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Le Spécialiste

Original title: Gli specialisti
  • 1969
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 44m
IMDb RATING
6.3/10
1.6K
YOUR RATING
Le Spécialiste (1969)
Trailer 1
Play trailer1:53
1 Video
71 Photos
Spaghetti WesternDramaWestern

A gunfighter contends with a pacifist sheriff, a seductive banker, a one-armed bandit, corrupt businessmen and hippies while searching for the money allegedly stolen by his lynched brother.A gunfighter contends with a pacifist sheriff, a seductive banker, a one-armed bandit, corrupt businessmen and hippies while searching for the money allegedly stolen by his lynched brother.A gunfighter contends with a pacifist sheriff, a seductive banker, a one-armed bandit, corrupt businessmen and hippies while searching for the money allegedly stolen by his lynched brother.

  • Director
    • Sergio Corbucci
  • Writers
    • Sergio Corbucci
    • Sabatino Ciuffini
  • Stars
    • Johnny Hallyday
    • Gastone Moschin
    • Françoise Fabian
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.3/10
    1.6K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Sergio Corbucci
    • Writers
      • Sergio Corbucci
      • Sabatino Ciuffini
    • Stars
      • Johnny Hallyday
      • Gastone Moschin
      • Françoise Fabian
    • 13User reviews
    • 23Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Videos1

    The Specialists
    Trailer 1:53
    The Specialists

    Photos71

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    Top cast28

    Edit
    Johnny Hallyday
    Johnny Hallyday
    • Hud Dixon
    • (as Johnny Halliday)
    Gastone Moschin
    Gastone Moschin
    • Sheriff Gideon Ring
    Françoise Fabian
    Françoise Fabian
    • Virginia Pollicut
    Sylvie Fennec
    • Sheba
    Angela Luce
    Angela Luce
    • Valencia
    Serge Marquand
    • Boot
    Gino Pernice
    Gino Pernice
    • Cabot
    Andrés José Cruz Soublette
    Andrés José Cruz Soublette
    • Rosencrantz
    • (as Andres Jose Cruz)
    Gabriella Tavernese
    • Apache
    Stefano Cattarossi
    • Kit
    Christian Belaygue
    • Buddy
    Renato Pinciroli
    • Lord
    Remo De Angelis
    Remo De Angelis
    • Romero
    Riccardo Domenici
    • Mac Lane
    • (as Riccardo Domienici)
    Mimmo Poli
    Mimmo Poli
    • Barman
    Mario Castellani
    • Judge Ham
    Franco Castellani
    • Woodie
    Brizio Montinaro
    Brizio Montinaro
    • Charlie Dixon
    • (as Montinaro Brizio)
    • Director
      • Sergio Corbucci
    • Writers
      • Sergio Corbucci
      • Sabatino Ciuffini
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews13

    6.31.5K
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    Featured reviews

    7Bunuel1976

    THE SPECIALIST (Sergio Corbucci, 1969) ***

    Cult film-maker Corbucci's rarest of his thirteen Spaghetti Westerns (of which I'm only left with WHAT AM I DOING IN THE MIDDLE OF THE REVOLUTION [1972] to catch) is one I only became aware of fairly recently via Marco Giusti's "Stracult" guide; it's an atypically bleak genre gem in the style of the director's own masterpiece, THE GREAT SILENCE (1968), complete with desolate snowy landscapes.

    Johnny Hallyday, the French Elvis Presley, whom I first saw in Jean-Luc Godard's DETECTIVE (1985) is a curious but highly effective choice to play the loner anti-hero Hud (who, like Clint Eastwood's The Man With No Name from Sergio Leone's celebrated "Dollars Trilogy", is fitted with a steel-plate armor for protection); incidentally, I had 'met' Hallyday's stunning daughter Laura Smet at the 2004 Venice Film Festival but was distracted by the presence of her esteemed director, Claude Chabrol! Gastone Moschin is another curious addition to the fold (serving pretty much the same function that Frank Wolff did in THE GREAT SILENCE) but acquits himself well and is amusingly clumsy in the presence of a bathing Francoise Fabian; the latter, then, plays a greedy nymphomaniac of a banker's widow who seduces all and sundry in the pursuit of her goals. Sylvie Fennec has the other major female role as a farm girl looked after by Hallyday and who, at one point, is entreated into Free Love by 'hippie' Apache Gabriella Tavernese (with this is mind, it's worth noting that the movie features surprising but welcome bouts of nudity from both Fabian and Tavernese)! Incidentally, the anachronistic addition of a bunch of long-haired youths (who also engage in dope-smoking and revolutionary talk) is a somewhat half-baked attempt at contemporary relevance – but it all eventually adds to the fun (besides, even the black barmaid sports an Afro hairdo!).

