2 out of 2 people found the following review useful:
SARTANA IN THE VALLEY OF DEATH {Edited Version} (Roberto Mauri, 1970) **, 9 February 2008
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Author:
MARIO GAUCI (marrod@melita.com) from Naxxar, Malta
This is the first entry I've watched in a long-running series of
Spaghetti Westerns revolving around the titular figure, played here by
William Berger; as such, he displays no particular features that would
make him stand out from similar anti-heroes (such as The Man With No
Name or Django) and, in fact, is never even referred to by that
nickname! Incidentally, this seems to have been considerably trimmed
for American export given that the running-time is a mere 79 minutes;
what remains is a thinly-plotted affair which virtually resolves itself
into one long chase! Incidentally, the R2 C'Est La Vie DVD sports
German credit titles and even the first spoken bits of dialogue is in
that language!
Sartana springs a trio of no-good brothers from jail intending to cut
in on a fortune in gold that awaits them; however, the latter soon
double-cross him and he's stranded on foot and without provisions in
Death Valley (hence the title) they also get even with their former
associates (including puppet-maker Luciano Pigozzi) for letting them
take the rap. Eventually, of course, Sartana catches up with the gang
taking some time-out to romance a gal who aided in his
convalescence
but she too turns out to be harboring ideas above her
station! At the finale, the 'outlaw' is revealed to be a courier for
the American cavalry entrusted with a crucial message and his reward
for the accomplishment of said mission is that he gets to keep the
brothers' gold for himself! For the record, the song playing over the
opening credits "King For A Day" is quite decent and is even warbled,
for no good reason, by a blonde bar-room chanteuse at one point in the
film.
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