The Forgotten Pistolero

1969 film
  • 17 October 1969 (1969-10-17)
Running time
91 minutesCountriesItaly
SpainLanguageItalian

The Forgotten Pistolero (Italian: Il pistolero dell'Ave Maria, lit. "The Gunman of Hail Mary") is a 1969 Italian Spaghetti Western film co-written and directed by Ferdinando Baldi. The film is a western adaptation of the Greek myth of Orestes, subject of three famous drama-plays by Aeschylus, Sophocles and Euripides.[1][2] Ulrich P. Bruckner puts it among the "most interesting and most touching Spaghetti Westerns of the late sixties".[3]

Plot

When he returns home from war the Mexican general Juan Carrasco is killed by the lover of his wife Anna and by Anna as well. The victim's children run away with their nanny but fifteen years later they come back for revenge. Anna and Tomas want to have them killed but their henchmen failed to do so. It turns out that Anna is not the real mother of the dead general's children.

Cast

Releases

Wild East Productions released this on a limited edition DVD in 2007 with The Unholy Four.

See also

References

  1. ^ "The Forgotten Pistolero Review". Spaghetti Western. Retrieved 3 December 2011.
  2. ^ José Vicente Bañuls; Francesco De Martino; Carmen Morenilla. El teatro greco-latino y su recepción en la tradición occidental. Levante, 2006. p. 160.
  3. ^ Ulrich P. Bruckner. Für ein paar Leichen mehr: der Italo-Western von seinen Anfängen bis heute. Schwarzkopf & Schwarzkopf, 2006. p. 313.

External links

  • The Forgotten Pistolero at IMDb Edit this at Wikidata
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Family
Films
Operas
Literature
  • Oresteia (458 BC, Aeschylus)
  • Electra (c. 413 BC, Euripides)
  • Orestes (c. 408 BC, Euripides)
  • Electra (c. 405 BC, Sophocles)
  • Electra (1937, Giraudoux)
  • The Flies (1943, Sartre)
  • Elektra (1971, Wijesinha)
  • Mourning Becomes Electra (1931, O'Neill)
  • Elektra (1981, Marvel)
Art


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