach Passenger
        • (as Patricia Carr)
        Arrigo Peri
        • Speedy - the Telegrapher
        • Director
          • Gianfranco Parolini
        • Writers
          • Luigi De Santis
          • Fabio Piccioni
          • Adolfo Cagnacci
        • All cast & crew
        • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

        User reviews21

        6.32.1K
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        Featured reviews

        8Bezenby

        If you meet Sartana, smell his breath

        Now this is more like it! Corpses everywhere, strange enemies, even stranger heroes - this is a good Italian Western, right here. Take that, Dead for a Dollar! Gianni Garko (of Body Count) is the mysterious Sartana, out to get some gold that's been scammed by local businessmen in conjunction with an amazingly over the top William Berger (Dial: Help, Maya, Spider Labyrinth and Keoma). Berger for me plays the best character in the film, a heartless, hyperactive killer who is not shy in double crossing folks, but can intuitively know when to hook up with Sartana too if the situation demands it.

        Yep, it's one of those films. Missing gold, uneasy alliances, double crossings, and many, many shoot outs leading to corpses lying everywhere and a mere two characters left alive at the end. This is the kind of film you're looking for. It's got everything you want. Except boobs.

        Some come for the Garko, who plays Sartana in a laid back, but deadly way, and stay for the Berger, who's anything but laid back here.

        WHUP!

        Oh, and seemingly, Klaus Kinski turned up on set one day, stared into the camera a couple of times, and got paid for it!

        WHUP!

        Oh, and this film has the loudest 'eating a chicken' foley effects I've heard ever heard ever heard.

        WHUP!
        9chaosrampant

        Sartana, angel of death!

        It is very obvious why Sartana created an avalanche of sequels, only second to Django. Even if it looks like yet another tale about stolen gold, Mexican bandits and switching allegiances, Sartana feels (and is) different. Of course seen back in 1968, it must have wowed European audiences with its bleak cinematography and nihilistic characters. However, 40 years (!) down the line, and it still feels as refreshingly dark and stylish as ever.

        As in with most spaghettis, the plot is near incomprehensible. It has something to do about a stolen shipment of gold and a constant switching of allegiances, as thief betrays thief to get the gold. But, again as in with most spaghettis, the plot isn't the issue at all.

        Sartana (1968) is a capsule of pure spaghetti western style. Everything is kept very minimal here, from the scarce dialogues, to the perennially empty town streets. Yet there's a hellish ambiance to proceedings and the nonsensical plot only adds to its psychotronic charm. I gave up trying to follow the plot after a while and just immersed myself in the surreal happenings.

        Sartana himself is like a crossover between The Man with no Name (the standard by which every spag antihero is measured) and Django, a black-clad amoral anti-hero. He's not out there to catch the baddies. He's just out for money and blood. His quirky gadgets often bring to mind the other Parolini character, Sabata, but Gianni Garko's character plays on a whole other level. There is of course, the occasional comic relief, in the form of an old gravedigger, but it only confirms that Sartana is indeed a grim western. That same darkness would resurface in Clint Eastwood's High Plains Drifter years later, on the other side of the pond.

        Overall, this is a must see for SW afficionados. If you're a fan of Corbucci's nihilistic side (Django, The Great Silence), Sartana will make you cream your pants. Dark, stylish, with a streak of Euro horror running through it, Sartana is a criminally forgotten piece of celluloid. Watch it and find out.
        6LatentSophism

        Dreadful and confusing

        I'm a big Spaghetti Western fan and fairly tolerant of the stylistic excesses, but this film made little sense. It's not clear what is motivating Sartana, the undertaking laughs insanely, William Berger does not know how to act, etc.
        5JohnWelles

        An Insult to the Spaghetti Western Genre.

        "If You Meet Sartana Pray for Your Death" (1968), directed by Gianfranco Parolini and starring Gianni Garko, William Berger Fernando Sancho, Sidney Chaplin(!) and Klaus Kinski phoning in a cameo role, has only one great thing going for it, and that's its ridiculously over the top title. The rest is a banal Spaghetti Western that has no tension and no direction.

        The script, such as it is, has a lot of incident and detail, none of which is interesting, as it is completely convoluted and very hard to care what happens to whom. Still, the plot is something like this: Sartana (Garko) gets involved with an insurance swindle run by several dignitaries, who hire a Mexican gang to steal a strong-box, and an American gang, led by Lasky (Berger), to kill the Mexicans.

