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1969 • Western • 91m

Cemetery Without Crosses

"Her thirst for revenge made his guns shoot to kill"

63

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78 critic reviews

65%

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A melancholic gunfighter is drawn into a vengeful and tragic kidnapping plot by his widowed ex-lover.

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Top Cast

Robert Hossein
Robert Hossein
Manuel
Michèle Mercier
Michèle Mercier
Maria Caine
Guido Lollobrigida
Guido Lollobrigida
Thomas Caine
Daniele Vargas
Daniele Vargas
Will Rogers
Serge Marquand
Serge Marquand
Larry Rogers
Pierre Hatet
Pierre Hatet
Frank Rogers
Philippe Baronnet
Philippe Baronnet
Bud Rogers
Pierre Collet
Pierre Collet
Sheriff Ben
Ivano Staccioli
Ivano Staccioli
Vallee
Béatrice Altariba
Béatrice Altariba
Saloon Woman
Michel Lemoine
Michel Lemoine
Eli Caine
Anne-Marie Balin
Anne-Marie Balin
Johanna
Benito Stefanelli
Benito Stefanelli
Ben Caine (uncredited)
Fabio Testi
Fabio Testi
Rogers' Man (uncredited)
José Canalejas
José Canalejas
Vallee Brother (uncredited)
Saturno Cerra
Saturno Cerra
Rogers Ranch Hand (uncredited)
Álvaro de Luna
Álvaro de Luna
Deputy Sheriff (uncredited)
Maria Gustafsson
Maria Gustafsson
Saloon Girl (uncredited)
Writer: Claude DesaillyDirector: Robert HosseinWriter: Robert HosseinWriter: Dario ArgentoProducer: Jean-Pierre LabatutExecutive Producer: Jean-Charles Raffini

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Reviews

John Chard
2014-03-30
80%

The Black Glove Man. Une corde, un Colt (AKA: Cemetery Without Crosses) is directed by Robert Hossein, who also stars and co-writes the screenplay with Dario Argento and Claude Desailly. Starring alongside Hossein are Michèle Mercier, Anne-Marie Balin, Daniele Vargas, Guido Lollobrigida and Serge Marquand. Music is by Andre Hossein and cinematography by Henri Persin. After being forced to watch the lynching of her husband by the ruthless Rogers family, Maria Caine (Mercier) asks her inept brothers-in-law for help in retribution. Getting no joy from the pair, she seeks outside help in the form of fast gun Manuel (Hossein), a loner living in solitude out at a ghost town... It's dedicated to Sergio Leone, who directs one of the best scenes in the film, contains the Argento factor, so it's not really a shock to proclaim that Leone's influence is all over Hossein's movie. It's a Pasta Western that operates in the void between the real and the spirit world, deliberately ethereal in tone, even sprinkling dashes of the surreal onto the hearty portion. Dialogue is used sparingly, but not to the detriment of films quality, and Hossein the director dallies in black and white staging, slow zooms and excellent usage of sound effects. Much like the dialogue, the violence is pared down, there's no Blunderbuss infused blood laden approach to the evil that men do here, it's all very controlled and in keeping with the tonal flows that Hossein favours. The cliché's of the sub-genre are adhered to throughout, thankfully so, while the finale is suitably melancholic. Thoughtful, sombre and ripe with blurry ambiguity, Cemetery Without Crosses is comfortably recommended to the Euro Western fan. 8/10

Wuchak
2019-08-29
50%

***Moody, serious, proficient but flat Spaghetti Western by Robert Hossein*** An ex-gunfighter living in a ghost town in the Southwest (Robert Hossein) decides to assist the wife (Michèle Mercier) of a friend that was unjustly lynched by the rough ruling family of the area, the Rogers. “Cemetery without Crosses” (1969) is a Euro Western (French / Italian / Spanish) originally titled “A Rope… a Colt…” (translated). Director/writer/star Robert Hossein was admittedly inspired by Sergio Leone and you can see the influence of “For a Few Dollars More” (1965). Speaking of which, one of the best scenes in the movie, the amusing dinner sequence at the Rogers’ ranch, was guest-directed by Sergio Leone. This is a competent Spaghetti Western with a quality score, the usual Spanish locations and a good cast with three beautiful women (Mercier, Anne-Marie Balin & Béatrice Altariba). I like the serious tone, the ambiance and attractive cinematography, but it’s too flat of an experience, disregarding the dinner scene. Simply put, it becomes one-dimensional and tedious as it moves along. “The Hellbenders,” aka “The Cruel Ones” (1967), was less proficient, but at least it entertained. “Doc” (1971) is a good comparison, but it had a superior cast and way more perks. Even “Navajo Joe” (1966) is more memorable IMHO. But if you like Euro Westerns give it a try. Some cinephiles rave about it. The film runs 1 hour, 30 minutes, and was shot in Almería, Andalucía, Spain. GRADE: C+/B-

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Keywords

Details

Status
Released
Origin
FR, IT
Languages
French, Italian, Spanish
Studios
Les Films Copernic, Loisirs du Monde, Fono Roma

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