IMDb रेटिंग
6.5/10
2.1 हज़ार
आपकी रेटिंग
अपनी भाषा में प्लॉट जोड़ेंA bounty hunter is hired by a mining town's crippled mayor to find his daughter, who has been kidnapped by the mayor's corrupt right-hand-man and his outlaw gang.A bounty hunter is hired by a mining town's crippled mayor to find his daughter, who has been kidnapped by the mayor's corrupt right-hand-man and his outlaw gang.A bounty hunter is hired by a mining town's crippled mayor to find his daughter, who has been kidnapped by the mayor's corrupt right-hand-man and his outlaw gang.
Antonio Casale
- Dahlman
- (as Nino Casale)
Rik Battaglia
- Gerald Merton
- (as Rick Battaglia)
Vincenzo Maggio
- Oldtimer
- (as Enzo Maggio)
Sofia Lombardo
- Lucy Merton
- (as Sophia Lombardo)
Giuseppe Cardone
- Poker player
- (बिना क्रेडिट के)
Domenico Cianfriglia
- Valler Henchman
- (बिना क्रेडिट के)
Arnaldo Dell'Acqua
- Valler Henchman
- (बिना क्रेडिट के)
Ottaviano Dell'Acqua
- Rioting Miner
- (बिना क्रेडिट के)
फ़ीचर्ड समीक्षाएं
By 1977, the spaghetti western was already on its death throes and if I'm not horribly mistaken, Mannaja is the last major release in the genre. These latter day spaghetti westerns are all visibly different from the 67-71 ones in that they tried to push the envelope in different ways. Ironically the vast amount of tired, quickie Django and Sartana clones that sprung in the late 60's weren't the final nail in the coffin. It seems that after westerns like Mannaja the genre had nowhere to go, having explored every nook and cranny of the old west and milked every bit of potential in the process.
Sergio Martino was not a regular spaghetti western director. He made his name through a series of fantastic giallo thrillers in the early 70's (All the Colours of the Dark, The Strange Vice of Mrs. Wardh etc) but he was generally a genre director who dabbled with anything that came his way. As a testament to his talent, he was usually successful, often with stunning results. He had tried his hand on the western once more in the Anthonio De Steffen vehicle Arizona Colt Returns, which was a pleasurable entry but business as usual for the most part. Mannaja is markedly different in that it strives for more. It has ambition and the means to pull it off.
Strangely, Mannaja takes its cue from Enzo G. Castellari's incredible Keoma (or as it was retitled for commercial purposes, Django Rides Again) from one year earlier. Maurizio Merli's Mannaja bears more than a passing resemblance to the dirty and grim looking Keoma played by Franco Nero, there are several beautiful slo-mo shots, a dream-like atmosphere in places, it's quite brutal (a hand is chopped, a woman is whipped, a man gets an axe in his head, old ladies and other innocent bystanders are shot and killed) and the score is very weird by spaghetti western standards and it can be as annoying as Keoma's (although I didn't mind the latter). Just as Keoma, it doesn't shy away from taking risks and luckily it pays off, no least thanks to Martino's skillful directing. There's visual awesomeness to be found throughout the movie. Striking compositions are enhanced by great set design lending a gritty feeling to everything from the dilapidated town to the dirty clothes to the muddy streets. Nature plays a big part in how the movie looks: rain, mud, fog are all used to great effect, the last shootout in the fog adding a surreal, ghost-town quality to it. The look of the first half hour reminded me of Altman's McCabe and Mrs. Miller for some reason, with a dash of Django. It also appears to be very much influenced by the work of Sam Peckinpah, whom Sergio Martino himself cites as an inspiration. Generally it's equal parts gritty and atmospheric and with enough budget to hold everything on the seams.
Maurizio Merli made his name in the Italian movie business by playing violent Dirty Harry-esquire cops in polizioto crime flicks and was quite successful as a genre actor. He can play the mean machine effortlessly and it's a real pleasure to watch him as a badass bounty hunter here. A real shame that he didn't do more westerns and even more so that he passed away 4-5 years after making this one. The rest of the cast all turn in fine performances.
Mannaja might have come during the twilight of the spaghetti western but it's easily one of the best it has to offer. A must-see for fans.
