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One Damned Day at Dawn... Django Meets Sartana!

Original title: Quel maledetto giorno d'inverno... Django e Sartana all'ultimo sangue
  • 1970
  • 1h 30m
IMDb RATING
4.9/10
368
YOUR RATING
One Damned Day at Dawn... Django Meets Sartana! (1970)
Spaghetti WesternDramaWestern

The small desert town of Black City is held in a reign of terror by a nasty gang of criminals lead by the ruthless Bud Willer. Earnest, but inexperienced Sheriff Jack Ronson arrives in town ... Read allThe small desert town of Black City is held in a reign of terror by a nasty gang of criminals lead by the ruthless Bud Willer. Earnest, but inexperienced Sheriff Jack Ronson arrives in town to establish law and order. Mysterious bounty hunter Django helps Ronson out.The small desert town of Black City is held in a reign of terror by a nasty gang of criminals lead by the ruthless Bud Willer. Earnest, but inexperienced Sheriff Jack Ronson arrives in town to establish law and order. Mysterious bounty hunter Django helps Ronson out.

  • Director
    • Demofilo Fidani
  • Writers
    • Demofilo Fidani
    • Mila Vitelli Valenza
  • Stars
    • Jack Betts
    • Fabio Testi
    • Dino Strano
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    4.9/10
    368
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Demofilo Fidani
    • Writers
      • Demofilo Fidani
      • Mila Vitelli Valenza
    • Stars
      • Jack Betts
      • Fabio Testi
      • Dino Strano
    • 14User reviews
    • 10Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos16

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    Top cast20

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    Jack Betts
    Jack Betts
    • Django
    • (as Hunt Powers)
    Fabio Testi
    Fabio Testi
    • Sartana…
    Dino Strano
    • Bud Willer
    • (as Dean Stratford)
    Benito Pacifico
    • Paco Sanchez
    • (as Dennis Colt)
    Attilio Dottesio
    Attilio Dottesio
    • McLaren
    • (as Dan Reesy)
    Joel Moore
    Michele Branca
    • Sanchez Henchman
    • (as Michael Brank)
    Celso Faria
    • Frank Cutler
    Roberto Danesi
    • Mordera
    • (as Robert Dannish)
    Luciano Conti
    Luciano Conti
    • Sanchez Henchman
    • (as Lucky McMurray)
    Simonetta Vitelli
    Simonetta Vitelli
    • Peter's Widow
    • (as Simone Blondell)
    Mariella Palmich
    • Dolores
    Franco Pasquetto
    • Peter Sturges
    Pietro Torrisi
    Pietro Torrisi
    • Paco, the giant
    Antonio Basile
    • Bart
    Calogero Caruana
    • Sheriff Mason
    Luciano Pallotta
    Alba Maiolini
    Alba Maiolini
    • Mourning Woman
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Demofilo Fidani
    • Writers
      • Demofilo Fidani
      • Mila Vitelli Valenza
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews14

    4.9368
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    Featured reviews

    5Leofwine_draca

    Mediocre western hiding behind a rip-off title

    ONE DAMNED DAY AT DAWN...DJANGO MEETS SARTANA! would have you believe it chronicles a meeting between those two icons of spaghetti western cinema, yet, as with so many others, the title is a misnomer and the names seem to have been added in post-production. That's particularly true in the case of Sartana (Fabio Testi), a rather weak and weedy sheriff who finds himself at the mercy of a criminal gang in this movie. At least Django is clad in black and thus looks the part...

    This middling western involves the usual clichéd gang of criminals wreaking havoc in a western town and bumping off anybody who gets in their way. When Sartana arrives in town to clean things up he finds himself with his hands full, so the silent and brooding Django steps in to help out. ONE DAMNED DAY AT DAWN... is full of action, but none of it is particularly impressive, with non-existent choreography and a whole lot of familiarity in the events that play out. The storyline is straightforward at best.

    Jack Betts (under the pseudonym Hunt Powers) successfully conveys Django's brooding persona, but Fabio Testi is a disappointment in this. His character is irritating and he only comes into his own at the climax. None of the others in the cast stand out. Director Demofilo Fidani made a career in cut-rate westerns but I suspect most of them are of second-rate quality, like this. Only a few scenes, like the bit with the arm wrestling and the candles, are memorable.
    3planktonrules

    This Django ain't quite Django....get it?

    The word 'Django' is really irrelevant in many westerns, as most have nothing to do with the original Franco Nero film "Django". It's NOT the same character and producers tossed the word into titles hoping to lure unsuspecting folks to the theaters looking for a Django film. Now, it's even more confusing with the recent release of the Quentin Tarantino film "Django Unchained"--yet another film that really is not about Django! As for "Django Meets Sartana", it's yet another non-Django film! Confusing, huh?!

    The film begins with a new sheriff arriving in a town that hasn't seen the law in years. Not surprisingly, the place is overrun by bandits and Jack Ronson (aka 'Sartana'; Fabio Testi) has his hands full. When a bounty hunter named Django (Jack Betts) arrives soon after, Ronson has a new ally to help him get rid of the thugs.

    So is this Django film worth seeing? Well, probably not unless you absolutely adore Italian westerns which are poorly written. The fight between Sartana and Django makes no sense at all--nor does their dialog in this scene. Plus, with the big shootout with the final group of baddies, one of the men has a clear shot at the Sheriff--but runs up some stairs in order to give the guy a chance to shoot him! The film also seems to have little in the way of unique plot--just one killing after another after another. Sure, there are some decent moments, but the film itself has little to differentiate it from several hundred other Italian westerns. Well, that isn't 100% true--it IS the only western I've ever seen where the Sheriff and the leader of the baddies arm wrestle to show who's the toughest hombre!!

