Wednesday, April 22, 2026

Little Known Spaghetti Western actors ~ Stefan Diestelmann

[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.]

Stefan Diestelmann was born in Munich, Germany on January 29, 1949, and was a German blues musician, singer, actor, and composer renowned as the most internationally recognized blues artist in the German Democratic Republic (GDR), where he played a pivotal role in developing the local blues scene during the 1970s and 1980s. His work with the Stefan Diestelmann Folk Blues Band and releases on the state-owned AMIGA label established him as a leading figure in East German music despite persistent challenges from communist authorities. His parents were actors affiliated with the East German DEFA studios, Diestelmann relocated to the GDR with his family in 1961 amid the construction of the Berlin Wall. There he pursued blues music as an autodidact and collaborating with international artists such as British blues musician Alexis Korner in 1982. Increasing repression, including performance bans and prohibitions on radio play, limited his activities in the East. In 1984, following a guest performance, Diestelmann chose not to return to the GDR and settled in West Germany, where he continued touring with various musicians across the Federal Republic, Austria, and Switzerland. He additionally contributed as a composer for films and appeared in acting roles, though he struggled to regain the prominence he had achieved in the East. Diestelmann lived reclusively in Bavaria until his death in Tutzing, Bavaria, Germany on March 27, 2007, which did not become publicly known until late 2011.

Stefan Diestelmann appeared in on Euro-western, “Sing, Cowboy, Sing” as the barkeeper in 1980.

DIESTELMANN, Stefan [1/29/1949, Munich, Bavaria, Germany – 3/27/2007, Tutzing, Bavaria, Germany] – producer, composer, film, TV actor, singer, musician, son of actor Jochen Diestelmann [1922-1983], actress Hildegard Diestelmann [1920-1989], member of the bands ‘Vai hu’ [1975], ‘Stefan Diestelmann Folk Blues Band’.

Sing, Cowboy, Sing – 1980 (barkeeper)

Spaghetti Western Directors, Screenwriters, Cinematographers

Spaghetti Western Director ~ Àmasi Damiani

Amasi Damiani is an Italian producer, director, assistant director, writer, film editor and actor. He directed twenty-three films between 1964 and 2011, a writer on sixteen films, a film editor on nine films and an assistant director on three films. He also produced and appeared in one film.

Amasi was born in Leghorn, Tuscany, Italy on September 26, 1927. He is the brother of writer Alberto Damiani. Amasi attended the university to please his parents, but they were not able to keep him there because he decided to try the Roman adventure. He entered the circle of the great Roberto Rossellini and they became friends. Damiani actually worked with him on his films for free. I was interested in learning the profession and sitting at the table with the master. Also with him were Vittorio Taviani and Federico Fellini.

After fifty years he returned to his hometown, Livorno. In the summer of 2010, he created the New Race Movie, a film school where he welcomes all people who want to learn what a film is and how to make it

Àmasi Damiani directed two Spaghetti westerns: “Una forca per un Bastardo” (A Rope for a Bastard) in 1967 and “Tara Poki” in 1971.

DAMIANI, Àmasi (aka Aaron Humberstone, Joseph Mallory, A. Van Dike, A. van Dyke) [9/26/1927, Leghorn, Tuscany, Italy -     ] – producer, director, assistant director, writer, film editor, actor, brother of writer Alberto Damiani, married to assistant director, production designer, makeup artist Adriana Lamacchia, founded the New Race Movie school [2010].

A Rope for a Bastard - 1967

I Fantasmi di Omah-Ri – 1971 [film was never released]

Tara Pokì – 1971


Spaghetti Western Screenwriter ~ Vito Bruschini

Vito Bruschini was born in Rome, Italy on March 19, 1943. He is an Italian director, assistant director, journalist and writer.

As a journalist he has directed the magazine Quark Magazine and the monthly ecotourism magazine Geos. He created an editorial services company, with which he created inserts and cultural attachments for various editorial publications and worked for the fashion magazine Audrey, for the print edition of the newspaper Il Globo and for the monthly watch magazine Kronos.

He worked as a screenwriter and assistant director on a number of films in the 1970s and directed and wrote the 1977 film “White Fang and the Big Kid”, which won the Jury Prize at the Giffoni Film Festival. In the 1980s, he wrote documentaries and cultural broadcasts for television and instructional videos for various editorial series. He has also taught directing at the Rosebud academy, a private school of cinema and television and has made television programs for the Sky platform.

As mentioned above Bruschini wrote the screenplay for a Spaghetti western that he also directed, “Zanna Bianca e il grande Kid” (White Fang and the Kid) in 1977.

