#WilliamBerger
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thedeadandthecure · 8 years ago
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So what was I telling you? That I'm a dirty whore. That's why I'm taking a shower... at least now I'll be a clean whore. #cinquebamboleperlalunadagosto #cincobonecaspelaluadeagosto #mariobava #edwigefenech #iravonfürstenberg #williamberger #cinema #cinefilos #moviesquotes #moviestill #giallo #giallo #70s #cultmovie
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mcbastardsmausoleum · 6 years ago
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a double-dose of euro-cult from Jess Franco by way of @mvdentertainmentgroup #MVDClassics with DIAMONDS OF KILIMANDJARO (1983) & GOLDEN TEMPLE AMAZONS (1986) #analaivars #jessfrancos #williamberger #linaromay #katjabienert https://www.instagram.com/p/BpBBkxBFGLt/?utm_source=ig_tumblr_share&igshid=bym9ulw851ad
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josephfrady · 7 years ago
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#5bamboleperlalunadagosto #1970 #mariobava #edwigefenech #williamberger #mystery #quote #movie DP #antoniorinaldi (à Anzio, Italy)
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giallofever2 · 8 years ago
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1970 #5bamboleperlalunadagosto - L'île de l'épouvante (France) Fem lig i fryseren (Danimarca) Cinco muñecas para la luna de agosto (Spagna) 5 koukles gia ena dolofono e Kolasmena kormia (Grecia) 5 dockor i augustimånen (Svezia) 5 Dolls for an August Moon e Island of Terror (Uk/Usa)
…Inspired by the novel of #agathachristie #10piccoliindiani #10littleindians Data di uscita: 14 febbraio 1970 (Italia) Regista: Mario Bava Musica composta da: Piero Umiliani
Cast #williamberger professor Fritz Farrel #iravonfurstenberg Trudy Farrel #edwigefenech Marie Chaney #howardross Jack Terrison Helena Ronee : Peggy Davidson #teodorocorra George Sagan Ely Galleani: Isabel Edith Meloni: Jill Stark Mauro Bosco: Jacques #mauricepoli: Nick Chaney
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billywiggins · 12 years ago
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Movie Review: "TODAY WE KILL, TOMORROW WE DIE"
Bill Kiowa (Brett Halsey) practices his pistol-handling everyday in prison, using a carefully carved wooden replica gun. Kiowa was framed, we learn, and up to the very morning of his release, he repeatedly whips the gun up and out of an imaginary holster, hoping to perfect his draw for the one moment he has dreamt of: facing the man who framed him.
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Brett Halsey (r.) as Kiowa
TODAY WE KILL opens as Kiowa gets his release, and the story unfolds with Kiowa rounding up a gang of mercenaries to help track down and confront the man who framed him, James Elfego. (The character's nationality is never mentioned but he is played by the Japanese actor Tatsuya Nakadai. Elfego dresses and acts like the other cowpokes in his gang -- minus a hat -- so the casting might be a lark, or meant to have some deeper subtext.) Kiowa's father gives him a stash of loot to use for paying off the hired guns, and dad is happy to recommend four top-shelf men for the job. Each man is a colorful, distinct personality, and each is played by a legitimate Euro-Western leading man, making the team an all-star squad of sorts. We have Franco "Chet Davis" Borelli, star of DEAD MEN DON'T MAKE SHADOWS, as a clean-cut ladies man; Wayde Preston from BALLAD OF DEATH VALLEY portraying the no-nonsense sheriff; Western stalwart William "(Banjo)" Berger as a frilled, bejeweled, fancy-boy card-shark; and lastly, the legendary Bud Spencer in full-on "Bambino" mode in the part of a bearded Herculean giant.