    By the way, although Jack Betts may not be a name you recognize, this handsome actor later became quite famous in soap operas. The reason you might not recognize him as the same guy is that in "Django Meets Sartana", he had brown hair--not his signature silver hair. Also, note the one battle where it's six against Django. Django's gun CLEARLY shoots more than six shots without reloading (he shoots one guy, the boss, twice)!! Not only is he cool, but he apparently has the ability to defy physics!!

    Why I did not adore the original "Django", it's sure a lot better than this tripe. Not one of Italy's finer moments in the film world.
    DanielKing

    One damned day in the afternoon ... I watched this movie

    As with most of the follow-ups to DJANGO this bears all the signs of having been tampered with in post-production in order to accommodate the most tenuous of links to that successful series. In this case, however, the makers have decided to double their money, or hedge their bets, depending on which way you look at it, by attempting to cash in on not one but two series. Not having seen any Sartana movies I cannot comment on how well this has been accomplished but in the case of Django I have to say it bears little resemblance to Fulci's DJANGO THE RUNNER let alone Corbucci's original. I spent most of the film under the impression that the man in black would turn out to be Sartana but in fact he was Django and the most spurious of reasons was given for making Sheriff Ronson that Sartana character.

    That aside what was the film like in itself? Well there was almost nothing about it to mark it in any way unusual. All the customary genre cliches were in place, with a few added touches to put it down as a shoddy spaghetti western: leering close ups, sweaty villains, sporadic violence, rudimentary characterisation, and so on. Unfortunately there was none of the sub-genre's visual flair to take your mind off the banality of the plot.
    5FightingWesterner

    Technically Well Made But Mediocre

    Fabio Testi takes a job as the new sheriff in a lawless town besieged by two ruthless gangs. Meanwhile, tough mystery man Hunt Powers also arrives to take care of some unfinished business. Considering the title of the film, you can pretty much guess who these two strangers turn out to be!

    A derivative, so-so spaghetti western, One Damned Day At Dawn...Django Meets Sartana! has good atmosphere, production values, and two decent actors in the title roles, just not a very good script.

    As in all three films I've seen from director Miles Deem, it's just too rushed and sloppy for it's own good, though not as bad as the other two.

    I would recommend this only for people who have already seen everything else.
    6Bezenby

    Ho-hum

    Fabio Testi, dressed as Tom Baker in Doctor Who, turns up in a windy town and announces that he's the new sheriff. That's all fine and dandy, the locals say, but then they point out that there's a bunch of Mexican jerks that ride into town now and again to steal stuff, and that lot are affiliated with an even bigger bunch of jerks, who think they run the town and make a big show of playing 'keep away' with Fabio's gun, pulling his pigtails and making fun of his really long scarf.

    Testi, unable to stand up to these bullies, goes back to his sheriff's office to mope and listen to The Cure. Shaken, he's now got to figure out how to get rid of these guys, but what you're thinking is "Well buddy the most important plot point I'd like to know is how these two bad guy gangs got together – that'll help the momentum of the film greatly". You're in luck, because we get a flashback that goes on for so long I wasn't sure if the film had moved on to some future bank heist involving the bad guys.

    Hunt Powers is here too as Django (but dressed as Sartana) and maybe he's the answer to Testi's problems, seeing as he appears to have a six- shooter that can fire twelve or more bullets with being reloaded! He's also not a timid pussy like Testi's character.

    Director Fidani is not so much the 'Ed Wood' of Spaghetti Western so much as a he is a trailblazer for how utterly trashy Italian cinema would become after the money started drying up. Here, he fills the film with everything he can think of – laughing bad guys, drinking, food eating, punch ups, gunfights at dawn, wind, punch ups, walking, looking, smelling, fire, glass raising, blinking, punch ups, shaving, roof climbing, Mexican doing the Times crossword, crossing streets, looking out of windows, looking into windows, pouring beer, brushing dust off of trousers, smoking cigars, Ames taping, hyperfine splitting, horse riding, squinting, scarf wearing, stereographic projection mapping, opening doors, crying, sitting, Morphological analysis and re- examination of the taxonomic circumscription of Acosmium, drooling, pointing, putting socks on, tracklaying and resignalling for the East London Line extension, baking, wriggling toes, scratching, wondering, The implementation of the AMPHORA2 workflow for phylogenetic analysis of metagenomic shotgun sequencing data, stirring, singing, farting, flirting, punch ups, etc.

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    Related interests

    Clint Eastwood in The Good, the Bad and the Ugly (1966)
    Spaghetti Western
    Mahershala Ali and Alex R. Hibbert in Moonlight (2016)
    Drama
    John Wayne and Harry Carey Jr. in The Searchers (1956)
    Western

    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Connections
      Edited into Down with Your Hands... You Scum! (1971)

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • June 25, 1970 (Italy)
    • Country of origin
      • Italy
    • Language
      • Italian
    • Also known as
      • Django Meets Sartana
    • Filming locations
      • Elios Film, Rome, Lazio, Italy(studio: filmed at Elios Film-Rome)
    • Production companies
      • Tarquinia Film
      • CIA
      • Tarquinia Cinematografica
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      • 1h 30m(90 min)
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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