BRUSCHINI, Vito [3/19/1943, Rome, Lazio, Italy -     ] – director, assistant director, journalist, writer.

White Fang and the Kid – 1977 (co)


Spaghetti Western Cinematographer ~ I.C. Freely

I.C. Freely was an alias used by German born cinematographer Andreas Demmer. He was born in Amber, Bayern, Germany on August 9, 1914. He was the son of court assistant and later judicial inspector Josef Demmer and his wife Anna, née Solleder, he learned the trade of a druggist after secondary school before he began an apprenticeship in photography and became an intern at Arnold & Richter in Munich from 1933. Andreas Demmer worked as a camera assistant at UFA, among others.

After the Second World War, he went to Switzerland, where he first worked for August Kern, whom he already knew from his time in Munich, and later for Heinrich Fueter's Condor-Films in the field of commissions and documentary films. In 1965, Demmer received an award at the Zurich Film Prize together with director Franz Schnyder.

In between, Demmer was repeatedly used by Erwin C. Dietrich for his films, all of which were genre-typical exploitation trash of the 1960s and 1970s with evocative titles such as “Black Market of Love” and “The Sex Adventures of the Three Musketeers”.

Andreas Demmer was married to the editor Anne Demmer, with whom he had a son, and from 1985 until his death to Alice Sauter. Most recently a member of the board of directors of T&C-Film, he died in Zurich on December 11, 1997 at the age of 83.

Demmer as I.C. Freely was the cinematographer on one Spaghetti western “Django Nudo und die husternen Madchen von Porno Hill” (Nude Django) in 1968.

[“Nude Django” was actually and American film “Brand of Shame” with additional soft porn scenes added.]

FREELY, I.C. (Andreas Demmer) [8/9/1914, Amberg, Bayern, Germany – 12/11/1997, Zurich, Switzerland] – cameraman, cinematograph, married to film editor Anne Demmer father of a son, married to Alice Sauterer (1985-1997).

Nude Django – 1968


Who Are Those Guys? ~ Sean Flynn

 

Sean Leslie Flynn was born on May 31, 1941, in Los Angeles, California, to Australian-born actor Errol Flynn and French-born actress Lili Damita. His father had achieved stardom in Hollywood by the late 1930s through roles in adventure films such as “Captain Blood” (1935) and “The Adventures of Robin Hood” (1938), establishing a reputation for portraying charismatic swashbucklers. Flynn's mother had emigrated to the United States in the 1920s and built a career in silent films and early talkies, including appearances in “The Bridge of San Luis Rey” (1929), before marrying Errol Flynn in 1935.

The couple's marriage produced Sean as their only child together, though Errol Flynn had two daughters from a subsequent marriage. Errol Flynn and Lili Damita separated shortly after Sean's birth, with their divorce finalized in 1942 amid publicized conflicts over Errol's lifestyle and career demands. Primary custody was awarded to Damita, who relocated with Sean to Florida to distance him from Hollywood's scrutiny.

Sean Flynn's acting career, which included roles in films such as “Son of Captain Blood” (1962) and two Spaghetti Westerns filmed in Spain in 1965, yielded only middling success and failed to fulfill his aspirations for excitement beyond scripted scenarios. By the mid-1960s, he had become bored and disinterested in Hollywood's artificiality, prompting him to abandon acting in favor of pursuits offering genuine peril and purpose. Prior to fully committing to photojournalism, Flynn briefly guided safaris and big-game hunts in Africa, reflecting his craving for real-world adventure unscripted by studio demands. During his final acting stint in Spain, financial necessity led him to purchase a Leica camera, which sparked a burgeoning interest in capturing authentic imagery rather than performing in front of lenses. This pivot aligned with his rejection of a lukewarm film trajectory, as contemporaries noted his talent lay untapped in the superficiality of entertainment. In January 1966, Flynn arrived in Vietnam as a freelance photographer for Paris Match, drawn to the conflict as "the only place in the world where anything’s happening," where he could document raw human drama and frontline intensity unavailable in acting. This shift to war photojournalism under contracts with outlets like Time magazine represented a deliberate embrace of risk and truth-seeking documentation over the comforts and illusions of stardom

Flynn disappeared April 6, 1970, while investigating Khmer Rouge activity near National Highway 1 in Cambodia, Flynn and fellow photojournalist Dana Stone were detained by communist guerrillas, likely Viet Cong or Khmer Rouge fighters; they were never seen again and are widely presumed executed, though no remains have been conclusively identified amid disputed recovery claims. Flynn was declared legally dead in 1984.

