Thursday, July 2, 2026

Little Known Spaghetti Western Actors ~ Giulio Donnini

[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.]

Giulio Donnini was an Italian film and television actor, active primarily in supporting roles across Italian cinema from the late 1940s until the mid-1990s. Born in Milan, Lombardy on Febrauary 17, 1924, he debuted in the 1947 adaptation of “I fratelli Karamazov” as Smerdiakov and went on to appear in over 65 productions, blending dramas, comedies, peplum films, and spy thrillers. Donnini gained recognition for memorable character parts, including the typing pool manager in Michael Caine's “Pulp” (1972), praised in a letter by author J.G. Ballard to director Mike Hodges, as well as roles in cult classics like “Danger: Diabolik” (1968) and the hit comedy “Johnny Stecchino” (1991) opposite Roberto Benigni. His career highlighted the versatility of Italian character actors during the post-war boom in national filmmaking, often portraying authority figures, priests, or eccentric officials. Donnini passed away in Rome on May 22, 200,1 at the age of 77.

Giulio Donnini appeared in one Euro-western “Io sono il capataz” (The Return of Pancho Villa) in 1950.

DONNINI, Giulio (aka Giulio Donini) [2/17/1924, Milan, Lombardy, Italy – 5/22/2001, Rome, Lazio, Italy] – theater, film, TV actor.

The Return of Pancho Villa – 1950

 

Spaghetti Western Directors, Screenwriters, Cinematographers

Spaghetti Western Director ~ Claudio Gora


 Claudio Gora was an Italian actor and film director whose career spanned over five decades, encompassing stage work, more than 130 film appearances, and nine directorial efforts in post-war Italian cinema] Born Emilio Giordana in Genoa, Liguria on July 27, 1913, he adopted the stage name "Claudio Gora" at his mother's urging to commemorate his father, an army officer killed during World War I. Gora debuted on stage in 1937 and entered cinema in 1939, initially as an actor in minor roles before expanding into directing neo-realist and drama genres.

Gora's directorial output included notable entries like the post-war drama “The Sky Is Red” (1950), which explored the struggles of orphaned children in bombed-out Milan and was noted for its realism in depicting urban hardship. Other key directorial works encompassed Eager to “Live” (1953), a tense crime thriller, and “Hate Is My God” (1969), reflecting his interest in moral and social themes amid Italy's cinematic golden age. As an actor, he excelled in supporting roles, often portraying authoritative or complex figures, with standout performances in Dino Risi's comedy-drama “Il sorpasso” (1962) as a stern family man, and Pietro Germi's “The Facts of Murder” (1959) as a shrewd police commissioner. His versatility extended to international co-productions, including appearances in films like “Gidget Goes to Rome” (1963).

In his personal life, Gora was married to actress Marina Berti from 1944 until his death, and they had five children, all actors: Carlo, Andrea, Marina, Luca, and Cristina Giordana, with several grandchildren also entering the industry. He passed away from a heart attack in Rocca Priora, Lazio on March 13, 1998, at age 84, leaving a legacy as a multifaceted figure in Italian entertainment.

Claudio Gora directed one Spaghetti Western, “L'odio è il mio Dio” (Hate is My God) in 1969.

GORA, Claudio (aka Claudio Cora, Emil Jordan) (Emilio Giordana) [7/27/1913, Genoa, Liguria, Italy – 3/13/1998, Rocca Priora, Lazio, Italy (heart attack)] – director, writer, actor, married to actress Marina Berti (Elena Maureen Bertolini) [1924-2002] (1944-1998), father of father of actor Carlo Giordana [1945-2020], Andrea Giordana [1946-    ], actor Marina Giordana [1955-    ], actor Luchino ‘Luca’ Giordana, actress Cristina Giordana, grandfather of actor Luchino Giordana.

