Friday, July 17, 2026

Little Known Spaghetti Western Actors ~ Günter Dornag

[These daily posts will cover little known actors or people that have appeared in more recent films and TV series. Various degrees of information that I was able to find will be given and anything that you can add would be appreciated.]

Günter Dorniag is/was a character/stuntman of unknown origin. He has only one film credit which was his only Euro-western as Günter Dornag in “Chingachgook, die große Schlange” (Chingachgook, the Great Snake) as a rider in 1967.

I can find no biographical information on him.

DORNAG, Günter (Günter Dorniag) [German] – film actor.

Chingachgook, the Great Snake – 1967 (rider)

Spaghetti Western Directors, Screenwriters, Cinematographers

Spaghetti Western Director ~ Anders Gullberg

Sven Anders Gullberg was born in Enskede, Stockholm, Sweden on August 4, 1947. He studied theatre, film and philosophy in Stockholm, National Film School, Beaconsfield, UK. Work with short-term engagement at SVT, RAI and ZDF. Has been making short films since 1972.

Anders Gullberg directed six Euro-westerns: “Encendero el tizonazo” in 2014, “La voluntad mas oscula” in 2015, “El palacio blanco de la reina” and “Rua raha” in 2017, “La vaca monteado” in  2018 and “Duelo en el saloon de una puerta abatable” in 2019.

GULLBERG, Anders (Sven Anders Gullberg) [8/4/1947, Enskede, Stockholm, Sweden -     ] – producer, director, cinematographer, film editor, composer, musician.

Encendero el tizonazo – 2014

La voluntad mas oscula - 2015

El palacio blanco de la reina – 2017

Rua raha - 2017

La vaca monteado - 2018

Duelo en el saloon de una puerta abatable – 2019


Spaghetti Western Screenwriter ~ Mario Costa

Italian production manager, director, assistant director, writer, film editor, actor was born in Rome on May 30, 1904. Costa’s work can be divided into two basic themes, first it was film versions of famous operas, later adventure films. He started working in films in his twenties, originally, he was an editor, production assistant, also involved in dubbing, and in the late thirties he also began writing scripts. His first film was the documentary film “Fontane di Roma” (1938), and his next short film “Pini di Roma” (1941) won an award at the Venice Film Festival. Mario Costa's feature directorial debut was the melodramatic story “La sua strada” (1943), for which he wrote the script himself and also edited it. After the war, Mario Costa focused on film adaptations of famous operas. After leaving the world of opera in the early 1950s, Mario Costa began making films of various genres, achieving another commercial triumph with the drama “Perdonami (1952) with Raf Vallon in the lead role. At the end of the 1950s, Mario Costa focused on adventure stories set in various historical periods, achieving wider acclaim with the film “I reali di Francia” (1959) starring Cuban star Chelo Alonso, and he also skillfully responded to the incipient interest in pirate stories with “La venere dei pirati” in 1961. Like other adventure filmmakers, he then switched to spaghetti westerns “Buffalo Bill” (1965). The last entry in Costa's filmography is the western “La Belva” (1970) with Klaus Kinski in the lead role.

COSTA, Mario (aka J.W. Fordson) [5/30/1904, Rome, Lazio, Italy – 10/22/1995, Rome, Lazio, Italy] – production manager, director, assistant director, writer, film editor, actor, married to ? father of production manager, director, assistant director, writer, Massimo Costa [1951-2004]

The Beast – 1970 (co)


Spaghetti Western Cinematographer ~ Tonino Maccoppi

Antonio “Tonino” Maccoppi is/was an Italian cameraman and cinematographer. He worked as a cameraman on six films between 1968 and 1991. He then turned to cinematography and worked on thirty-two films from 1968-1993. He was sometimes credited using the alias, Tony Hasler.

Tonino Maccoppi was a cinematographer on two Spaghetti westerns: “Un dólar para Sartana” (Raise Your Hands Dead Man, You’re Under Arrest) in 1971 and “Spirito Santo e le cinque magnifiche canaglie” (Gunmen and the Holy Ghost) in 1972.

MACCOPPI, Tonino (aka Tony Hasler) (Antonio Maccoppi) [Italian] – cinematographer, cameraman.

Raise Your Hands Dead Man, You’re Under Arrest – 1971

Gunmen and the Holy Ghost – 1972

Red Sun 4K UHD Review

Genre Grinder Cares

By: Gabe Powers

July 8, 2026


Label Arrow Video

4K UHD Release: July 14, 2026

Video: 1.85:1/2160p (HDR10/Dolby Vision)/Color

Audio: English LPCM 1.0

Subtitles: English SDH

Run Time: 115:04

Directors: Terence Young

Note: This review recycles aspects of my review of Cauldron Films’ release of Shanghai Joe (1973).

