Friday, July 10, 2026

RIP Joanna Pettet

 


RIP Joanna Pettet - Joanna Pettet, the London-born actress who played one of the eight Vassar graduates in Sidney Lumet’s “The Group” and a spy put to work by her father, David Niven’s James Bond, in “Casino Royale”, died in Temecula, California on July 7, 2026. She was 83. Born Joanna Jane Salmon was born in London on November 16, 1942. After her father, Harold, a British Royal Air Force pilot, was killed during World War II, her mother, Cecily, remarried and settled in Montreal. Joanna took the surname of her stepfather and had $1,000 with her when she moved to New York at age 16. She studied acting at Neighborhood Playhouse and made her Broadway debut in the 1961-62 Hal Prince-produced comedy “Take Her, She’s Mine”, starring Art Carney and Elizabeth Ashley and directed by George Abbott. Her film appearances included “The Group” (1966), “Casino Royale” (1967), “The Night of the Generals” (1967), “Robbery (1967); and “Blue” (1968). On television, Pettet turned up on four episodes of Rod Serling’s NBC anthology series ‘Night Gallery’ in the early 1970s and had a recurring role spanning the fourth and fifth seasons of CBS’ ‘Knots Landing’ in 1983 as Janet Baines. Pettet was married to actor Alex Cord from 1968 to 1989 and they had a son of Damien Zachary Cord in 1969 who died in1995. As mentioned above Pettet appeared in one Euro-western as Joanne Morton in 1968’s “Blue” with Terence Stamp.

Little Known Spaghetti Western Actor ~ Jaime Doria

[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.]

Jaime Doria is/was an Italian character actor. He appeared in fifteen films between 1966 and 1987. I can find no biographical information on him.

Jaime Doria appeared in two Spaghetti westerns: “J. and S. – storia criminale del far west” (Sonny & Jed) as a Garcia aide in 1972 and “La dove non batte il sole” (The Stranger and the Gunfighter) in 1974

DORIA, Jaime [1943, Galicia, Spain -     ] – film, TV actor.

Sonny & Jed – 1972 (Garcia aide)

The Stranger and the Gunfighter - 1974

Spaghetti Western Directors, Screenwriters, Cinematographers

Spaghetti Western Director ~ Ferde Grofe Jr.

Ferde Grofé Jr. is an American film producer, director, and screenwriter known for his work on independent action, adventure, and war films during the 1960s and 1970s, as well as later documentary productions. He is the son of the celebrated composer and arranger Ferde Grofé, who is best remembered for works such as the Grand Canyon Suite.

Born in Passaic, New Jersey on April 4, 1924, Grofé Jr. initially trained as an actor before entering the film industry as an assistant to producer Sam Katzman at Columbia Studios' Clover Productions. He later moved into independent filmmaking, often collaborating with American International Pictures and actor-director George Montgomery on low-budget features shot in the Philippines, including “The Steel Claw”, “Warkill”, and “The Proud and Damned”. One of his most distinctive projects was “The Day of the Wolves” (1971), filmed in Lake Havasu, Arizona, as his only feature produced in the continental United States. In subsequent years, he shifted toward producing documentary television programs, such as those on World War II and Vietnam War topics, and eventually retired to the Pacific Northwest.

Fedre died in Oakdale, California on October 20, 1998 at the age of 74.

Ferde Grofe Jr. directed one Spaghetti western, “Los orgullosos y los malditos” (The Proud and the Damned) in 1968.

GROFE Jr., Ferde (aka Ferde Grofé Jr., Ferd Grofe Jr., Ferde Grofé, Ferdie Grofe Jr., Ferde Grofe jr.) (Ferdinand Rudolf von Grofé Jr.) [4/4/1924, Passaic, New Jersey, U.S.A. – 10/20/1998, Oakdale, California, U.S.A.] – producer, director, writer, son of composer, conductor, arranger, Ferde Grofé Sr. (Ferdinand Rudolph von Grofé) [1892–1972], married to Iris Renee Walker [1923-2010 (1943-1998) father of Glenn Robert Grofe [1947-2007].

The Proud and the Damned – 1968


Spaghetti Western Screenwriter ~ Sandro Continenza

Sandro Continenza was an Italian screenwriter and journalist renowned for his extensive contributions to post-World War II cinema, particularly in comedy, peplum, and adventure genres, with credits on over 150 films spanning from 1949 to the early 1990s. Born on July 13, 1920 in Rome, he began his career as a gag writer for satirical magazines before transitioning to screenwriting, collaborating with prominent directors such as Alessandro Blasetti, Mario Monicelli, and Mario Mattoli. Continenza is also credited with coining the enduring Italian term maggiorata fisica, a humorous euphemism for a woman with prominent physical attributes, first used in a film script to describe actress Sophia Loren.