        It takes a very long time, too long, to find all this out, and by that point, I ceased to care. Berger is a good actor, one that fits very well into the greed-fill world of Spaghetti's, but isn't given anything interesting to do and is wasted completely. Kinski obviously was doing his role for the money, which is a shame, as his is, career wise the best actor in the film. Garko has a good opening line ("I am your pallbearer."), but not much else, and doesn't have the same magnetic presence as Clint Eastwood or Lee Van Cleef.

        The director made "Sartana" and other "Circus" Westerns like this. They're called "Circus" Westerns because there is so much jumping around and choreographed back-flips that you might be watching a kung-fu movie and not a Spaghetti. The sets here aren't so much grand as big, to accommodate all the acrobatics; it has a hefty budget, but the desert scenes are shot in some quarry. Why? I suspect because Parolini was more interest in making an action film that just happened to be set in the West than creating a Western. These types of Spaghetti's were certainly very popular in their day, and they gave a lifeline to an ailing genre a few years later. I just wish the lifeline had been better. Maybe saying this movie is an insult to the genre is too strong, but when you see progressive and transcendent Spaghetti Westerns like "Black Jack" and "Once Upon a Time in the West" that were made in the same year, you realise how lazy this film is.
        7marc-366

        He is your Pallbearer

        Sartana (played superbly by John Garko) has one of the greatest entrances on screen of all the Spaghetti protagonists. When accused of looking like a scarecrow, he utters the classic line "I am your pallbearer" before gunning down all the bandits facing him. A classic moment, with the black clad Sartana setting the scene perfectly for this Gothic tinged western.

        The story itself is a very complicated affair, and one which I'm not completely sure I followed from beginning to end (I blame the wine consumption). In simple terms, the story evolves around a stagecoach robbery and murder (with the culprits themselves hijacked and massacred by Lasky - played by the ever brilliant William Berger - and his gang). Enter Sartana, in the midst of further double crossing and more double crossing. And cue bloodshed aplenty!

        Sartana combines the gadgetry of Parolini's later Sabata movies, with the darkness and brutality of Django. There are classic performances from Garko and Berger together with the familiar faces of Fernando Sancho and Klaus Kinski.

        The success of Sartana is clearly demonstrated by the string of sequels (and name-checks) that followed. And rightly so, the character is in equal parts cool, mysterious and deadly. Much like the film. I just wish I understood it better (time to put away the bottle, and rewind the video perhaps).

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        Related interests

        Clint Eastwood in The Good, the Bad and the Ugly (1966)
        Spaghetti Western
        Bruce Willis in Die Hard (1988)
        Action
        Mahershala Ali and Alex R. Hibbert in Moonlight (2016)
        Drama
        Jack Nicholson and Faye Dunaway in Chinatown (1974)
        Mystery
        John Wayne and Harry Carey Jr. in The Searchers (1956)
        Western

        Storyline

        Edit

        Did you know

        Edit
        • Trivia
          On the Norwegian cover of the VHS tape, it does not have the name of the main star, Gianni Garko. Only the names of the co-stars Klaus Kinski, Willam Berger and Sidney Chaplin.
        • Goofs
          At the end of the film, large clouds of dust and hay billow in the street, yet the leaves on the tree in the foreground are perfectly still. The dust and hay are obviously being blown by large fans off-camera.
        • Quotes

          El moreno: You look just like a scarecrow.

          Sartana: I am your pallbearer.

        • Connections
          Featured in Denn sie kennen kein Erbarmen - Der Italowestern (2006)

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        FAQ14

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        Details

        Edit
        • Release date
          • August 14, 1968 (Italy)
        • Countries of origin
          • Italy
          • West Germany
        • Languages
          • English
          • Italian
          • Spanish
          • Latin
        • Also known as
          • Gunfighters Die Harder
        • Filming locations
          • Manziana, Rome, Lazio, Italy
        • Production companies
          • Paris Etolie Films
          • Parnass Film
        • See more company credits at IMDbPro

        Box office

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        • Budget
          • ITL 137,000,000 (estimated)
        See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

        Tech specs

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        • Runtime
          • 1h 35m(95 min)
        • Sound mix
          • Mono
        • Aspect ratio
          • 1.85 : 1

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