FLYNN, Sean (Sean Leslie Flynn) [5/31/1941, Los Angeles, California, U.S.A. – 6/?/1971 Chi Pou, Cambodia (murdered)] – journalist, photographer, cinematographer, film, TV actor, son of producer, director, writer, actor, singer Errol Flynn (Errol Leslie Thomson Flynn) [1909-1959] actress, singer Lili Damita (Liliane Marie Madeleine Carré) [1908–1994], half-brother of stuntwoman, actress Deirdre Flynn [1945-    ], model, photographer Rory Flynn [1947-    ], Arnella Flynn [1953-1986], uncle of actor Sean Flynn [1989-    ].

The Sign of Zorro - 1962 (Don Ramón Martínez y Rayol/Zorro)

7 Magnificent Pistols for Timothy – 1965 (Timothy Hollister Benson)

Vengeance Ranch - 1966 (Jimmy Trevor/Slatery/Ringo/Gringo/Luke)

Special Birthdays

Harald Leipnitz (actor) would have been 100 today but died in 2000.







Bob Henry (actor) would have been 90 today but died in 2016.








Ángel Terrón [stuntman] is 75 today. 



Tuesday, April 21, 2026

Little Known Spaghetti Western actors ~ Otto Dierichs

[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.]

Otto Dierichs was a German actor known for his career in East German film and television productions. Born on March 23, 1900, in Düsseldorf Germany, he appeared in numerous DEFA films and television series, often in supporting roles, and directed several early television projects. His work spanned from the 1950s through the 1970s, with notable appearances in films such as ''Ein irrer Duft von frischem Heu'', ''Leute mit Flügeln'', and ''Befreiung – Die Hauptrichtung des Schlages'' (Liberation: Direction of the Main Blow), as well as episodes of series like ''Polizeiruf 110'' and ''Wege übers Land''. Dierichs passed away on September 12, 1978, in Berlin. His contributions reflect the landscape of East German entertainment during the GDR era through numerous performances in film and television 

Otto Dietrichs appeared in one Euro-western, “Trini” (Death for Zapata) as Miguel in 1976.

DIERICHS, Otto [3/23/1900, Düsseldorf, North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany – 9/12/1978, East Berlin, Berlin, East Germany] – director, film, radio, TV, vocie actor.

Death for Zapata – 1976 (Miguel)

Spaghetti Western Directors, Screenwriters, Cinematographers

Spaghetti Western Director ~ Russell Quinn Cummings

Russell Quinn Cummings is an American producer, director, assistant director, writer, stuntman and actor. He was born in Hobbs, New Mexico on December 30, 1984, and has appeared in twenty-five films and TV appearances beginning in 2006 to the present. He’s also produced and written three films.

Cummings has appeared in three recent Spaghetti westerns: “Six Bullets to Hell” in 2013 as Sheriff Morris and performing stunts which he also helped producer and wrote, “The Price of Death” in 2017 as a deputy and in 2024’s “In the Name of the Gun”

Russell Quinn Cummings co-directed one Spaghetti western “¡Seis balas al infierno!” (Six Bullets to Hell) with Tanner Bear in 2016

CUMMINGS, Russell Quinn (aka Russell Cummings) [12/30/1981, Hobbs, New Mexico, U.S.A. -     ] - producer, director, assistant director, writer, stuntman, actor

Reverend Colt – 2013, 2016 [Film was never made.]

Six Bullets to Hell – (co) 2016


Spaghetti Western Screenwriter ~ Ulrich P. Bruckner

Ulrich P. Bruckner was born in Innsbruck, Tyrol, Austria on March 28, 1962. He went to college at Leopold-Franzens-Universität Innsbruck and then attended A. B. Freeman School of Business at Tulane University. After graduation he went to work at Koch media and films and was able to convince them to let him release a number of Spaghetti western films on DVD. The films had excellent reproductive qualities and features such as original trailers and interviews. Bruckner than went to work for Sony Pictures Home Entertainment GSA and now President at Explosive-Media. Ulrich has also written a history of European westerns Für ein paar Leichen mehr (2002) and a revised edition in 2006. Ulrich travelled to Spain several times to visit the Leone and other Euro-western locations and then on to Italy to interview some of the stars of the genre including Giuliano Gemma, Gianni Garko and George Hilton.

Ulrich produced directed and wrote screenplays for several short documentaries on participants in the Spaghetti western genre and their films. These can be found on several of the Koch DVD and Blu-ray releases as well as several others.

Ulrich wrote the screenplays for “Mark Damon: From Gunslinger to Hollywood Player” in 2006 and “Spaghetti Western Memories” in 2012

BRUCKNER, Ulrich P. (aka Ulrich Bruckner) [3/28/1962, Innsbruck, Tyrol, Austria -     ] – author, producer, director, film actor, married to Anita Bruckner, father of actor Anton Bruckner.