A ceremonial samurai sword intended as a gift to the U.S. President from the Japanese ambassador is stolen by the devilish rogue, Gauche (Alain Delon). To restore their honor and return the sword to its rightful owner, disgraced samurai Kuroda Jubei (Toshiro Mifune), double-crossed bandit Link Stuart (Charles Bronson), and femme fatale Christina (Ursula Andress) must set aside their differences and hunt down the merciless Gauche across the beautiful vistas of the American west. (From Arrow’s official synopsis)

The so-called spaghetti westerns were a series of European films set largely in the American west, made mostly by Italians, shot in Spain, and often co-financed by West Germans. They were designed for multiregional release and utilized international casts to aid sales in other countries. These efforts ensured that the spaghettis were popular across Europe, North America, and Asia, especially in Japan, where the genre’s connections to samurai cinema weren’t forgotten, and in Hong Kong, where the style and mythical revisionism of the spaghettis inspired pioneering wuxia filmmakers.

Mutual admiration and the similar box office success of kung fu and samurai flicks eventually led to a collection of East meets West spaghettis, in which Japanese samurai and Chinese martial artists had adventures alongside cowboys in the American Southwest. Early examples were Enzo Peri’s Death Walks in Laredo (Italian: Tre pistole contro Cesare, 1968) and Don Taylor & Italo Zingarelli’s The 5-Man Army (Italian: Un esercito di 5 uomini, 1969), but 1973 was the year that the mini-genre broke out with Bruno Corbucci’s The Three Musketeers of the West (Italian: Tutti per uno... botte per tutti), Tonino Ricci’s Karate, Fists & Beans (Italian: Storia di karatè, pugni e fagioli), Alberto de Martino’s Here We Go Again, Eh Providence? (Italian: Ci risiamo, vero Provvidenza?), and Mario Caiano’s Shanghai Joe (Italian: Il mio nome è Shangai Joe)*.

There were higher-profile examples, too, like The Stranger and the Gunfighter (Italian: Là dove non batte il sole, 1974), which paired Lee Van Cleef and Lo Lieh, and Take a Hard Ride (1975), a spaghetti-blaxploitation vehicle that teamed-up Van Cleef with Jim Brown, Fred Williamson, and martial arts star Jim Kelly – both directed by Antonio Margheriti – but none had the budget or notoriety of Terence Young’s Red Sun (French: Soleil rouge; Italian: Sole rossois, 1971), which is to The Stranger and the Gunfighter, as Sergio Leone’s Once Upon a Time in the West (Italian: C'era una volta il West, 1968) is to Sergio Corbucci’s Django (1966) – a lavishly produced variation on a theme designed for blockbuster markets and critical praise. It’s not as good as Leone’s film, but it has the same spirit of scale and grandeur, and even shares a cast member in Charles Bronson.

Red Sun’s cultural melting pot is also bigger than its counterparts’. The cast is built around four leads, mirroring that of Once Upon a Time in the West (probably on purpose), right down to the three men to one woman ratio. Instead of blending Hollywood and Italian stars, Red Sun represents four distinct countries – America in Bronson (reportedly, Young wanted Clint Eastwood), Switzerland in Ursula Andress, France in Alain Delon, and Japan with Toshiro Mifune.

Young was a versatile filmmaker who shot thrillers, dramas, musicals, and comedies. He was particularly gifted at staging action, which made him a leading director of war films and scored him the job of bringing the James Bond novel series to the big screen. His greatest claims to fame are Dr. No (1962), From Russia with Love (1963), and Thunderball (1965) – the first, second, and fourth Bond films, respectively – making him one of the architects of post-war spy cinema. Extremely capable and extremely influential, especially in Italy, where his films spawned a series of 007 knock-offs, if any (currently working) English director could compete with Leone, it would be Terence Young.

Mifune is the centerpiece of the film’s meta-casting. Arguably the biggest jidaigeki star to have ever lived, his storied career included Akira Kurosawa’s Yojimbo (1961), the film Leone remade as Fistful of Dollars (Italian: Per un pugno di dollari, 1964), and Seven Samurai (1954), the film that John Sturges remade as Magnificent Seven (1960), co-starring Bronson. Red Sun was his only western, but not his first English language movie. Previously, he had a supporting part in John Frankenheimer’s Grand Prix (1966), alongside western legend James Garner, and John Boorman’s Hell in the Pacific (1968), alongside western legend Lee Marvin.

Andress and Young had worked together previously on Dr. No, a film that made them stars, but which also pigeonholed their wider careers as Bond Girl and Bond director. Andress had made one other western, Robert Aldrich’s comedy 4 for Texas (1963), which had Bronson in a supporting role. She was such a regular fixture in Italy throughout the ‘60s, ‘70s, and ‘80s that she might as well have been considered an Italian star at the time, instead of a Swiss one, for the sake of the box office.

