An innocent man sentenced to ten years in prison for a crime he did not commit, is released from jail, promising to seek revenge on the guilty.
Klaus Kinski
Gary Hamilton
Peter Carsten
Acombar
Marcella Michelangeli
Maria
Guido Lollobrigida
Miguel Santamaria
Antonio Cantafora
Dick Acombar
Giuliano Raffaelli
Doctor
Luciano Pigozzi
Francisco Santamaria
Lucio De Santis
Jim Santamaria
María Luisa Sala
Rosy
Furio Meniconi
Mike
Luigi Bonos
Joe
Joaquín Blanco
Marco Morelli
Giacomo Furia
Franco Gulà
Ettore Arena
Paul Costello
Alberigo Donadeo
Osiride Pevarello
Renzo Pevarello
Amerigo Santarelli
Director, Screenplay
Antonio Margheriti
Screenplay, Story
Giovanni Addessi
December 14, 2013
8
For Whom the Bell Tolls.
And God said to Cain (E Dio Disse a Caino) is directed by Antonio Margheriti, who also co-writes the screenplay with Giovanni Addessi. It stars Klaus Kinski, Peter Carsten, Marcella Michelangeli, Guido Lollobrigida and Antonio Cantafora. Music is by Carlo Savina and cinematography by Riccardo Pallottini and Luciano Trasatti.
When Gary Hamilton (Kinski) receives a pardon from his sentence at a prison work camp, he has only one thing on his mind; revenge on those responsible for his unfair incarceration.
A ghost returns and he'll have, he'll have only one desire in his heart, only one thirst: Revenge.
How wonderful, a Spaghetti Western/horror hybrid with scary Kinski as an avenging angel good guy! For the first 30 minutes the film looks to be building up a head of steam for a standardised Spaghetti Western, but things shift once Hamilton approaches town and night begins to fall. From here the film plays out as a Gothic horror involving Western characters, resplendent with big creepy mansion set in a shifty looking town that is cloaked in murky moonlight.
The whole town teeters on the edge of panic as they know who is coming to visit on this dark night. Atmosphere is tightly coiled as things move in the shadows, windows blow open, strange sounds emanate on the impending storm, and the stench of death is everywhere. A bell tolls ominously, birds flee the vicinity, all while Hamilton moves about the town with deadly silence, even using a network of catacombs under the town that were left over from an aged Indian cemetery.
The production value isn't high, but Margheriti maximises what is at his disposal to great ends. The sound effects work is simply terrific, with the shrill of the birds and the dripping water in the caverns playing a tune being particularly striking. There's inventive deaths, sublime scenes (love that rider less horse sequence and the Orson Welles mirror homage) and Kinski being ace as a ghoulish phantom taking a string from the bow of the Count of Monte Cristo.
It's also great to find that Margheriti and Addessi give strength to the picture by way of psychological smarts within the characterisations. This is not merely a spooky revenge story, a chance to pile the bodies up, there is substance to the main players, their motives and means, their frailties and family fractures brutally laid bare. The dialogue is sometimes naff, the cliche's of Spaghetti Westerns rife, and of course not all the visual effects work like they should, but this is one moody and memorable movie that is well worth seeking out if you can see a decent enough print of it. 8/10
Status:
Released
Original Language:
Italian
Budget:
$0.00
Revenue:
$0.00