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Soundtrack CD artwork prominently featuring Bud Spencer
The first third of the film, wherein Kiowa assembles the gang, is kind of light-hearted, and has a BLUES BROTHERS-esque "let's get the old band back together" feel to it. Despite Halsey's menacing demeanor, the gang is seemingly primed more for a rip-roaring good ol' Western adventure than a fierce, intense showdown with a band of violent savages. Particularly curious is the conceit where Kiowa will meet with a prospective gunman, lay out the terms of the job, and, BANG, we cut to a shot of them riding together side-by-side. So first it is Kiowa alone, then he picks up his first hire and it's two men riding, then another hire and bang, three men riding, etc. Set to the pic's spritely, bouncy, main theme, it's definitely more mirthful than menacing, though hard to determine if that's due to the director's intent or his clumsy touch. Once the crew is in place, we are shown a sepia-toned flashback as to the source of our star's anger: Elfego viciously raping and murdering Kiowa's halfbreed wife, then announcing his intent to have Kiowa framed for the murder and a robbery he was about to commit. Finally, Kiowa's gang set out on their cat-and-mouse chase of Elfego and his gang. After a long series of tricks and ambushes, the good guys have whittled down the bad to a single man, Elfego himself. Kiowa finally gets his chance after the long years in jail practicing for the moment ... and despite the need to deliver a mini-monologue before doing it, he at last disarms and kills his rival.
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Tatsuya Nakadai as Elfego The story has been given much attention by fans and students of cinema, due to it being an early writing effort of horror film master Dario Argento. But truth told, it is a very ordinary and generic revenge story, one that could have been done by anybody. The interesting aspect of a Japanese man playing the villain is never really addressed within the story itself, so we don't know if it's a "choice" by the writer, or what. Direction by Tonino Cervi is efficient if unremarkable. This film is the only Western on his resume, and its direction is straightforward, and notwithstanding the sepia flashback setpiece, pretty ordinary. The scenery lends a bit of moody and distinctive ambience to the action, especially in the final showdown sequence, which is set in a lovely, densely-wooded forest. And as mentioned previous, the pic's recurring title music is a little bit too bright and happy to be a good match for the revenge setting of the story. Angelo Lavagnino is the composer. Yet despite the ill fit of the pic, it is a catchy theme. Brett Halsey (billed as Montgomery Ford), an American TV veteran leads the cast as the morose and intense Bill Kiowa. This is the first I've seen of him in a Western, and I am impressed. His style here is straight from the Franco Nero Django school, with bright brooding eyes, stubbly beard, and big oversized scarf. He is the lone member of the "good guys" that is played straight, that is to say, without a wink or smirk, and he's very good in the part. Wayde Preston is good, bringing a John Wayne-type swagger as the quick-shooting lawman. Bud Spencer is as ever, the wry, sarcastic behemoth of a man, always fighting with his fists rather than engaging in gunplay. (And just an aside, but why does Spencer never wear a hat in any of his roles? Vanity? Who knows.) The standout among Kiowa's men is the delightful William Berger as Colt Moran. His sideways grin and dapper styling are a delight to watch, especially in a scene where he confronts an underhanded poker cheater in a saloon. Toward the film's climax, Berger dispatches a bad guy and betrays no emotion other than to bemoan the blood splatter on his fine, frilly shirt. The villains are led by the evil Elfego, played by Tatsuya Nakadai, a veteran of the Japanese screen including several appearances in Kurosawa pics. His performance here is pretty brilliant, all wide-eyed, intense, and deeply felt. He is a good match for Halsey's low-key, brooding hero. Elfego is dressed like a western gentleman (no hat, though) and packs a big machete in addition to his pair of six-shooters. Was the machete intended to bring to mind a samurai sword? Maybe, but I really wish we had some explanation to his character's origin and backstory. It might have opened up a new level of intrigue to an ordinary plot. I saw this pic on a widescreen 35mm digital remaster (on a US DVD from VCI). The picture is good but not great; a murkier version of the full film can be found on YouTube as of this writing. It's not an essential eurowestern, but I would call TODAY WE KILL, TOMORROW WE DIE a solid entry in the genre. Worth seeking out for a standard tale efficiently done, and for fine turns by Halsey, Berger, and especially Tatsuya Nakadai. B-, 7 out of 10 stars.
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