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Todesmelodie

Originaltitel: Giù la testa
  • 1971
  • 18
  • 2 Std. 37 Min.
IMDb-BEWERTUNG
7,5/10
39.719
IHRE BEWERTUNG
James Coburn and Rod Steiger in Todesmelodie (1971)
Official Trailer ansehen
trailer wiedergeben3:36
2 Videos
99+ Fotos
EpicSpaghetti WesternTragedyWestern EpicDramaWarWestern

Ein I.R.A.-Sprengstoffexperte auf der Flucht in Mexiko trifft auf einen amoralischen mexikanischen Banditen; gemeinsam werden sie in die mexikanische Revolution hineingezogen.Ein I.R.A.-Sprengstoffexperte auf der Flucht in Mexiko trifft auf einen amoralischen mexikanischen Banditen; gemeinsam werden sie in die mexikanische Revolution hineingezogen.Ein I.R.A.-Sprengstoffexperte auf der Flucht in Mexiko trifft auf einen amoralischen mexikanischen Banditen; gemeinsam werden sie in die mexikanische Revolution hineingezogen.

  • Regie
    • Sergio Leone
  • Drehbuch
    • Sergio Leone
    • Sergio Donati
    • Luciano Vincenzoni
  • Hauptbesetzung
    • Rod Steiger
    • James Coburn
    • Romolo Valli
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • IMDb-BEWERTUNG
    7,5/10
    39.719
    IHRE BEWERTUNG
    • Regie
      • Sergio Leone
    • Drehbuch
      • Sergio Leone
      • Sergio Donati
      • Luciano Vincenzoni
    • Hauptbesetzung
      • Rod Steiger
      • James Coburn
      • Romolo Valli
    • 190Benutzerrezensionen
    • 100Kritische Rezensionen
    • 77Metascore
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
    • Auszeichnungen
      • 1 Gewinn & 2 Nominierungen insgesamt

    Videos2

    Official Trailer
    Trailer 3:36
    Official Trailer
    Official Trailer
    Trailer 3:34
    Official Trailer
    Official Trailer
    Trailer 3:34
    Official Trailer

    Fotos125

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    + 117
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    Topbesetzung45

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    Rod Steiger
    Rod Steiger
    • Juan Miranda
    James Coburn
    James Coburn
    • John H. Mallory
    Romolo Valli
    Romolo Valli
    • Dr. Villega
    Maria Monti
    • Woman on Stagecoach
    Rik Battaglia
    Rik Battaglia
    • Santerna
    • (as Rick Battaglia)
    Franco Graziosi
    • Governor Jaime
    Antoine Saint-John
    • Gutierez
    • (Italian, English version)
    • (as Domingo Antoine, Jean Michel Antoine)
    • …
    Vivienne Chandler
    • Coleen, John's Girlfriend
    David Warbeck
    David Warbeck
    • Sean Nolan
    Giulio Battiferri
    • Miguel
    Poldo Bendandi
    Poldo Bendandi
    • Revolutionary
    Omar Bonaro
    • Revolutionary
    Roy Bosier
    • Landowner on Stagecoach
    John Frederick
    John Frederick
    • American on Stagecoach
    Amato Garbini
    • First Policeman on Train
    Michael Harvey
    Michael Harvey
    • Coachman
    Biagio La Rocca
    Furio Meniconi
    Furio Meniconi
    • Innkeeper
    • Regie
      • Sergio Leone
    • Drehbuch
      • Sergio Leone
      • Sergio Donati
      • Luciano Vincenzoni
    • Komplette Besetzung und alle Crew-Mitglieder
    • Produktion, Einspielergebnisse & mehr bei IMDbPro

    Benutzerrezensionen190

    7,539.7K
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    Empfohlene Bewertungen

    DrLenera

    Leone's most underrated film,a rich masterpiece which gets better and better with each viewing

    It's generally thought that this film is Leone's weakest major film,and it is far less well known than the Dollars trilogy and the two Once Upon a Times. In actual fact,this is a masterpiece that deserves to be far better known and regarded than it actually is. It sees Leone attempting new things such as character development and political comment,while refining elements from his earlier films. It's really the bridge between Once Upon A Time In The West and Once Upon A Time In America,and it contains a great many elements of both films {which let's face it,despite both being Leone films are quite different}.