Delon made his Hollywood debut in Ralph Nelson’s Once a Thief (1965), followed by his first western, Michael Gordon’s Texas Across the River (1966) with Andress’ 4 for Texas co-star Dean Martin. Like Andress, he was already very popular in Italy, having worked with Luchino Visconti and Michelangelo Antonioni. Around the same time as Red Sun, Delon was making crime movies with known spaghetti western hater Jean-Pierre Melville and transferred the cool persona he’d cultivated on Le Samouraï (1967), Le Cercle Rouge (1970), and Un Flic (1972) straight into his role as Red Sun’s main antagonist.

The film (not to be confused with Rudolf Thome’s Rote Sonne, also 1970) was co-financed by French, Italian, and Spanish producers and filmed in Almeria, Spain in locations and sets that are familiar to any spaghetti western fan – the opening train heist, for example, was shot in the same La Calahorra rock formation as the opening train heist from Damiano Damiani’s Bullet for the General (Italian: Quien Sabe?, 1966). The supporting cast includes familiar faces, too, including Luc Merenda, Guido Lollobrigida, Hungarian Barta Barri, Spaniard Ricardo Palacios, and Englishman Anthony Dawson (who also worked with Young on Dr. No and From Russia with Love).

Unlike Burt Kennedy’s Hannie Caulder (1971), which was also co-financed by Brits and shot around Almeria with a partially Spanish crew, Red Sun tries too hard to appeal to the broadest possible audience and finds itself lacking core themes and signature images. Making a spaghetti-baguette-paella-beans-on-toast western requires too many cooks in the kitchen, it seems. Still, Young was one of the greatest action directors of his generation and Red Sun is ultimately worth watching for its shoot outs and its novelty casting, especially during the scenes where Bronson, cast somewhat against type as the funny one, and Mifune play odd couple.

Just for fun, here’s a screencap from the beginning of the film. Note that the wanted poster beside Charles Bronson appears to have a picture of Tony Musante’s character, Paco, from Sergio Corbucci’s The Mercenary (Italian: Il Mercenario; aka: A Professional Gun, 1968) on it, albeit with a different name. I don’t believe that this is an intended easter egg, but the result of production designers reusing props.

* On the opposite end of the spectrum is Luigi Vanzi’s The Silent Stranger (Italian: Lo straniero di silenzio; aka: A Stranger in Japan, 1968), which flips the script, sending writer/star Tony Anthony’s titular bounty hunter to Edo Japan.

Video

Red Sun was borderline unwatchable on digital video in the US. There were two pan & scan DVDs from Fox Lorber and UAV, and it never had an official stateside Blu-ray release. Digital streaming or imports from Europe were the only available options. Studio Canal premiered the film on 4K UHD in the UK and France in 2024. At its base, Arrow’s US UHD/BD debut utilizes the Studio Canal’s 4K/HDR master; however, R3Store Studios and Arrow appear to have done their own grading pass, because the color timing is a bit different. The images on this page are taken from Arrow’s Blu-ray edition and I’ve also included some sliders featuring the UK Blu-ray release.

Neither 1080p transfer demonstrates the difference that the 4K resolution and Dolby Vision upgrades give both 2160p UHD transfers, but they do illustrate the subtle color differences. For example, the Arrow transfer corrects Studio Canal’s slightly greenish skies, but also pumps up the redness of the skin tones. What I can’t show you here is that the Arrow disc’s Dolby Vision pass is a bit more impressive than SC’s, but not really enough to garner re-buying the set if you already own the UK or French one. Outside of these very minor differences, both releases look great. I noticed some slightly mushy wide-angle details, but textures are consistent, grain is fine and natural, and there aren’t any major print damage artifacts.

Audio

Red Sun comes fitted with an uncompressed LPCM soundtrack in its original mono sound. Unlike most of the movies that fall under the Eurowestern heading, a lot of scenes appear to have been shot using sync’d sound, which is better for the performance quality, but does lead to issues of volume and clarity inconsistency. The track has a bit more depth than expected and exhibits only minor distortion at high volume. The final ingredient in this Hollywood-tier production crew is legendary composer Maurice Jarre, known best for collaborating with David Lean on Doctor Zhivago (1965) and Lawrence of Arabia (1962). Jarre doesn’t go full Lean, nor does he mimic Ennio Morricone, which would’ve still been in vogue.

Extras

    Commentary by critics C. Courtney Joyner and Henry Parke – Joyner, the author of The Westerners: Interviews with Actors, Directors, Writers (McFarland, 2009) and director of Trancers III (1992), and Parke, author of The Greatest Westerns Ever Made and the People Who Made Them (TwoDot, 2024), explore the making of Red Sun, the ins & outs of international financing, connections to other European and American westerns, and the wider careers of the cast & crew

    A Global Western (31:54, HD) – Action/Spectacle: A Sight and Sound Reader (BFI, 2000) author Jose Arroyo discusses the film’s production, its mash-up quality, its structure, its release and eventual cult following, and the circular influence shared by European and Hollywood movies.