Mark Damon: From Gunslinger to Hollywood Player - 2006

Spaghetti Western Memories – 2012


Spaghetti Western Cinematographer ~ Alfredo Fraile

Alfredo Fraile Lallana was born in Madrid, Spain on April 25, 1912, and began his career as a cinematographer in the early 1940s, during the post-Spanish Civil War period when Spanish cinema was rebuilding under significant political and cultural constraints. His first credited role as director of photography came with the film “Porque te vi llorar” (1941), directed by Juan de Orduña.

Fraile quickly established collaborations with key directors of the era, particularly Rafael Gil, with whom he worked on multiple projects that showcased his skill in black-and-white photography. He served as cinematographer on “Huella de luz” (1943), a drama directed by Gil that highlighted his emerging technical style. This partnership continued with “El clavo” (1944), a period drama noted for its atmospheric lighting and use of shadows to enhance dramatic tension.

Throughout the rest of the decade, Fraile contributed to several notable Spanish productions, including “La pródiga” (1946), directed by Rafael Gil, where his work helped define the visual tone of post-war melodramas. These early efforts laid the foundation for his reputation as a versatile and reliable cinematographer in the Spanish film industry during a formative time.

Fraile's most productive and acclaimed years as a cinematographer came in the 1950s and 1960s, when he became a key collaborator with leading Spanish directors such as Luis García Berlanga and Juan Antonio Bardem, helping shape some of the most important films of Spanish cinema during the Franco era. His work in this period was marked by sharp black-and-white photography, effective use of lighting and composition to support satirical and social themes, and technical skill in capturing the nuances of Spanish society under censorship.

Alfred died on May 21, 1994, in Madrid at the age of 82.

Alfredo Fraile was a cinematographer and co-cinematographer on four Spaghetti westerns: “Tierra brutal” (The Savage Guns) in 1961, “L’uomo della velle maledetta” (The Man od the Cursed Valley) with Remo Grisanti, “El hijo de Jesse James” (The Son of Jesse James) with Fausto Zuccoli and “I due violenti” (Two Violent Men) all in 1964.

FRAILE, Alfredo (aka Fraile) (Alfredo Fraile Lallana) [4/25/1912, Madrid, Madrid, Spain – 5/21/1994, Madrid, Madrid, Spain] – producer, director, writer, cinematographer, cameraman, actor, married to María Eugenia Peña father of six children.

The Savage Guns - 1961

The Man from the Cursed Valley – 1964 (co)

The Son of Jesse James – 1964 (co)

Two Violent Men – 1964

Once Upon A Time In The West Ending Explained: An Ancient Race

Slash Film

By Lee Adams

January 26, 2026

I don't think I'll ever tire of rhapsodizing about the shootouts in the movies of Sergio Leone. He was a director fascinated by the infinite possibilities of the showdown — the critical few moments before the duelists draw their guns and try to shoot each other dead. With extreme close-ups, he studied faces as time stretched out to impossible lengths. And then, the matter was settled in a brief flurry of violence.

Leone's obsession with the waiting period reached its artistic peak in "Once Upon a Time in the West." Here, the timer for the showdown begins well before the logical starting point — when all the adversaries are present and facing each other. For eight breathless minutes, three villains stand around and do nothing at a dusty train station in the middle of nowhere. One cracks his knuckles. Another tries to take a nap but is bothered by a fly. The third catches drops from the water tower in the brim of his hat. It takes a talented director to make an exciting action sequence, but a genius to make boredom just as enthralling.

Then the train rolls in with a burst of noise and smoke, carrying our hero. He plays a mournful tune on his harmonica. Images and music are intrinsically linked in Leone's films and, like the tinkling pocket watches in "For a Few Dollars More," the man's leitmotif is crucial to the movie's emotional payoff. You can tell he's probably in town for vengeance, but what drives him to haunt his target before pulling the trigger?

So what happens in Once Upon a Time in the West again?

After Harmonica (Charles Bronson) realizes he's been set up — he was there to meet the boss, Frank (Henry Fonda) — he exchanges a few terse words with the three killers and shoots them dead.

Meanwhile, Brett McBain (Frank Wolff) and his kids are preparing a wedding party at their isolated Sweetwater ranch to welcome his new bride, Jill (Claudia Cardinale), a former New Orleans escort who Brett married in secret a month prior. Frank and his henchmen crash the party early and murder the whole family.

When Jill arrives in the nearest town and finds no one waiting for her, she gets a carriage driver to take her to the ranch. On their way, she sees Harmonica exchange words with Cheyenne (Jason Robards), an escaped outlaw who belongs to Frank's gang.

