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DJANGO KILL... IF YOU LIVE, SHOOT! 1967 Original HD Trailer

Django Kill… If You Live, Shoot! (1967) - Cult Film Index Review

If the spaghetti western ever had a true acid nightmare, it's Django Kill… If You Live, Shoot! (1967). Giulio Questi's film, his directorial debut, and a film Questi himself wanted to simply call If You Live, Shoot! Before producers added the Django tie-in, it didn't just bend the genre; it tore it apart. Written by Questi and Franco "Kim" Arcalli, Arcalli later became a pivotal collaborator with Bertolucci and Antonioni on films like The Passenger and 1900, with Ivan Vandor's eerie, dissonant score deepening the sense of psychic collapse. The film was withdrawn from Italian cinemas within a week of release due to censorship complaints and was cut from 117 to 95 minutes.
The story opens with one of the genre's great resurrection images: a nameless half-breed Stranger (Tomas Milian) clawing his way out of a mass grave after being betrayed during a gold robbery by Oaks (Piero Lulli) and his white gang members. His arrival in the town of "The Unhappy Place" is less a return than an infection. Bill Templer (Milo Quesada) and the corrupt townspeople battle over the gold, while Sorrow (Roberto Camardiel) commands a flamboyantly attired gang whose homoerotic menace is among the film's most deliberately destabilizing elements.

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Видео DJANGO KILL... IF YOU LIVE, SHOOT! 1967 Original HD Trailer канала Cult Film
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