Hate is My God – 1969


Spaghetti Western Screenwriter ~ Roberto Colangeli

Roberto Colangeli is an Italian film editor who was involved in twenty-seven films between 1969 and 1994. His screenwriting career consisted of one film and that was his only Spaghetti western. He was the son of film editor Otello Colangeli. Other than that I can find no biographical information on him.

Roberto Colangeli co-wrote the screenplay for one Spaghetti western, “Ehi Amigo… sei morto!”  (Hey Amigo, to Your Death!) with Renato Savino in 1970.

COLANGELI, Roberto [Italian] – assistant director, writer, film editor, son of Otello Colangeli [1912-1998].

Hey Amigo, to Your Death! – 1970 (co)

 

Spaghetti Western Cinematography ~ Giuseppe La Torre

Giuseppe La Torre was an Italian cinematographer who worked on seventy-eight films and also as a cameraman on six between 1936 and 1971. Like many cinematographers there is little to nothing other than a birthdate and list of films he was involved in online or in print. He must have passed on by now but I can find no mention of his death.

Giuseppe La Torre was a cinematographer on five Spaghetti westerns: “Oeste Nevada Joe” (Joe Dexter) with Julian Rosenthal, “Der letzte Mohikaner” (The Last Tomahawk) with Ernst W. Kalinke and “Oklahoma John” (The Man from Oklahoma) all in 1964, “Lola Colt” (Black Tigress) in 1967 and “El valor de un cobarde” (Quinto: Fighting Proud) in 1969.

La TORRE, Giuseppe (aka Joseph L. Tower) [11/11/1915, Rome, Lazio, Italy - deceased] – cinematographer, cameraman.

Joe Dexter – 1964 (co)

The Last Tomahawk – 1964 (co)

The Man from Oklahoma – 1964 [as Joseph L. Tower]

Black Tigress – 1967

Quinto: Fighting Proud - 1969

Why The Good, the Bad and the Ugly's Final Gunfight is Considered the Greatest in Cinema

Men’s Journal

By Rachel Schneider

June 20, 2026

Few movie genres are as closely associated with gunfights as Westerns.

From dusty frontier towns to isolated desert landscapes, shootouts have long served as the dramatic centerpiece of the genre. But according to No Film School, one Western stands above all the rest when it comes to cinematic showdowns.

That honor belongs to Sergio Leone's 1966 masterpiece The Good, the Bad and the Ugly.

The publication recently ranked the film's legendary final standoff as the greatest gunfight in Western movie history — a scene that remains one of the most copied and celebrated moments ever put on screen.

A Three-Way Showdown for the Ages

Directed by Sergio Leone and starring Clint Eastwood, Lee Van Cleef, and Eli Wallach, The Good, the Bad and the Ugly follows three gunslingers searching for a buried cache of Confederate gold during the Civil War.

Everything builds toward the film's unforgettable finale.

In the closing moments, Blondie, Angel Eyes, and Tuco find themselves standing in a circular cemetery known as Sad Hill, each determined to claim the treasure for themselves. The result is one of cinema's most famous Mexican standoffs.

Rather than relying on constant action, Leone stretches the tension to nearly unbearable levels. Close-up shots of eyes, hands, and nervous expressions slowly build suspense as the three men wait to see who will draw first.

Ennio Morricone's Score Changed Everything

A major reason the scene remains so effective nearly 60 years later is the music. Composer Ennio Morricone’s iconic score, including “The Ecstasy of Gold,” transforms the sequence into something larger than a traditional gunfight.

The music swells as the camera circles the three characters, creating an atmosphere that feels almost operatic. Many filmmakers have attempted to recreate the magic of the scene, but few have come close.

Why It Still Holds Up Today

Westerns have delivered countless memorable shootouts over the decades. Films like High Noon, The Magnificent Seven, Tombstone, and Unforgiven all feature iconic gunfights of their own.

Yet No Film School placed The Good, the Bad and the Ugly at the top of its ranking because the scene isn't simply about who shoots first. It's about tension, anticipation, and storytelling.