Learning that her husband and new family have been gunned down, Jill decides to stay at the ranch regardless. This scuppers Frank's plans, as he had been hired by the filthy rich railroad tycoon Mr. Morton (Gabriel Ferzetti) to scare the McBains off the land. Why? Mr. McBain bought the patch of desert knowing the railway would one day pass through it and was preparing to build a station and a town in readiness.

After Frank's men try to frame Cheyenne for the murder of Jill's family, he joins forces with Harmonica. Together, they plan to keep the land in Jill's hands and out of the hands of the avaricious Frank and his power-hungry boss. As we eventually find out, Harmonica also has a far more personal reason for stalking Frank.

The evolution of westerns

"Once Upon a Time in the West" is often regarded as Sergio Leone's finest film, with the director at the height of his artistic powers. All the signature techniques and stylistic flourishes that he honed in the Clint Eastwood-led "Dollars" trilogy are woven into a tale that is as thematically rich as it is cinematically lush.

If his earlier spaghetti westerns were a playful response to the classic era of Hollywood westerns, Leone's near-three-hour epic was in a direct dialogue with them. Working with writer Sergio Donati, he packed the story with references to their favorite westerns. The bad guy wears black and the good guy wears (almost) white. Henry Fonda plays against type by stepping into the villain's shoes. The Monument Valley backdrops evoke John Ford. And the key plot point of an enterprising outsider anticipating the arrival of the railroad recalls "Johnny Guitar."

In other words, Leone was doing a Tarantino while the future "Pulp Fiction" director was still in short pants. Not a lot happens over 166 minutes, but Leone is supremely confident in his ability to grip an audience's attention with his mega close-ups, terse dialogue, and Ennio Morricone's stunning score. Each principal character has its own theme and these leitmotifs interweave as they prowl around each other.

But in my opinion, the ending doesn't pay off as satisfyingly as the emotional final duel in "For a Few Dollars More." But that's likely because Leone had the bigger picture in mind — "Once Upon a Time in the West" is a film about the death of the Old West itself.

Harmonica's revenge

From the moment Harmonica's wailing lament pierces the silence of the desert, he lets the instrument do most of the talking for him. As Cheyenne notes, "Instead of talking, he plays. And when he better play, he talks."

Harmonica follows Frank like a vengeful wraith from the moment he arrives. He trails him to Morton's opulent private train. He is captured and Frank wants to know who he is. Harmonica only answers with the names of men Frank has killed in the past. After Harmonica and Cheyenne team up and use the $5,000 bounty on the latter's head to buy the Sweetwater ranch at auction, Frank confronts Harmonica with the same question and receives the same answer — more names of dead men.

Not only does Harmonica intend to leave Frank guessing until the end, but he also wants to make sure he gets to kill him. After Morton bribes Frank's men to take the latter out, Harmonica saves his life twice, much to Jill's fury.

Frank and Harmonica finally have their showdown as the railroad arrives at the Sweetwater ranch. A flashback shows us why Harmonica wants revenge so badly. When he was a boy, Frank and his gang sadistically made him support his older brother's weight as they hung him from an archway. Just before Harmonica collapsed under the weight, Frank forced the instrument of his name into his mouth. Now the dirge-like tune becomes clear — it represents the boy's cries as he watched his brother die.

Back in the present, Harmonica beats Frank to the draw and shoots him. As Frank collapses to the floor, Harmonica pushes the instrument into his mouth. There is a horrified moment of recognition in the man's eyes as he draws his final breath.

What the ending really means

Before their final showdown, Harmonica and Frank have a brief exchange that sums up the main theme of "Once Upon a Time in the West:"

“Harmonica: So you found out you're not a businessman after all.

Frank: Just a man.

Harmonica: An ancient race.

(Harmonica gazes along the newly built railway track.)

Harmonica: Other Mortons will be along, and they'll kill it off.”

Men like Frank and Harmonica don't have a place in the modern world and they know it, just like Ethan Edwards in "The Searchers" and Bishop's gang in "The Wild Bunch." "Once Upon a Time in the West" is a lament for the adventure and freedom of the frontier and all the hardship and bloodshed that came with it, romanticized as simpler times when tough men settled their differences by quickdraw. It also doubles as an elegy for the classic westerns of Hollywood's golden era — the simplistic black vs white narratives gradually became extinct as revisionist westerns began to interrogate the genre's tropes with more nuance, complexity, and guilt. Hence the "Once Upon a Time" of the title. The Old West has passed into myth, like ancient legends and fairytales.