Sergio Martino was not a regular spaghetti western director. He made his name through a series of fantastic giallo thrillers in the early 70's (All the Colours of the Dark, The Strange Vice of Mrs. Wardh etc) but he was generally a genre director who dabbled with anything that came his way. As a testament to his talent, he was usually successful, often with stunning results. He had tried his hand on the western once more in the Anthonio De Steffen vehicle Arizona Colt Returns, which was a pleasurable entry but business as usual for the most part. Mannaja is markedly different in that it strives for more. It has ambition and the means to pull it off.
Strangely, Mannaja takes its cue from Enzo G. Castellari's incredible Keoma (or as it was retitled for commercial purposes, Django Rides Again) from one year earlier. Maurizio Merli's Mannaja bears more than a passing resemblance to the dirty and grim looking Keoma played by Franco Nero, there are several beautiful slo-mo shots, a dream-like atmosphere in places, it's quite brutal (a hand is chopped, a woman is whipped, a man gets an axe in his head, old ladies and other innocent bystanders are shot and killed) and the score is very weird by spaghetti western standards and it can be as annoying as Keoma's (although I didn't mind the latter). Just as Keoma, it doesn't shy away from taking risks and luckily it pays off, no least thanks to Martino's skillful directing. There's visual awesomeness to be found throughout the movie. Striking compositions are enhanced by great set design lending a gritty feeling to everything from the dilapidated town to the dirty clothes to the muddy streets. Nature plays a big part in how the movie looks: rain, mud, fog are all used to great effect, the last shootout in the fog adding a surreal, ghost-town quality to it. The look of the first half hour reminded me of Altman's McCabe and Mrs. Miller for some reason, with a dash of Django. It also appears to be very much influenced by the work of Sam Peckinpah, whom Sergio Martino himself cites as an inspiration. Generally it's equal parts gritty and atmospheric and with enough budget to hold everything on the seams.
Maurizio Merli made his name in the Italian movie business by playing violent Dirty Harry-esquire cops in polizioto crime flicks and was quite successful as a genre actor. He can play the mean machine effortlessly and it's a real pleasure to watch him as a badass bounty hunter here. A real shame that he didn't do more westerns and even more so that he passed away 4-5 years after making this one. The rest of the cast all turn in fine performances.
Mannaja might have come during the twilight of the spaghetti western but it's easily one of the best it has to offer. A must-see for fans.
This film begins with a bounty hunter who goes by the name "Blade" (Maurizio Merli) riding into the small mining town of Suttonville with a criminal named "Burt Craven" (Donald O'Brien) as his prisoner. Unfortunately, when he gets there he is informed that there is no real sheriff there which makes it impossible for him to claim the bounty. To make things even worse, he is also told that the entire town is essentially owned by the wealthy owner of the local silver mine named "Edward McGowan" (Philippe Leroy) and that nothing gets done without his approval or that of his chief enforcer and bodyguard by the name of "Voller" (John Steiner) . To that end, when Blade volunteers to help Edward McGowan with a problem he is experiencing with some local bandits, Voller doesn't take it too well and this results in a serious rift between Blade and everyone else-and Voller is not a man to take things lightly. Now rather than reveal any more I will just say that this was an entertaining "Spaghetti Western" which managed to keep my attention pretty much from start-to-finish. Admittedly, I didn't especially care for a couple of the twists and turns taken and the musical score was a bit odd. But even so I liked this film for the most part and I have rated it accordingly. Slightly above average.
Although very much late in the game for an Italian western, (the bulk of which were made between 1965 and 1972) Mannaja (A Man Called Blade) is no slouch. It's actually a good muscular western with lots of violence and dark atmosphere, with the sun blocked out and everything bathed in a fog of dust.
Maurizio Merli plays Blade, a mysterious hatchet wielding bounty hunter with unfinished business to take care of regarding a puritanical mine owner and his psychotic number two, played by John Steiner, who's excellent at portraying nasty weasels.
Also memorable is (the late?) Donal O'Brien, who would later gain infamy as the title character in Doctor Butcher M.D. (Medical Deviate), as a scroungy fugitive who gets his hand cut off by Blade in the first scene and features prominently in the film's finale.
Director Sergio Martino is a master of Italian exploitation and really knows how to deliver the goods, especially in action/adventures. Another of his films I really enjoyed was Slave Of The Cannibal God with Ursula Andress and Stacy Keach.
Also, I really enjoyed the title song even though it was repeated way too often in the course of the film.