Every glance, every movement, and every note of Morricone's score adds to the drama.

Nearly six decades after its release, the final standoff remains one of the most recognizable scenes in movie history, and according to many critics and fans, the greatest gunfight the Western genre has ever produced.


Special Birthdays

Mirko Kujacic (actor) would have been 125 today but died in 1987.

Fabio Frizzi (composer, singer) is 75 today.



Wednesday, July 1, 2026

Little Known Spaghetti Western Actors ~ Robert Donner

[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.]

Robert Donner was an American character actor renowned for his portrayals of eccentric and quirky supporting roles in film and television over a career spanning more than four decades.

Born in New York City on April 27, 1931, Donner spent his early years moving between New Jersey, Michigan, and Texas, shaping his diverse background before enlisting in the U.S. Navy immediately after high school, where he served for nearly four years. After his discharge, he relocated to the West Coast, attended California State University, Northridge, and began pursuing acting, debuting on screen in the 1959 Western Rio Bravo alongside John Wayne.

Donner's breakthrough came in the late 1960s with his role as the tough prisoner Alibi in “Cool Hand Luke” (1967), followed by appearances in notable films such as “Vanishing Point” (1971) and Clint Eastwood's “High Plains Drifter” (1973). On television, he became a familiar face for his comedic turns, including the dim-witted Yancy Tucker on ‘The Waltons’ in the 1970s and, most iconically, the delusional prophet Exidor on ‘Mork & Mindy’ from 1978 to 1982, a role that showcased his talent for offbeat humor. As a founding member of the improvisational troupe Crazy Quilt Comedy Company, he appeared in over 100 productions, often bringing a distinctive, memorable energy to ensemble casts, with his final role in the family adventure Hoot (2006). Donner passed away from a heart attack at his home in Sherman Oaks, California on June 8, 2006, survived by his wife, Jill, and two brothers.

Robert Donner appeared in one Spaghetti western as Skave in 1975’s “La parola di un fuorilegge... è legge!” (Take a Hard Ride).

DONNER, Robert (aka Bob Donner, Robt. Donner) (Robert Edward Rosen) [4/27/1931, New York City, New York, U.S.A. – 6/8/2006, Sherman Oaks, Los Angeles, California, U.S.A. (heart attack)] – film, TV actor, singer, married to director, actress Cissy Wellman (Celia McCarthy Wellman) [1943-    ] (1965-1982), married to producer, writer Jill Sherman [1950-    ] (1982-2006).

The Magnificent Stranger – 1966 [film was withdrawn]

Take a Hard Ride – 1975 (Skave)

Spaghetti Western Directors, Screenwriters, Cinematographers

Spaghetti Western Director ~ Ernest Goodman

Ernst Hofbauer was an Austrian film director who specialized in sexploitation cinema, directing over 40 low-budget features centered on erotic themes. Born in Vienna, Austria on August 22, 1925, he began his career as an assistant director in 1950 before helming his first feature, gaining prominence in the 1970s for the “Schulmädchen-Report” (Schoolgirl Report) series—a collection of anthology films depicting sexual encounters among teenage girls, framed as pseudo-documentary "reports" inspired by a bestselling book on youth sexuality. These productions, which spawned at least 13 installments, achieved significant commercial success in West German theaters amid the era's loosening sexual mores, often blending softcore nudity with comedic vignettes featuring adult actresses portraying underage students. However, the series provoked ongoing controversy for its exploitative portrayal of adolescent sexuality, leading to censorship challenges, distribution bans in regions like the United States, and retrospective critiques of enabling predatory fantasies under the guise of social commentary. Hofbauer's reclusive persona and prolific output in the genre earned him comparisons to figures like Russ Meyer, though his work remains niche, preserved primarily in grindhouse and cult film circles rather than mainstream acclaim.

Ernest Hofbauer using the alias Ernest Goodman directed one Euro-western, “Die schwarzen Adler von Santa Fe” (Black Eagle of Santa Fe) in 1965.