    The Ghosts of the Samurai (31:12, HD) – Professor of Japanese Films at the University of California San Diego Daisuke Miyao focuses mostly on Mifune, the real history behind the film, the history of samurai fiction, western film influences in Japan, and connections between Mifune and Delon via Melville’s Le Samouraï.

    The Man with the Gold Tooth (14:56, HD) – Action Figures: Men, Action Films, and Contemporary Adventure Narratives (Palgrave Macmillan, 2006) author Mark Gallagher wraps things up with a retrospective look at the career of Alain Delon.

    Archival French TV promos:

        Pour le cinéma (3:27, SD) – Behind-the-scenes featurette and Terence Young interview.

        Un journal du cinéma (2:03, SD) – Press tour interviews with Terence Young and Toshiro Mifune.

    Theatrical trailer

    Image gallery



1968 Classic, Inspired by Real-Life Tragedy, Named Among Best Western Movies of 1960s ‘The Great Silence’ is a hugely underrated classic Western.

Men’s Journal

By Jack Walters

July 1, 2026

By many, the 1960s are widely considered the best decade for the Western genre. While Hollywood classics like Stagecoach and The Searchers had already been and gone, this era saw the rise of the so-called Spaghetti Western—a cinematic movement in Italy that aimed to emulate and evolve the classic Hollywood style.

Sergio Corbucci was among the most renowned filmmakers of this period, breaking into the scene with 1966’s Django, which became an immediate Western classic. But while Django is still remembered as a staple of the genre today, some of Corbucci’s lesser-known films have slipped through the cracks.

According to a ranking by Collider, Corbucci’s best film was actually The Great Silence, which he made just two years after Django. The Western stars Jean Louis Trintignant as a mute outlaw tasked with protecting a group of outlaws from the dangerous bounty hunters looking to take them down.

It’s a classic story of power, conflict, and sacrifice that clearly drew inspiration from many other Westerns that preceded it, but The Great Silence also garnered attention for its original, powerful screenplay that was reportedly influenced by several real-life events.

Corbucci claimed that The Great Silence was conceived as a political allegory following the deaths of Che Guevara and Malcolm X. The film intended to subvert typical tropes of the Western genre to provide a modernized, destabilizing Western that forced audiences to confront the real dangers of society in the 1960s.

While The Great Silence is now viewed as one of Corbucci’s greatest movies, and perhaps his strongest writing accomplishment, the film wasn’t an immediate success when it was first released in Italy. Its dark, bleak story was offputting to many contemporary critics, but the film was thankfully reevaluated in the years that followed with the benefit of hindsight.

Critics saw just how much Corbucci’s film had influenced the genre and finally respected the brave storytelling decisions he’d taken to subvert the traditional Hollywood tropes and build something much more socially relevant. Today, it’s viewed as a shining jewel in the Spaghetti Western movement, with many modern critics putting it on par with Django as Corbucci’s magnum opus.



Special Birthdays

Piero Umiliani (composer) would have been 100 today but died in 2001.








Thomas Keck [voice actor] would have been 95 today but died in 2015.



Thursday, July 16, 2026

RIP Margarita Andrey

 


Spanish actress Margarita Andrey died in Madrid at the age of 99 on July 15 in Madrid, Spain, the management entity AISGE reported on Wednesday. Born in Madrid on September 19, 1926, she achieved fame in just a decade of profession in films such as “Historias de la Radio” and “Aeropuerto”, before retiring from the profession after marrying in 1956 and having two children. Andrey appeared in one Euro-western, “El sobrino de don Buffalo Bill” (The Nephew of Buffalo Bill) as Mariana Sheriff in 1944.

Little Known Spaghetti Western Actors ~ Marie Dorly

[These daily posts will cover little known actors or people that have appeared in more recent films and TV series. Various degrees of information that I was able to find will be given and anything that you can add would be appreciated.]

Marie Dorly was a French actress who was born sometime in the late 1800s. She was probably a stage actress who also made over 50 films between 1909 and 1917. Marie was highly active in the 1910s and she is best remembered for her collaborations with legendary directors like Louis Feuillade and Léonce Perret, often playing supporting roles such as mothers, maids, or housekeepers in early cinema classics. There were a number of actors, actresses and singers named Dorly who were active during this period but their relationships to one another is unknown.

Marie Dorly appeared in on Euro-western, “Calino Wants to be a Cowboy) as a saloon patron in 1911.

DORLY, Marie [French] – film actress.

Calino Wants to be a Cowboy – 1911 (saloon patron)