Seven Guns for the MacGregors

1968 film
  • Enzo Dell' Aquila
  • Fernando di Leo
  • David Moreno
  • Duccio Tessari[1]
Story byDavid Moreno[1]Produced byDario Sabatello[2]Starring
  • Robert Woods
  • Manolo Zarzo
  • Fernando Sancho
  • Agata Flory
CinematographyAlejandro Ulloa[3]Edited by
  • Mario Morra
  • Nino Baragli[3]
Music byEnnio Morricone[3]
Production
companies
  • Jolly Film
  • Produzione D.S.
  • Estela Films[3]
Distributed byU.N.I.D.I.S
Release date
1966Countries

Seven Guns for the MacGregors (Italian: Sette pistole per i MacGregor) is a Technicolor 1966 Spaghetti Western. It is the directorial debut film of Franco Giraldi (here credited as Frank Garfield), who was Sergio Leone's assistant in A Fistful of Dollars.[5] The film gained a great commercial success and generated an immediate sequel, Up the MacGregors! (1967), again directed by Giraldi,[5][6]

Plot

The MacGregors, horse ranchers of Scottish descent, are underway to the market when they are robbed of their horses by a gang under the helm of a corrupt sheriff. One of the brothers infiltrates the gang but his first attempt tries to play them backfires.

Cast

Release

Seven Guns for the MacGregors was released ins 1966.[4] It was distributed by U.N.I.D.I.S. in Italy.[3] The film was followed by the sequel Up the MacGregors! featuring overlapping plot and character similarities.[2]

Reception

In contemporary reviews, from "Japa." of Variety found the film to have a "predictable but fast moving plotline" noting that the "offbeat flavor of having the Scottish MacGregor clan living in the rough in 19th century Texas gives this Italian western an added zing., helping overcome simplistic scripting and pedestrian direction." and that the film "avoids pitfalls of many overblown Italo-made westerns which tend to become over philosophical and dramatic in their approach to violence and love in the old west."[2] A review in the Monthly Film Bulletin noted that the films "colour is so variable and that the script plays it straight around the middle, where the blood-letting makes an uneasy contrast with the tongue-incheek bravado of the earlier scenes."[1]

References

Footnotes

  1. ^ a b c "7 Pistole Per I Macgregor (7 Guns for the MacGregors), Italy/Spain, 1965". Monthly Film Bulletin. Vol. 34, no. 405. British Film Institute. October 1967. p. 158.
  2. ^ a b c Variety's Film Reviews 1968-1970. Vol. 12. R. R. Bowker. 1983. There are no page numbers in this book. This entry is found under the header "December 4, 1968". ISBN 0-8352-2792-8.
  3. ^ a b c d e "7 pistolas para los McGregor [7 pistole per i MacGregor] (1966)" (in Italian). Archivio del Cinema Italiano. Retrieved 20 September 2019.
  4. ^ a b Grant 2011, p. 443.
  5. ^ a b Marco Giusti (2007). Dizionario del western all'italiana. Mondadori, 2007. p. 546. ISBN 978-88-04-57277-0.
  6. ^ Hughes, p.106

Sources

  • Grant, Kevin (2011). Any Gun Can Play. Fab Press. ISBN 9781903254615.
  • Hughes, Howard (2004). Once Upon a Time in the Italian West. I. B. Tauris. ISBN 1-85043-430-1.

External links

  • Seven Guns for the MacGregors at IMDb Edit this at Wikidata
  • Seven Guns for the MacGregors at AllMovie


  • v
  • t
  • e
Stub icon

This 1960s Western film–related article is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.

  • v
  • t
  • e