GOODMAN, Ernest (aka Herb Al Bauer, Herb Al-Bauer) (Ernst Hofbauer) [8/22/1925, Vienna, Austria – 2/24/1984, Munich, Bavaria, Germany] – director, assistant director, writer, actor.

Black Eagle of Santa Fe – 1965


Spaghetti Western Screenwriter ~ Ronald M. Cohen

Ronald M. Cohen was an American screenwriter and television producer renowned for his gritty Western films and socially provocative television series that explored interracial dynamics and urban tensions.

Born in Chicago, Illinois on December 23, 1939, Cohen studied film at New York University before breaking into the industry in the early 1960s by selling his first script to the Western series ‘Wanted: Dead or Alive’, prompting him to leave his job as a cab driver. His early screenwriting credits included the 1968 film “Blue”, starring Terence Stamp and Karl Malden, and the 1969 Western “The Good Guys and the Bad Guys”, featuring Robert Mitchum as an aging sheriff.

Cohen's television career flourished in the 1980s, where he created and wrote for series that often tackled controversial themes, earning him a reputation as a bold but volatile writer. Notable among these was ‘American Dream’ (1981), an ABC series depicting a white family's relocation to a Black inner-city neighborhood in Chicago, which received an Emmy nomination for its pilot but faced viewer protests over its interracial content and was canceled after one season; ABC subsequently fired Cohen from the show. He followed with ‘Call to Glory’ (1984), a Cold War-era drama set at Edwards Air Force Base starring Craig T. Nelson, and ‘Fortune Dane’ (1986), a short-lived series starring Carl Weathers as a Black troubleshooter navigating racial dynamics in a fictional city. Later, Cohen contributed episodes to shows like ‘Ohara’ and ‘Walker, Texas Ranger’.

In his later years, Cohen returned to Westerns with the 1997 TNT adaptation of Elmore Leonard's novel “Last Stand at Saber River”, starring Tom Selleck, which became the highest-rated cable movie of its time and earned him a Western Heritage Wrangler Award. At the time of his death from heart failure on April 21, 1998, at his Los Angeles home, at age 58, he was adapting Leonard's Gunsights for Selleck. Cohen, the longtime companion of actress Julie Adams, was survived by her and her sons, as well as his brother and nieces; he was remembered for his fascination with the Western genre and his willingness to address racial realities in his scripts, despite frequent network clashes.

Ronald M. Cohen co-wrote the screenplay for one Spaghetti western, “Blue” with Meade Roberts in 1968.

COHEN, Ronald M. (Ronald Maurice Cohen) [12/23/1939, Chicago, Illinois, U.S.A. – 4/21/1998, Los Angeles, California, U.S.A. (heart failure)] – producer, writer.

Blue – 1968 (co)


Spaghetti Western Cinematographer ~ Girolamo LaRosa

Girolamo LaRosa was an Italian cameraman and cinematographer who worked on two films as a cameraman in 1969 and 1980 and twenty-one films as a cinematographer from 1970-1996. La Rosa also was a writer on one film 1983’s “Amok”.

I can find no biographical information on him.

Girolamo LaRosa was a cinematographer on only one Spaghetti western, “Una cuerda al amanecer” (A Cry of Death) and

La ROSA, Girolamo [Italian] – cinematographer, cameraman.

Death Played the Flute - 1972

FREE Admission for Templin residents at El Dorado in July.

 

This gift belongs to you, Templin!

Throughout July, all residents with PLZ 17268 will receive free admission to El Dorado.

As a thank you for 20 unforgettable years, we invite you to experience the Wild West throughout July – more than once.

⭐️ New stunt show

Show program until 6:00 p.m.

⭐️ Open Saloon till 9pm

Swimming pier at Röddelinsee

All attractions included (except pony rides & gold washing)

So: grab your family, bring your guests, and come on down! 🤠

Just show your ID at the cash register and visit us as often as you like.

We are looking forward to seeing you!