    Mario Adorf, too, enjoys himself tremendously with the smallish role of a larger-than-life Mexican bandit nicknamed "El Diablo" – who keeps a youthful biographer constantly by his side (an element which may have influenced Clint Eastwood's UNFORGIVEN [1992]) and, at one point, challenges the captive Moschin to a head-butting duel! Having mentioned this, the film also contains one very unusual 'weapon of death' – as Hallyday disposes of an adversary by kicking the cash-register of the saloon into his face! As always, the enjoyably fake fistfights are accompanied by over-emphatic sound effects; equally typically for the genre, however, the wistful score by Angelo Francesco Lavagnino emerges a most significant asset. Actually, the ambiguous ending is entirely in keeping with the film's generally somber tone – after Fabian's comeuppance at the hands of the locals, the hippies (who had previously idolized Hud) suddenly turn against him when wounded and terrorize the town (forcing everyone on the street and unclothed)…but the unflappable gunman manages to lift himself up to meet their challenge (they, however, scurry away at the prospect of facing him!) and then rides out of town, leaving Fennec behind.

    In conclusion, I acquired this via a good-quality Widescreen print in Italian albeit with French credits and the occasional lapse – about one minute of screen-time in all – into the French language (where, apparently, the original soundtrack wasn't available).
    8fgh

    Great Italo-Western, but yet depressing

    The whole town of Blackstone is afraid, because they lynched Bret Dixon's brother - and he is coming back for revenge! At least that's what they think.

    A great Johnny Hallyday and a very interesting, early Mario Adorf star in this Italo-Western, obviously filmed in the Alps.

    Bret Dixon is coming back to Blackstone to investigate why his brother was lynched. He is a loner and gunslinger par excellance, everybody is afraid of him - the Mexican bandits (fighting the Gringos that took their land!) as well as the "decent" citizens that lynched Bret's brother. They lynched him, because they thought he stole their money instead of bringing it to Dallas to the safety of the bank there. But this is is only half the truth, as we find out in the course of this psychologically interesting western.

    But beware, it's kind of a depressing movie as everybody turns out to be guilty somehow and definitely everybody is bad to the bone...

    Still, I enjoyed it very much and gave it an 8/10. Strange, that only less than 5 people voted for this movie as of January 12th 2002....
    9Weirdling_Wolf

    An audaciously stylised, dazzlingly quick-fire, bullet-blasting spaghetti western!'

    With his deservedly lauded, darkly hued outlaw masterpiece 'The Specialists' Sergio Corbucci once again dynamically proves himself the grand architect of audaciously stylised, dazzlingly quick-fire, bullet-blasting western action! A bona fide, flint-edged classic, dramatically fortified with an exemplary cast of charismatic Euro-cult legends, truly breathtaking vistas, an exemplary score by Angelo Francesco Lavagnino, pristine photography by maestro Dario Di Palma, and a seethingly enigmatic performance by broody, blisteringly bellicose blue-eyed Gallic icon Johnny Hallyday as the loner, fatally fast Gunslinger Hud Dixon!

    There's a fatalistic, palpably grim, strikingly Noirish quality to Corbucci's art that I found especially fascinating, with its majestically mountainous, soul-stirring vistas, lasso-tight plot, exemplary set pieces, and generously seratonin-spiking climax, the undeniably special 'Gli Specialisti' is a very, VERY fine western indeed! On a more personal note, not only did I find Hallyday's steely portrayal of the stern, solitudinous shootist Hud suitably menacing, it also proved to be pleasingly nuenced, engendering great sympathy for his isolated, doom-laden vengeance, a rare trait one doesn't often find in the more noisome, gun-happy spaghetti western protagonists of its era.
    8jameselliot-1

    Senor Corbucci multi-layered script

    The French Elvis, Johnny Hallyday is excellent, physically well-cast and impressive as the recurring main character in hundreds of Italian westerns: the lanky, silent stranger with supernatural shooting skills, and for the most part, not particularly interested in having sex with any of the gorgeous girls that filled the Italian westerns.

