+

poster of A Pistol for Ringo
Rating: 6.2/10 by 66 users

A Pistol for Ringo (1965)

Giuliano Gemma stars as a cool, cocky mercenary enlisted by a sheriff to infiltrate a ruthless gang of outlaws. Ennio Morricone provided the score to this early spaghetti western hit.

Directing:
  • Duccio Tessari
  • María Teresa Font
  • Mahnahén Velasco
Writing:
  • Duccio Tessari
  • Duccio Tessari
Stars:
Release Date: Wed, May 12, 1965

Rating: 6.2/10 by 66 users

Alternative Title:
Eine Pistole für Ringo - DE
金槍客獨闖鬼門關 - HK
A Gun For Ringo - HK

Country:
Italy
Spain
Language:
Italiano
Runtime: 01 hour 38 minutes
Budget: $0
Revenue: $0

Plot Keyword: hostage, ranch, mexican border, hopscotch

Juan Cazalilla
Mr. Jenkinson - Bank director
Pablito Alonso
Chico - Mexican boy
Nazzareno Zamperla
Sancho's gang member
Jose Halufi
Sancho's gang member
George Martin
Ben - the sheriff
Juan Torres
Henry - Bank clerk
Frank Oliveras
Bandit (uncredited)
Duccio Tessari
Deputy Sheriff (uncredited)

John Chard

Somebody has come for Christmas! Una pistola per Ringo (A Pistol for Ringo) is directed and predominantly written by Duccio Tessari. It stars Giuliano Gemma, Fernando Sancho, Lorella De Luca, Nieves Navarro and Antonio Casas. Music is by Ennio Morricone and cinematography by Francisco Marin. When a gang of bandit bank robbers hole up at a rich family's hacienda - taking all who reside there as hostages - the authorities free the gunman known as "Angel Face" from prison to ingratiate himself into the bandit horde. His mission is to destroy from within and free the innocent... Filmed in Technicolor/Techniscope out of the familiar Spaghetti Western stomping grounds of Almeria in Spain, A Pistol for Ringo is a very enjoyable piece of pasta. From the quirky sight that greets us at pic's beginning, where our anti-hero gunman with the baby face plays hopscotch with children - then quickly dispatching four enemies enemies in the blink of an eye - to the wholly satisfying finale, it's quirky yet dramatic entertainment. Set at Xmas time, Duccio enjoys dallying with the season's motifs as part of the narrative, and even Morricone gets in on the act, imbuing his varied score with seasonal strains (the Silent Night section simply wonderful). Gemma is very likable in the lead role, helped enormously by a screenplay that introduces a character that uses cunning whiles that are as deadly as his pistol skills. He is also very athletic (no doubt boosted by the calcium from all the milk he drinks), which brings some energy to the narrative. What action there is is brisk and zippy, with heaps of horse and stuntman felling going on, and little stabs of humorous violence (the bell shot oh my) induce smiles. Add in a couple of verbally jousting babes (Luca and Navarro) and Sancho as a bulky and moody bastardo, and yer good to go for one of the better Spags of the time. 7/10


My Favorite

Welcome back!

Support Us

Like Movienade?

Please buy us a coffee

scan qr code