Tor Caldara, Anzio, Italy is a 104 acres of beach, an inlet, a sandy
clearing and a stream surrounded by woodland oaks, south of Anzio. It also boasts unusual fauna and
flora, and is a protected WWF site. There’s a circular medieval watchtower on
the headland and the Nature Reserve features sulphurous springs – in some films
distinctive yellow strata can be seen in the landscape – which when they are
bubbling give the area the smell of rotten eggs. It was one of the beaches used
by the Allies during Operation Shingle – the Anzio Landings in Italy
in January 1944 – and since then it’s seen plenty of action, both as a popular
beauty spot and, especially in the 1960s, as a filming location.
Scenes featuring Tor Caldara can be spotted in Pasolini’s “The Gospel According to St
Matthew”
and “Medea”,
and it’s the beach with a defensive German bunker that is assaulted in the
low-budget WWII movie “Hell in Normandy”.
It was particularly popular with makers of sword and sandal epics and
features in, or is the principle setting for, “Hercules Conquers Atlantis”, “Maciste Against
the Vampire”, “Mole Men Against the Son of Hercules”, “Perseus the Invincible”,
“The Giant of Marathon”, “The Giants of Rome” and most prominently
in “Hercules
against the Moon Men”. It was later a useful ‘desert’ (with the sea
and headland kept well out of shot) in many, many spaghetti westerns, including
“Texas Adios”, “Django
Shoots First”, “Vengeance”, “This Man Can’t Die”, “Adios Gringo” and “Johnny
Hamlet”.
Whenever Italian filmmakers needed a modest stretch of
desert and woodland or cliffs and a beach close to their Rome studios, Tor Caldara was the go-to
location. The site was particularly popular with directors Mario Bava and
Sergio Corbucci. Bava featured scenes at the beach and inlet in “Danger: Diabolik”, “Hercules
in the Center of the Earth” (aka “Hercules in the Haunted World”),
the Viking movies “Erik
the Conqueror” and “Knives of the Avenger”,
the horror titles “The Whip and the Body”, “Five Dolls For an August Moon” and “Shock”
and extensively in the alleged comedy western “Roy Colt & Winchester Jack”. It
also cropped up in several of his westerns, including “Ringo and His Golden
Pistol” (aka “Johnny Oro”) “Navajo Joe” and “The Hellbenders”.
Perhaps the most famous scene shot at Tor Caldara was the opening
title sequence to Corbucci’s “Django” in the winter of 1965-66, with Franco Nero dragging
a coffin through the mud and pouring rain. You’d never guess the Mediterranean is only a few hundred yards away, over that
rise.
Tor Caldara was also used for “Django’s” later scenes at the
rope bridge – including the infamous moment when Nero has his hands mangled by
horses’ hooves – and for the final shootout amid the crosses of desolate Tombstone cemetery.
“Django” (1966)
“Texas,
Adios” (1966)
“Navajo Joe” (1966)
“Little Rita of the West” (1967)
“Vengeance” (1968)
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