    "The Stranger" character is more interested in dollars or gold but it's rarely explained in most films what his goal would be once he gets said dollars. The prototype was Clint Eastwood followed by Franco Nero, Terrence Hill, Anthony Steffen, George Hilton, Mark Damon, John Phillip Law, Jean-Louis Trintignant, Giuliano Gemma, Gianni Garko, Chuck Connors, Robert Woods, Charles Bronson, Tony Anthony and other actors. Abstract and surreal, the one-dimensional characters in Italian westerns have nothing in common with the more complex characters in American western films and, especially, TV shows that presented westerners faced with the problems and challenges of daily life. An example of this is the character Connors played in Castellari's Kill Them All and Come Back Alone compared to the single dad Lucas McCain raising a son in The Rifleman, a violent show yet filled with great humanity.

    Hallyday gives a measured performance, much cooler than the explosive Law was in Death Rides A Horse, lighting the ever-present cigarillo and protecting a beautiful girl from harassing proto-hippies who enjoy rolling in mud holes while dealing elsewhere with a beautiful lady crime boss. Gli Specialisti also includes Mexican banditos, white townspeople (in Nevada), and a closing massacre that wipes out the town. His casting is as unusual as Trintignant's was in The Great Silence, an actor not associated with westerns like Hilton and Steffen were.

    As realized in his The Great Silence, and Django, Corbucci had a great eye for scenic and unusual locations that elevated his films from the many Italian westerns that all shared the same geography. His locations are an important part of his westerns. Gli Specialisti never struck a major chord in audiences and Euro western fans but it's well worth repeated viewings.
    9heybhc

    A top-notch director at his best!

    In the late sixties director Sergio Corbucci made four spaghetti westerns in a row--the classics THE MERCENARY, THE GREAT SILENCE, THE SPECIALISTS, and COMPANEROS. Three of these, all except THE SPECIALISTS, are constantly turning up on ten best lists when spaghetti westerns are rated. Until recently all I had seen was a very poor quality compilation with some English, some Italian, a fuzzy picture, and it was nearly incomprehensible. Now, having seen a beautiful widescreen version with subtitles (still in two languages, however), I can safely include THE SPECIALISTS in that group of four classics. Johnny Halliday is very good as the charismatic Hud, a notorious hand with the gun returning to Blackstone to investigate the death of his brother, who was lynched by the townspeople for losing their savings. It involves a voluptuous beauty who owns the bank, a Mexican bandit leader, El Diablo, who was once friends with Hud, an honest sheriff who dreams of better days, and a small band of hippies--well, it was the late sixties, and hippies were everywhere, even apparently in our westerns. It's not a desert western, shot in the alps somewhere, and is lovely to look at. There is a bit more nudity than I expect in a western, but that's not a bad thing. Sylvie Fennec is lovely as Sheba, who may be Hud's niece, or dead brother's girlfriend...that's never made clear. This film deserves to be seen, and once again, we plea for a nice DVD with all the trimmings--I think THE SPECIALISTS would be as well known as any of Corbucci's other westerns, and that's high praise indeed.

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    Related interests

    Clint Eastwood in Le Bon, la Brute et le Truand (1966)
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    Western

    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      Françoise Fabian tells in her biography that Sergio Corbucci - the film maker - asked her to play in a rape scene which was not previously in the script. There was a serious argument between the two of them because of this and even Corbucci's wife stood up on the set to defend her husband.
    • Goofs
      In the ending cast credits of the French version, Lucio Rosato is credited with playing both Cabot and the Deputy Sheriff. Gino Pernice, who actually played the former role, is credited in the opening credits but not the ending.
    • Connections
      Featured in L'Oeil du cyclone: Westernissimo (1995)

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    FAQ13

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • April 24, 1970 (France)
    • Countries of origin
      • Italy
      • France
      • West Germany
    • Languages
      • Italian
      • French
      • Spanish
    • Also known as
      • The Specialists
    • Filming locations
      • Cortina d'Ampezzo, Belluno, Veneto, Italy
    • Production companies
      • Adelphia Compagnia Cinematografica
      • Les Films Marceau
      • Neue Emelka
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 44m(104 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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