Continenza's debut came in 1949 with “Totò cerca casa”, a comedy directed by Mario Mattoli starring the iconic comedian Totò, marking the start of a long and fruitful partnership that saw him contribute to numerous Totò vehicles, including “Totò le Mokò” (1949), “Totò e Peppino divisi a Berlino” (1962), and “Totò, Peppino e... la malafemmina” (1956). He often worked alongside esteemed writers like Agenore Incrocci (Age), Furio Scarpelli, Suso Cecchi D'Amico, and the duo Vittorio Metz and Italo De Feo, helping to craft fast-paced, satirical narratives that captured the spirit of Italy's commedia all'italiana. His style emphasized improvisation and adaptability, frequently revising scripts on set to accommodate actors' strengths, especially Totò's instinctive comedic timing rooted in commedia dell'arte traditions.

Beyond comedies, Continenza ventured into peplum and Spaghetti westerns, scripting films like “Teseo contro il Minotauro” (1960), “Ercole alla conquista di Atlantide” (1961), and “Sugar Colt” (1967), which exemplified the era's low-budget spectacles blending myth, action, and light-hearted adventure. Later in his career, he tackled more varied projects, including the cult war parody “Quel maledetto treno blindato” (1978, known internationally as “The Inglorious Bastards”) and erotic comedies such as “Fico d'India” (1980). Occasionally stepping in front of the camera, he appeared in minor roles in anthology films like “L'amore difficile” (1962) and “Tempi nostril” (1954).

Continenza's legacy lies in his versatility and productivity during Italian cinema's golden age, bridging journalism's wit with film's populist entertainment, though he received no major awards and often shared credits in ensemble writing teams. His work reflected the socio-cultural shifts of mid-20th-century Italy, from postwar reconstruction humor to the excesses of the 1970s, influencing generations of screenwriters in the genre.

Sandro Continenza co-wrote screenplays for nine Euro and Spaghetti westerns: “Il sogno di Zorro” (The Dream of Zorro) with Mario Amendola, Ruggero Maccari, Marcello Marchesi and Vittorio Metz in 1951, “Il bandolero stanco” with Emo Bistolfi, Mario Guerra, Renato Rascel and Carlo Romano in 1952, “Gli eroi del West” (Heroes of the West) with Mario Guerra, Jose Mallorqui, Steno, Vittorio Vighi and Renzo Tarabusi in 1963, “Los pistoleros de Arizona” ($5,000 on One Ace) with José Antonio de la Loma, Alfonso Balcazar and Helmut Harun in 1964, “Django spara per primo” (Django Shoots First) with Massimo Capriccoli, Tito Carpi, Alberto DeMartino, Vincenco Flamini and Giovanni Simonelli, “Per pochi dollari ancora” (Fort Yuma Gold) with Massimiliano Capriccioli, Remigo Del Grosso, Guilles Morris Dumoulin, Augusto Finocchi, Ettore Giannini and Leonardo Méndez, “Sugar Colt” with Giuseppe Mangione, Franco Giraldi, Augusto Finocchi and  Fernando di Leo, “Per il gusto di uccidere” (A Taste for Killing) with Víctor Auz, Augusto Finocchi, Remigio Del Grosso,  Massimo Capriccioli and Leonardo Méndez all in 1966 and “Zanna Bianca alla riscossa” (White Fang to the Rescue) with Giovanni Simonelli in 1974.

CONTINENZA, Sandro (aka Continenza, Allesandro Continenza) (Alessandro Continenza) [7/13/1920, Rome, Lazio, Italy – 11/21/1996, Rome, Lazio, Italy] – assistant director, writer.

The Dream of Zorro – 1951 (co) [as Continenza]

Il bandolero stanco – 1952 (co)

Heroes of the West – 1963 (co)

$5,000 on One Ace – 1964 (co)

Django Shoot’s First – 1966 (co)

Fort Yuma Gold – 1966 (co)

Sugar Colt – 1966 (co)

A Taste for Killing – 1966 (co)

I soliti ignoti del West – 1972 [film was never made.]

The Lone Stranger in the West – 1973 [film was never made.]

White Fang to the Rescue – 1974 (co)


Spaghetti Western Cinematographer ~ Matthieu Lemercier

Matthieu Lemercier is a French cinematographer who attended Aix-Marseille University where he received a Master’s degree in cinematography graduating in 2008. He’s worked sixteen years as a cinematographer.

Matthieu Lemercier was a cinematographer on two Spaghetti westerns: “Per un pugno di spaghetti” in 2014 and “Per un pugno di spaghetti 2: Rosalita” in 2015.