Maurizio Merli plays Blade, a mysterious hatchet wielding bounty hunter with unfinished business to take care of regarding a puritanical mine owner and his psychotic number two, played by John Steiner, who's excellent at portraying nasty weasels.
Also memorable is (the late?) Donal O'Brien, who would later gain infamy as the title character in Doctor Butcher M.D. (Medical Deviate), as a scroungy fugitive who gets his hand cut off by Blade in the first scene and features prominently in the film's finale.
Director Sergio Martino is a master of Italian exploitation and really knows how to deliver the goods, especially in action/adventures. Another of his films I really enjoyed was Slave Of The Cannibal God with Ursula Andress and Stacy Keach.
Also, I really enjoyed the title song even though it was repeated way too often in the course of the film.
I found this film to be quite inspirational, actually. The movie is about a man who wields a blade for a weapon in fending off the bad guys while rescuing the girl from the evil villain, Voller (brilliantly played by John Steiner). At the beginning of the film we find our rogue hero Blade (played by Maurizio Merli) chasing after a man through the misty swamps. The man looks behind him frantically several times to try to make out the figure of his pursuer. Suddenly there is a swishing noise in the air as a hatchet blade strikes the man, severing his right hand against a tree. Thus begins the tale, and follows our hero into a virtual ghost town, where "sin and vice are not permitted." He enters a saloon where he and his new companion (the man with the severed hand) receive several shifty-eyed glances. This is when Blade first meets the dastardly Voller and wagers a gamble playing cards, to which of course our hero wins. The filming technique used throughout this scene is truly classic, where some shots show a profile of the villain on one side of the screen, with Blade standing in the background. The character acting is superb. I cannot speak enough about how Steiner personifies the classic old west villain to a "T". His snide mannerisms and long, lean stature lend to his overall character appeal. Throughout this film, there is plenty of splendid gunfighting and even a particularly notable scene in which Blade dukes it out with Voller and three of his henchmen in the mud. Yes, the actor actually does 90% of these stunts (as I later found out watching the director interview on DVD)! The director, Sergio Martino, could not have directed a more well-scripted film, complete with all the elements of a traditional spaghetti western! I give this film 3 out of 4 stars, mainly for its overall character appeal and for the simple fact that it's a 70's flick! 'Nuff said...
Italian production full of action , excessive characters , shootouts and lots of violence . For money, for pleasure, for revenge, he doesn't care why he kills or how . It deals with a dramatic story of a feud between implacable enemies . After getting the bounty of a villainous outlaw known as Burt Craven (Donald O'Brien) , a tough bounty hunter named Blade (Maurizio Merli) arrives in a mining city called Suttonville , where is hired to track down the abducted daughter (Sonja Jeannine) of the town's crippled owner (Philippe Leroy) who has a corrupt right-hand-man (John Steiner) . Meanwhile , a bunch of bandits are looting shipment of silver from the silver mines that are run the mine owner McGregor. But Blade is double-crossed and imprisoned by the nasties and submitted to cruel tortures . Later on , there takes place some exciting scenes of men fighting to the death . At the end happens a bloody vendetta and reckoning , as usual . Sharp shoots, gun and axe with great accuracy!
