A Town Called Bastard (1971)

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(A Town Called Hell)


Country: GB/SP
Technical: col/scope 95m
Director: Robert Parrish
Cast: Robert Shaw, Stella Stevens, Telly Savalas, Martin Landau, Michael Craig, Fernando Rey, Dudley Sutton

Synopsis:

A woman arrives in an accursed Mexican town with a reward for the man who killed her husband ten years before. The governor accepts the task but is unaware that the town's former antagonist is now a priest, whose interest in turn is piqued by the arrival of a Colonel he recognizes from Revolution days.

Review:

Anglo-Saxon spaghetti western - or whatever one should call it - all the more fascinating for its weirdly mythic scenario, perverse violence and unusual casting. Hardly coherent, but stylish.

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(A Town Called Hell)


Country: GB/SP
Technical: col/scope 95m
Director: Robert Parrish
Cast: Robert Shaw, Stella Stevens, Telly Savalas, Martin Landau, Michael Craig, Fernando Rey, Dudley Sutton

Synopsis:

A woman arrives in an accursed Mexican town with a reward for the man who killed her husband ten years before. The governor accepts the task but is unaware that the town's former antagonist is now a priest, whose interest in turn is piqued by the arrival of a Colonel he recognizes from Revolution days.

Review:

Anglo-Saxon spaghetti western - or whatever one should call it - all the more fascinating for its weirdly mythic scenario, perverse violence and unusual casting. Hardly coherent, but stylish.

(A Town Called Hell)


Country: GB/SP
Technical: col/scope 95m
Director: Robert Parrish
Cast: Robert Shaw, Stella Stevens, Telly Savalas, Martin Landau, Michael Craig, Fernando Rey, Dudley Sutton

Synopsis:

A woman arrives in an accursed Mexican town with a reward for the man who killed her husband ten years before. The governor accepts the task but is unaware that the town's former antagonist is now a priest, whose interest in turn is piqued by the arrival of a Colonel he recognizes from Revolution days.

Review:

Anglo-Saxon spaghetti western - or whatever one should call it - all the more fascinating for its weirdly mythic scenario, perverse violence and unusual casting. Hardly coherent, but stylish.