LEMERCIER, Matthieu [French] – cinematographer., cameraman

Per un pugno di spaghetti – 2014

Per un pugno di spaghetti 2: Rosalita – 2015

A French-Language “Zorro” Offers a Charmingly Offbeat Interpretation of the Famous Vigilante

Roger Ebert.com

By Roger Ebert

June 30, 2026

The character of Zorro has been around for over a hundred years. Created by American pulp writer Johnston McCulley in 1919, the popular masked vigilante has appeared in over 40 feature films and multiple television series, portrayed by actors ranging from Tyrone Power and Douglas Fairbanks to Guy Williams and Antonio Banderas. And although Zorro may seem a somewhat archaic figure to modern audiences, the character has indelibly shaped much of the superhero fiction that remains so popular today.

Even those who know relatively little about the original stories in which the character appeared will find his masked crusader persona, complete with a domino mask, flowing cape, and secret lair, deeply familiar. This makes sense, given that Zorro was one of the foundational influences behind the creation of Batman, another wealthy aristocrat who plays dumb as a cover for the secret identity that allows him to battle corrupt elites and help the poor. But while these familiar narrative beats are still present in “Zorro,” MHz Choice’s eight-part French-language reimagining of the famous character, the series is eager to put its own spin on his story.

While this latest adaptation boasts familiar swashbuckling action, a masked hero, and a well-meaning crusade for justice, this isn’t a particularly traditional tale. A genre-bending mix of adventure, occasionally slapstick comedy, relationship mishaps, and colonial politics, this “Zorro” feels largely unlike any take on this particular hero we’ve ever seen before. It’s an ambitious reimagining that doesn’t always work—its insistence on mistaken identity gags will test your patience at more than one point—but the show’s refreshingly different approach to its premise still manages to make this century-old hero feel brand new again.

The story begins in 1821 when Zorro is essentially retired. His real-life alter ego, the dorky but charmingly earnest Don Diego de la Vega (Jean Dujardin), hasn’t put on his famous cape and mask in 20 years. Now a fifty-something proto-technocrat, he fights for justice by way of civic improvement. He has grand plans for improving his beloved Los Angeles, including installing a central pipeline to bring much-needed water to the town. But when he inherits the role of mayor after his father’s (André Dussollier) death, he learns that the elder De la Vega has left it in substantial debt to the predatory businessman Don Emmanuel (Éric Elmosnino).

A corrupt grifter who runs the local casino, uses shell corporations to avoid taxes, and pays his workers with mezcal that he then has the police arrest them for drinking in public, Don Emmanuel regularly—and gleefully—exploits the most marginalized and downtrodden in the community. (There’s even a point at which his casino chips become the town’s primary currency.) He fears no punishment or consequences, and his brazen behavior is nothing so much as proof that, despite Don Diego’s best efforts, the people still need Zorro after all.

Getting back into the saddle takes a while, both literally and figuratively speaking, but by the time loyal sidekick, Bernardo (the endlessly delightful Salvatore Ficarra) has upgraded his gear and introduced him to the son of his famous horse, Tornado (who is also named Tornado, because of course he is), things are suddenly looking a lot more like something we’ve seen before.

Yet “Zorro” smartly refuses to take the easy path. As Don Diego resumes his secret identity, freeing the wrongfully imprisoned, thwarting theft, and just generally riding to the rescue whenever it’s necessary, Zorro slowly emerges as the town’s de facto leader and beloved savior, frequently stealing the spotlight from his own mayoral efforts. To make things even more complicated, De La Vega’s wife Gabriella (Audrey Dana) has a flirtatious run-in with Zorro, a connection blossoms, and Don Diego ultimately finds himself trapped in a love triangle…with another side of himself.

Plenty of vaudevillian-style hijinks ensue as De La Vega pushes himself to the limit to keep his secret, complete with several close calls, misunderstandings, and false accusations. But “Zorro” is at its most interesting in the moments when Don Diego’s identities—both real and secret—come into conflict. We see our hero genuinely struggling with the intersection of his very different lives, torn between his understanding of the man he is and the man he wants to be seen as. He resents his alter ego’s popularity and ability to inspire the townspeople, even as he basks in their praise and admiration. He relishes the opportunity to reconnect with the wife he loves, physically and otherwise, though he is tormented by the fact that she’s drawn so strongly to someone else. (Even if that man is, also technically, him.)

American audiences are likely most familiar with Dujardin from his Oscar-winning turn in the largely dialogue-free 2011 film “The Artist,” and he makes for a charismatic leading man here, awkwardly earnest and dryly funny by turns. Though the series features its share of sword-fighting action, this “Zorro” is equally as interested in Don Diego’s internal battles with himself, often depicted via arguments with an imaginary version of his dead father, and Dujardin deftly balances humor and sincerity in ways we don’t tend to associate with this particular character.