This Western contains action-packed , ruthless characters , quick-fire , violence , rapacious revenge , slaughter , shoot'em up and results to be quite entertaining , though drags at times , balancing in ups and downs . A good example of twilight Spaghetti western genre from Italy ; it is daring , a notoriously violent Pasta movie , so extreme in every way , it is one of the handful of Italian Western that abounded in the 60s and 70s . This moving Spaghetti packs noisy action , thrills , crossfire , twists and turns with exciting final . There is a very odd implementation of shots in the camera work during some particular scenes as the film approaches its climax , as in the ending and the unusual conclusion . There is plenty of action in the movie , guaranteeing some violence , shoot'em up or stunts every few minutes , including agreeable soundtrack with Morricone influence . Well starred by Maurizio Merli as a bounty killer , armed with a hatchet instead of a gun , Merli may be a name best remembered by Poliziesco aficionados, but in his day, from the mid-'70s to the late 80s, Maurizio was one of the most popular actors of the genre where he found his niche - at the time cheap B movies, now revered cult classics. The handsome, Italian-born actor began in Western genre in White Fang series (1974) and worked well enough for Marino Girolami and Fabrizio De Angelis to cast Merli as the lead in the crime drama Rome violent (1975) a year later. Much like before, Merli was cast because the film vaguely resembled the Franco Nero Film Streets of eternity (1973) ("High Crime") . Violent Rome (1975) turned out to be a huge success both in Italy and abroad and Merli found himself inexplicably catapulted to national stardom. Very similar to how Terence Hill found his niche in comedies after being discovered out of the crowd of Nero stand-ins , Maurizio Merli established himself as the leading man in the Italian crime film genre of the period . Over the brief span from 1975-1979, Merli starred in no less than a dozen crime films from the likes of noted Italian directors Umberto Lenzi , Stelvio Massi, and Fernando Di Leo including such classics as Naples violenta (1976) , and From Corleone to Brooklyn (1978) . Merli also followed Nero's footsteps once again in the Keoma-inspired Mannaja .From there, Maurizio began acting in others genres until his early death at 49 . Unlike fellow Spaghetti star Franco Nero or Clint Eastwood, however, Maurizio never became a top international box-office attraction . Mannaja is a thrilling western with screenplay by the notorious Scavolini and Sergio Martino himself , including a breathtaking confrontation between the protagonist Maurizio Merli against the heartless John Steiner and his hoodlums . Exciting Spaghetti Western and it is proceeded in violent style and ordinary narration . The film packs thrills , gunplay and high body-count ; it's fast moving , quite entertaining and including bursting with explosive violence . Here appears familiar faces from Macaroni Western such as : Donald O'Brien , Rik Battaglia , Enzo Fiermonte , Antonio Casale and special mention for Philippe Leroy as the wheelchair bound mayor McGowan and the extremely baddie John Steiner as co-starring playing the corrupt and sadistic associate.
Good production design creating an acceptable scenario with muddy outdoors, rocky landscapes from Campo Imperatore, L'Aquila, Abruzzo in the Stagecoach/Horse Riding scenes , Lazio , Rome and interiors in Elios studios . Adequate and atomspheric cinematography by Federico Zanni. Nice and sensitive musical score by Guido and Maurizio De Angelis , furthermore , catching and emotive songs performed by Cesare De Natale as Dandylion. Mannaja was competently directed by the prolific filmmaker Sergio Martino who usually uses pseudonym as Martin Dolman . Talented and versatile writer/director Sergio Martino has made a vast array of often solid and entertaining films in all kind of genres as horror, Giallo , comedy, Western , and science fiction in a career that spans over 40 years . He was especially expert on Western as proved in ¨Mannaja¨ and this ¨Arizona returns¨ and Giallo such as ¨The case of scorpion's tail ¨ , ¨Torso¨ ,¨the scorpion with two tails¨ , ¨The strange vice of Mrs Ward¨ , Cannibal movie as "Mountain of the Cannibal God", Italian crime thrillers as "Violent Professionals" and ¨Sci-Fi as ¨Destroyer¨ , "2019: After the Fall of New York" . Rating: 7/10 , above average Spaghetti , this is a great Ravioli Western in which the camera stalks in moving style throughout a story with decent visual skills . This is a bewildering story , enjoyable as well as violent , and it will appeal to Spaghetti hardcore fans .
