A knife-wielding Mexican ne'er-do-well is tasked by a scholar with locating $3 million in revolutionary gold, and finds himself working and competing with various parties for it.A knife-wielding Mexican ne'er-do-well is tasked by a scholar with locating $3 million in revolutionary gold, and finds himself working and competing with various parties for it.A knife-wielding Mexican ne'er-do-well is tasked by a scholar with locating $3 million in revolutionary gold, and finds himself working and competing with various parties for it.
- Nathaniel Cassidy
- (as Donal O'Brien)
- Jean-Paul
- (as Edward Ross)
- Mateos Gonzalez
- (as Dan May)
- Posada Customer
- (uncredited)
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This Zapata-Western is inferior than previous entries but displays stirring adventures , shootouts, riding pursuits and is pretty amusing . Sensitive musical score by Bruno Nicolai , replacing the great Ennio Morricone , former films composer . Colorful and evocative cinematography by Mancori , showing marvelously the habitual Almeria (Spain) outdoors. The picture was well directed by Sergio Sollima that would be his last Western and following directing successes such as ¨Sandokan¨.
My Grade: B+
Blue Underground DVD Extras: Part of BU's Spaghetti Western Collection. Uncut; 17 minute'Run man Run: 35 years Running' Featurette; 38 minute 'Westerns Italian Style' Featurette; Italian Main Titles; Posters & Still Gallery; Talent Bios for Sergio Sollima & Tomas Milian; Theatrical Trailer
3 Easter Eggs: Highlight the hidden knife in the Extras menu for Trailers for "Django", "Dajango Kill", and "A Man Called Blade"; Highlight the knife in the main menu for Tomas Milian telling of his run with a tax man; The hidden knife over the face in the Chapter Select menu for an unsubtitled interview of some sort
This is a semi-sequel to "The Big Gundown", but like the Dollars trilogy one can be watched without the other and no confusion arise. In fact, it is probably best to watch this and not compare it to the two previous Sollima Westerns as this movie will be found wanting, which is not to say it is a poor film. Quite the opposite, it is very well directed, acted (especially by Milian), scored by Bruno Nicolai (although allegedly Ennio Morricone gave a helping hand) and the cinematography by Guglielmo Mancori is fantastic. It is just that in this picture what you get is absolutely what you see; there isn't any Fascist allegory hiding underneath like there is in "Face to Face" (1967) or the character complexities there is in "The Big Gundown". Perhaps because Sollima is a better director than scriptwriter (this is his only Spaghetti Western where Sergio Donati doesn't have a screenplay credit). Still, this is a very good Western, way above the average fare and a film anybody with even only a superficial knowledge of the genre will acknowledge as a great.
The Nicolai/Morricone score is nice but too hammering for my taste, cinematography is well above average. For me this film is the most humorous of the 3 Sollimas.
6/10
Did you know
- TriviaDirector Sergio Sollima said on the DVD extras of the movie that it was in fact Ennio Morricone that scored the music for the film. Sergio Sollima said Morricone's conductor Bruno Nicolai got the credit probably because Morricone was tied up at another studio at the time and didn't want any trouble.
- Quotes
Manuel 'Cuchillo' Sanchez: Where do you think we are?
Pablo: It's difficult to say, these hills are all the same. Let's ask him, come on! Oye amigo! can you tell me wher...?
Unknown "Gringo": I ain't your amigo dirty Mexican, get outta here!
Manuel 'Cuchillo' Sanchez: ...I think we are in Texas! Gracias Señor.
- Alternate versionsUK/international version is almost 35min shorter. The upcoming UK BluRay includes both the uncut original 120min version as well as this shorter UK/international theatrical cut at 85min run time
- ConnectionsFeatured in Western, Italian Style (1968)
- SoundtracksEspanto Enel Corazon
Sung by Tomas Milian
Choir by Cantori Moderni Di Alessandroni (uncredited)
Composed by Ennio Morricone (uncredited), Bruno Nicolai (uncredited) and Giuliano Tilesi (uncredited)
Lyrics by Peter Boom (uncredited)
- How long is Run, Man, Run?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Runtime
- 1h 41m(101 min)
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 2.35 : 1