Unfortunately, some of the series’ jokes go on a bit too long, and the show drags badly in its midsection. Part of the reason for this is that Zorro and Gabriella’s repeated flirtations and steadily deepening relationship require an almost laughable suspension of disbelief to work, something the admittedly strong chemistry between the actors can’t always cover for. This results in a regrettable (and, quite frankly, unnecessary) dumbing-down of her character. Her incomprehensible disinterest in Zorro’s true identity—not to mention her willingness to let him keep the mask on at all times—does a disservice to Dana’s otherwise sparky and intelligent performance as a woman who generally seems fairly modern for her time.

Told in French, shot in Spain, and full of the colorful imagery of Old California, “Zorro” makes for an enjoyable enough summer distraction, a pleasant throwback to when adventure-themed television was still something major networks still made. Despite poking at themes ranging from the rise of populism to the struggles of aging, the show never takes itself too seriously, and its broad, warmly comedic vibes will almost certainly charm a wide range of viewers. Perhaps this particular masked avenger isn’t the hero we particularly expected to reappear in the year of our Lord 2026, but his return is a welcome one all the same.

All eight episodes screened for review. Premieres June 30 on MHz Choice.

Trailer https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_IIMAlA_BrM


Angel Eyes Named the Greatest Western Villain: Discover Why He Tops the List

Men’s Journal

By Rachel Schneider

June 25, 2026

Angel Eyes Named the Greatest Western Villain: Discover Why He Tops the List

The Western genre has produced some of cinema's most unforgettable villains. From ruthless outlaws and corrupt lawmen to cold-blooded killers, these characters have often become just as iconic as the heroes who eventually faced them.

Collider recently ranked the greatest Western villains of all time, and one character stood above the rest: Angel Eyes from Sergio Leone's 1966 masterpiece The Good, the Bad and the Ugly.

Why Angel Eyes Took the No. 1 Spot

Played by Lee Van Cleef, Angel Eyes isn’t simply another outlaw looking for a payday. He’s calculating, patient, and completely without a conscience.

Throughout The Good, the Bad and the Ugly, Angel Eyes relentlessly hunts a cache of buried Confederate gold, leaving a trail of betrayal and murder behind him. Unlike many Western villains, he doesn’t operate by any code of honor. If someone stands between him and what he wants, they’re expendable.

Collider praised the character’s chilling combination of “piercing eyes, sneering smirk, and callous charm,” noting that he inspires fear simply by walking into a room. The publication also pointed to his willingness to betray even his own employer and abandon his allies if it benefits him, making him one of the most morally bankrupt characters ever seen in a Western.

Other Legendary Western Villains Also Made the List

While Angel Eyes claimed the top spot, Collider's ranking featured several other memorable antagonists from across Western history. Leonardo DiCaprio's cruel plantation owner Calvin Candie from Django Unchained finished second, followed by Lee Marvin's intimidating Liberty Valance from The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance.

Javier Bardem's relentless Anton Chigurh from No Country for Old Men came in fourth, while Henry Fonda's shocking turn as Frank in Once Upon a Time in the West rounded out the top five.

The remainder of the top 10 included Little Bill Daggett (Unforgiven), Calvera (The Magnificent Seven), Lucky Ned Pepper (True Grit), Johnny Ringo (Tombstone), and Ben Wade (3:10 to Yuma).

A Villain Who Defined the Spaghetti Western

Angel Eyes has endured because he represents everything audiences fear in a Western antagonist.

He's intelligent, ruthless, and impossible to predict.

Combined with Lee Van Cleef's unforgettable performance and Sergio Leone's masterful direction, the character helped elevate The Good, the Bad and the Ugly into one of the greatest Westerns ever made.


Special Birthdays

George Bellamy (actor) would have been 160 today but died in 1944.









Ramón Lillo (actor) is 85 today.










Sue Lyon (actress) would have been 80 today but died in 2019.



Thursday, July 9, 2026

Little Known Spaghetti Western Actor ~ Franco Doria

[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.]

Francesco ‘Franco’ Doria is/was a dwarf Italian cameraman and film actor best known for his work in 1960s and 1970s genre films. His acting credits include appearances in cult classics such as “Wild, Wild Planet” (1966), “The Tree of Guernica” (1975), and the holiday favorite “The Christmas That Almost Wasn't” (1966).

Like most European dwarf performers and actors very little is known about the. Doria is no exception. Many came from careers in the various circuses so that was probably the case for Franco. We do know he appeared in around a dozen films between 1964 and 1976. Among them was his only Spaghetti western appearance as a Mesilla deputy in 1966’s

Franco Doria appeared in one Spaghetti western, “l buono, il brutto, il cattivo” (The Good, the Bad and the Ugly” in 1966.

DORIA, Franco (aka Frank Doris) (Francesco Doria) [Italian] – cameraman, film actor.

The Good, the Bad and the Ugly - 1966 (Mesilla deputy)