This Western contains action-packed , ruthless characters , quick-fire , violence , rapacious revenge , slaughter , shoot'em up and results to be quite entertaining , though drags at times , balancing in ups and downs . A good example of twilight Spaghetti western genre from Italy ; it is daring , a notoriously violent Pasta movie , so extreme in every way , it is one of the handful of Italian Western that abounded in the 60s and 70s . This moving Spaghetti packs noisy action , thrills , crossfire , twists and turns with exciting final . There is a very odd implementation of shots in the camera work during some particular scenes as the film approaches its climax , as in the ending and the unusual conclusion . There is plenty of action in the movie , guaranteeing some violence , shoot'em up or stunts every few minutes , including agreeable soundtrack with Morricone influence . Well starred by Maurizio Merli as a bounty killer , armed with a hatchet instead of a gun , Merli may be a name best remembered by Poliziesco aficionados, but in his day, from the mid-'70s to the late 80s, Maurizio was one of the most popular actors of the genre where he found his niche - at the time cheap B movies, now revered cult classics. The handsome, Italian-born actor began in Western genre in White Fang series (1974) and worked well enough for Marino Girolami and Fabrizio De Angelis to cast Merli as the lead in the crime drama Rome violent (1975) a year later. Much like before, Merli was cast because the film vaguely resembled the Franco Nero Film Streets of eternity (1973) ("High Crime") . Violent Rome (1975) turned out to be a huge success both in Italy and abroad and Merli found himself inexplicably catapulted to national stardom. Very similar to how Terence Hill found his niche in comedies after being discovered out of the crowd of Nero stand-ins , Maurizio Merli established himself as the leading man in the Italian crime film genre of the period . Over the brief span from 1975-1979, Merli starred in no less than a dozen crime films from the likes of noted Italian directors Umberto Lenzi , Stelvio Massi, and Fernando Di Leo including such classics as Naples violenta (1976) , and From Corleone to Brooklyn (1978) . Merli also followed Nero's footsteps once again in the Keoma-inspired Mannaja .From there, Maurizio began acting in others genres until his early death at 49 . Unlike fellow Spaghetti star Franco Nero or Clint Eastwood, however, Maurizio never became a top international box-office attraction . Mannaja is a thrilling western with screenplay by the notorious Scavolini and Sergio Martino himself , including a breathtaking confrontation between the protagonist Maurizio Merli against the heartless John Steiner and his hoodlums . Exciting Spaghetti Western and it is proceeded in violent style and ordinary narration . The film packs thrills , gunplay and high body-count ; it's fast moving , quite entertaining and including bursting with explosive violence . Here appears familiar faces from Macaroni Western such as : Donald O'Brien , Rik Battaglia , Enzo Fiermonte , Antonio Casale and special mention for Philippe Leroy as the wheelchair bound mayor McGowan and the extremely baddie John Steiner as co-starring playing the corrupt and sadistic associate.
Good production design creating an acceptable scenario with muddy outdoors, rocky landscapes from Campo Imperatore, L'Aquila, Abruzzo in the Stagecoach/Horse Riding scenes , Lazio , Rome and interiors in Elios studios . Adequate and atomspheric cinematography by Federico Zanni. Nice and sensitive musical score by Guido and Maurizio De Angelis , furthermore , catching and emotive songs performed by Cesare De Natale as Dandylion. Mannaja was competently directed by the prolific filmmaker Sergio Martino who usually uses pseudonym as Martin Dolman . Talented and versatile writer/director Sergio Martino has made a vast array of often solid and entertaining films in all kind of genres as horror, Giallo , comedy, Western , and science fiction in a career that spans over 40 years . He was especially expert on Western as proved in ¨Mannaja¨ and this ¨Arizona returns¨ and Giallo such as ¨The case of scorpion's tail ¨ , ¨Torso¨ ,¨the scorpion with two tails¨ , ¨The strange vice of Mrs Ward¨ , Cannibal movie as "Mountain of the Cannibal God", Italian crime thrillers as "Violent Professionals" and ¨Sci-Fi as ¨Destroyer¨ , "2019: After the Fall of New York" . Rating: 7/10 , above average Spaghetti , this is a great Ravioli Western in which the camera stalks in moving style throughout a story with decent visual skills . This is a bewildering story , enjoyable as well as violent , and it will appeal to Spaghetti hardcore fans .
क्या आपको पता है
- ट्रिवियाThe reason the exteriors have so much fog and smoke was because the filmmakers were trying to hide the fact that the studio, Elios Studio near Rome, needed to be renovated.
- गूफ़In the opening sequence the man captured screams and you can clearly see his modern fillings.
- इसके अलावा अन्य वर्जनUK versions are cut by 6 secs by the BBFC to remove footage of horsefalls.
- कनेक्शनFeatured in The Spaghetti West (2005)
टॉप पसंद
रेटिंग देने के लिए साइन-इन करें और वैयक्तिकृत सुझावों के लिए वॉचलिस्ट करें
विवरण
- रिलीज़ की तारीख़
- कंट्री ऑफ़ ओरिजिन
- भाषा
- इस रूप में भी जाना जाता है
- A Man Called Blade
- फ़िल्माने की जगहें
- Campo Imperatore, L'Aquila, Abruzzo, इटली(Stagecoach / Horse Riding Scenes)
- उत्पादन कंपनियां
- IMDbPro पर और कंपनी क्रेडिट देखें
- चलने की अवधि
- 1 घं 41 मि(101 min)
- ध्वनि मिश्रण
- पक्ष अनुपात
- 2.35 : 1
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