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SARTANA'S HERE, TRADE YOUR PISTOLS FOR A COFFIN
aka C'e Sartana… vendi la pistola e comprati la bara! (I), Vende la pistola y comprate la tumba (Es), Django arrive, préparez vos cerceuils (Fr), Django und Sabata - wie blutige Geier (WG), Guns for Dollars (US video)
1970
Italy/Spain
Colt Produzioni Cin.che (Rome), Hispamer Film (Madrid)
Director: Anthony Ascott [Giuliano Carnimeo]
Story & screenplay: Tito Carpi
Music: Francesco De Masi
Cinematography: Stelvio Massi {Techniscope - Technicolor}
Editor: Ornella Micheli
Set design: Stefano Bulgarelli
Cameraman:
Filmed:
Original running time: 95 mins
Release information: Registered 21.07.70. Italy (07.08.70, 95 mins), France (Paris, 06.12.72, 90 mins), West Germany (26.11.70, 89 mins), Spain (30.07.73)
Cast: George Hilton (Sartana), Charles Southwood (Sabbath), Erika Blanc (Trixie), Piero Lulli (Spencer), Linda Sini (Maldito) Nello Pazzafini (Mantis, a bandit) Carlo Gaddi (Baxter), Aldo Barberito (Angelo, a barman), Mario Zuanelli (a Mantis bandit), Lu Kamante [Luciano Rossi] (Clint Fossett), Rick Boyd [Federico Boido] (Joe Fossett), Gigi Bonos (Cameron, a barman), Gaetano Imbro, Spartaco Conversi (a Mantis bandit), Umberto Di Grazia
Uncreditd: Fortunato Arena (a Mexican peasant), Janos Bartha (the Sheriff), Furio Meniconi (Romero, a Mantis henchman)

Available on DVD as Fistful of Lead

This entry saw Hilton take over from Gianni Garko as the titular character in the popular Sartana series. There is a corresponding change in atmosphere too, with the gothic machismo of the earlier four entries giving way to a preponderance of the type of humour that perforates virtually all of Giuliano Carmineo's collaborations with his favourite actor.

For a plot we are given the regulation 'lots of people seek to con each other out of a large amount of gold' scenario. The main participants - apart from Sartana himself, of course - include a corrupt banker (Piero Lulli), a crazed Mexican bandito (the always-excellent Nello Pazzafini) and a pair of ludicrous low-rent psycho brothers (a dream-team pairing of Rick Boyd and Luciano Rossi). There's also an extremely camp fellow called Sabbath (Charles Southwood) gadding around in a lovely white costume, daintily drinking tea and talking about his mother!

The style is pure comic book, with cynically malicious direction combining with superb photography, fine music and eccentric set pieces. There are jokes aplenty (such as Pazzafini shooting the petals off a sunflower one by one whilst repeatedly proclaiming "I am faster than Sartana…He is faster than me…"), but they fortunately don't intrude on the plot that much.

For some reason this really reminded me of Sam Raimi's excellent Sharon Stone vehicle The Quick and the Dead. Don't ask me why, though.

Kevin Grant also asked me to mention that one of his favourite film quotes ("On your feet mister. And keep your hands away from that loaf of bread") happens to come from this film.

Matt B