    It starts in humorous vein,right from the opening sequence of the dirty,very poor Rod Steiger character Juan being taunted by some rich folk aboard a lavish carriage,the camera showing lots of close ups of mouths and eyes in what almost seems a parody of Leone's style. Juan is much like Tuco in The Good the Bad And The Ugly,loud,simple and very funny {he's even often accompanied by comical music }.Juan's first encounters with the other main protagonist,IRA man Sean {James Coburn} are treated like comical duels,and as they go to rob a bank it seems the picaresque tone will continue.

    However,about a third of the way through the film becomes more and more serious. As Juan,thanks to Sean,becomes more and more involved in the Mexican Revolution,the tone becomes darker as more and more scenes take place at night and there is serious tragedy. The change in tone may jar to some people,but one can see the mature,contemplative Leone of Once Upon A Time In America reveal himself before our eyes.

    Of course there are still some great action scenes,such as the taking of a bank which is superbly cut to Ennio Morricone's music {listen for the cheeky quotes from Mozart!},or Sean and Juan machine-gunning what seems like a whole army. There is as usual a great deal of violence,but it's less personal and graphic and instead is shown to have more consequence. The film's plot does move rather slowly,with Leone taking his time as usual,but this mean we can more enjoy the mannered Steiger and the laid back Coburn as one of the greatest partnerships in cinema history.

    Of particular interest are the several flashbacks dotted throughout the movie,shot in dreamlike slow motion and usually set to what is quite simply one of the most beautiful film themes EVER {Morricone excels himself with the score for this film}. Representing Sean's past,they ask as many questions as they answer,Leone trusting his audience to work things out. The final one is missing from many versions of this film,a tragedy because as well as being sublimely beautiful {and ambiguous,is it Sean's memory?,a marijuana-enhanced hallucination?,a vision of Heaven?} it adds yet another element to the story.

    A Fistful Of Dynamite {well,the French Once Upon A Time..The Revolution is the films' best title}is a masterpiece,it's extremely entertaining whilst also being full of complexity. Things become clearer and more interesting on second and third viewings. Don't expect the operatic ritualism of Once Upon in The West or the comic crowd pleasing of the Dollars films,but if you watch this you will be watching a cinematic master at the height of his powers.
    10hokeybutt

    Another Sergio Leone masterpiece... Duck You Sucker!!!

    A FISTFUL OF DYNAMITE aka DUCK YOU SUCKER (5 outta 5 stars)

    I think this is Sergio Leone's third greatest movie... right after Once Upon a Time in the West and The Good, The Bad and the Ugly. Most Leone fans rank this film a lot lower... but I think that's because they are only familiar with the shortened two hour version. Also, for the record, I absolutely loathe the re-titling... A Fistful of Dynamite... how lame! At least the original Leone title, Duck You Sucker was... distinctive. Even the French title (translation: Once Upon a Time... The Revolution) is kinda classy. But AFOD??? Gimme a break! This movie has absolutely nothing to do with A Fistful of Dollars so why even try to make the comparison?

    Anyway, I loved this movie when I first saw it in the theatre in 1972 (age 12). I am pretty sure that what we saw at the time was the lengthy, uncut version... and I don't remember being bored at all. (The most common complaint about this movie is that it is slow and boring... heck, that's the most common complaint about EVERY Leone movie.) Rod Steiger and James Coburn play Sean and Juan, respectively a poor Mexican bandit and a fugitive Irish terrorist... who meet up in Mexico and become involved (against their wills) with revolutionary warfare in that struggling country. The movie is exciting, funny, dramatic, suspenseful and, well, just plain brilliant. This is Ennio Morricone's greatest film score and the way it meshes with Leone's visuals is simply amazing... particularly in my favourite scene... the bank heist. Juan and his young sons break into the Bank of Mexico, shoot it out with the guards and go from door to door, searching for gold and finding only political prisoners, until finally... oh, I can't give it away! See it for yourself. This is a movie filled with classic scenes: Coburn's arrival on the "motorsickle" and his confrontation with Steiger's gang... Steiger and Coburn with their machine guns... Steiger's final act of vengeance (which is severely chopped to bits in the short version... robbing it of its vicious power). Its been said that Steiger's comical accent is stereotypical and insulting... but I say NO! He is playing one of the richest and most complex characters of his career... with some of his greatest speeches ("And what happens to the poor people? They are DEAD!"). Not to slight James Coburn, who also does a fantastic job, but Steiger is the star of this one.
    10SquirePM

    Probably the best unknown movie ever made.

    Here is a tragedy -- a great film doomed by a terrible title.

    I saw this movie as "Duck, You Sucker" in the theater in 1972 or '73. I still have images and haunting music burned in my brain from it. It has, for one thing, one of the biggest real explosions ever filmed, an absolutely awesome blast using real high explosives that makes today's fiery spectacles pale. I think the whole production company was stunned by it, certainly Sergio Leone was, because he gives it the full treatment: multiple cameras and angles, wide shots, lots of screen time giving us lots of looks. And it's worth it. If you're not a war veteran, you've never seen anything like this.

    But this film is much more than its fx. It's a deep, moving story told on the grand scale, with Oscar-class cinematography. It is both a major outdoor adventure and a small, intimate story. It has some of the quirkiest scenes, blackest humor and darkest betrayals, too.

    Don't look for it on TV, unless Turner Classic Movies shows it "uncut." It was horribly mutilated in editing for television, and therefore unpopular and rarely shown. Get the original theatrical version, and watch it undisturbed. A party atmosphere would ruin it for you.

    It's on my top-20 all time list!
    10ChungMo

    Just saw the restored print

    It's a shame that most people will not get to see this film on the big screen. The new print makes the film look like it was shot recently. The sound has been re- mastered also and is 90% perfect. A few of the restored scenes help the film along although they add to the already long running time. It is slightly different from the LaserDIsc version that came out a few years ago especially the end scene. However, one friend (a film reviewer) told me that it's the same version that he saw when it came out in 1972 for two weeks before it was pulled, re-titled and cut.

    I have to say that this film is one of Leone's best and I now rate it above "Once Upon a Time in America". It's not an easy film and there are a few "flaws" but in a strange way it is the most human film Leone made. Coburn and Steiger both come off as real people despite the occasional lapse in accents. It's amazing how much time Leone gave to searing close-ups of the two actors and how they were able to convey so much of the story in silence. The story is very subtle and very unsubtle at the same time which can make following the film hard if you are expecting the "hello stupid" storytelling we get these days. Leone did the same thing in "Once upon a Time in the West" and "America". There's a storytelling genius here that's all the more amazing if you consider that Leone was operating out of his native language.

    What makes this film stand out is the outright message Leone conveys with the story. He didn't do that with any of his other films.

    A few words on the restored scenes. As with other Leone films that have undergone editing by American distributors, the removed scenes are a mixed bag. Some scenes were removed for length purposes, others for content reasons and some I suspect were removed because they were perceived as not up to the quality of the rest of the film. This was certainly the case for "The Good, The Bad & The Ugly". In "Duck, You Sucker", the restored opening helps the film's message which is probably not what the American censors though it was. The stagecoach robbery rape scene, which in the American version was edited in a way to suggest that Juan is really a gentleman thief not a rapist, is problematic unless you read it as a political comment and even then it's tough to take. The churchyard sequence, which is completely absent in the American version, is one of Leone's clumsiest scenes and it's absence didn't really affect the film. Some of it is out of focus! The ending sequence was apparently reedited by Leone after the opening in Europe and exists in several different versions over there! The version we see here is very, very long but illuminates the main characters motivations better then the American version.

    Hopefully this limited re-release signals the soon arrival of a DVD version.

    Update, July 2007: Finally, the DVD has been released. After watching the restored, restored version I have to add that the film really holds up. This version is identical to the screened version except for one minor, yet important difference at the very end. A crucial line from the American version has been restored.

    The extras deserve some mention. First of all they all have a copyright of 2005 which indicates that the release of this DVD was delayed for some reason. The interviews are very interesting but each extra is heavily inter-cut with scenes from the film, the clips are frequently unrelated to the topic and often the same clips are repeated in each extra! You get to see James Coburn running in a field in Ireland over and over. One extra tracks the different versions that exist of this film, shows stills from scenes that Leone cut before the premier in Italy (the negatives of these particular scenes have apparently been destroyed) and leads into a rumination on the Sean/John confusion. The writer of this extra then comes to the conclusion that "Sean" isn't the James Coburn character! I don't agree at all but it's a useful extra.

    A DVD to own.
    9funkyfry

    100 proof dynamite action film by genre master Leone

    Excellent action film with Steiger over-the-top but Coburn right on the money as bandit/revolutionaries in Mexico. More gunfire and explosions and less balmy confrontations than in other Leone pics. I'm stuck on a second viewing by how much of a "70s" film this is, and how much real cinematic value and interesting ideas Leone has put into the film despite its basic action-film plotline. Rumors say Malcolm MacDowell was the original lead -- very intriguing possibility. The look on Steiger's face after he finds out he's risked his life to rescue a bunch of dirty prisoners is priceless.

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    Handlung

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    • Wissenswertes
      Sergio Leone offered the role of Juan Miranda to Eli Wallach, but Wallach had already committed to another project. After Leone begged Wallach to play the part, he dropped out of the other project and told Leone he'd do his movie. However, the studio already had Rod Steiger signed. Leone offered no compensation to Wallach, and Wallach subsequently sued.
    • Patzer
      In the train, the automatic pistol that Juan Miranda uses is a Browning GP35. As its names suggests, this model became available in 1935 (so a contemporary of the aforementioned MG42).
    • Zitate

      John H. Mallory: [to Dr. Villega] When I started using dynamite... I believed in... many things, all of it! Now, I believe only in dynamite. I don't judge you, Villega. I did that only... once in my life. Get shovellin'.

    • Crazy Credits
      A quote from Chairman Mao regarding the nature of revolutions was removed from original English prints out of fear that audiences would misinterpret the quote's use as an endorsement of communist revolution. The quote was later put back into uncut prints.
    • Alternative Versionen
      The new 5.1 remix of the soundtrack on the restored Region 2 Special Edition release uses incorrect music cues for several scenes including the restored long flashback scene at the end, and edits out two expletives, one is uttered by Juan while talking to himself before attacking the bridge, the other spoken by John on the train. Both of these are intact in all other restored versions. The title of the restored version is now "Duck You Sucker" while the title on the cover remains "A Fistful of Dynamite".
    • Verbindungen
      Edited into Spaghetti Western Trailer Show (2007)

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    Details

    Ändern
    • Erscheinungsdatum
      • 2. März 1972 (Westdeutschland)
    • Herkunftsland
      • Italien
    • Sprachen
      • Englisch
      • Italienisch
      • Spanisch
    • Auch bekannt als
      • Los héroes de Mesa Verde
    • Drehorte
      • Toner's Pub, Baggot Street, Dublin, Irland(Flashback scenes in pub)
    • Produktionsfirmen
      • Rafran Cinematografica
      • Euro International Films
      • San Marco
    • Weitere beteiligte Unternehmen bei IMDbPro anzeigen

    Box Office

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    • Weltweiter Bruttoertrag
      • 980 $
    Weitere Informationen zur Box Office finden Sie auf IMDbPro.

    Technische Daten

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    • Laufzeit
      2 Stunden 37 Minuten
    • Farbe
      • Color
    • Sound-Mix
      • Mono
      • Stereo(original Italian prints)
    • Seitenverhältnis
      • 2.35 : 1

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