The Hills Run Red

1966 [ITALIAN]

Action / Drama / Western

4
Rotten Tomatoes Critics - Rotten 35% · 1 reviews
Rotten Tomatoes Audience - Spilled 35% · 100 ratings
IMDb Rating 5.8/10 10 967 967

Plot summary

After the Civil War ends, two soldiers return home with a cache of stolen money. They are caught by Union troops. One escapes, but the other is sent to prison for five years. When he gets out and goes home, he finds that his wife has died in poverty because his partner kept all the money, and is now a major power in the area with an army of deadly gunmen to back him up.

Director

Top cast

Dan Duryea as Col. Winny Getz
Henry Silva as Garcia Mendez
Tiberio Mitri as Federal Sergeant
Geoffrey Copleston as Brian Horner
720p.BLU 1080p.BLU
820.27 MB
1280*544
English 2.0
NR
23.976 fps
1 hr 29 min
Seeds 1
1.49 GB
1920*816
English 2.0
NR
23.976 fps
1 hr 29 min
Seeds ...

Movie Reviews

Reviewed by ma-cortes 6 / 10

Pleasant Spaghetti Western with usual nasty Henry Silva who steals the show as a merciless gunfighter

An Italian production full of action , exaggerated characters, shootouts and lots of violence . For money, for pleasure, for revenge, he doesn't care why he kills or how ¡ ... A soldier named Brewster (Thomas Hunter) is taken prisoner in Fort Wilson . 5 years later he's freed and sees the atrocity over his family and executes a single-handedly revenge, as he slashes, ravages and murders each person involved in the killing . He is relentless in his vendetta , deadly in his violence. The conflict is a simple one between avenger Brewster , now named Houston, and oppressors, nasties bandits commanded by cruel foreman (Henry Silva) and his chief Milton (Gazzolo), owner of the ranch Mayflower where lives his sister Mary Ann(Nicoletta Machiavelli). Houston/Brewster is only helped by a mysterious vet gunslinger named Getz (Dan Duryea) and May Ann . Meanwhile Houston aids an unappreciated although terrorized town called Austin (Texas) in the process and suddenly finds his little son Tim (Loris Loddi). The town is inhabited by important people as Horner. Then Brewster is submitted a tempestuous trap by a saloon-girl and is caught and he faces the vicious bandits.It's an exciting western with breathtaking showdown between the protagonist Thomas Hunter against the heartless Henry Silva and his hoodlums. Thomas Hunter is fine, he cries, ravages the screen, shoots, hit and run and kills but also receives violent knocks, punches, kicks and wounds . In the film premiere attained bit success , nowadays is best valued and I think it turns out to be a good Spaghetti Western. Henry Silva as a cruelly baddie role is terrific, he bears a hysterical and mocking smile, subsequently the would play similar characters . The film packs violence,gun-play, explosion, high body-count and it's fast moving and quite entertaining. There is plenty of action in the movie , guaranteeing some shootouts or stunts every few minutes. There are many fine technicians and nice assistants as Goffredo Unger, also secondary , habitual master of arms in numerous Spaghetti Western. Good production design creating an excellent scenario with luminous outdoors, dirty and rocky landscapes under a glimmer sun and a fine set on the Austin town . The musician Ennio Morricone, Lee Nichols, composes a nice soundtrack and well conducted by usual Bruno Nicolai; it's full of guttural sounds, sensible songs and a haunting musical leitmotif. Striking cinematography by Toni Secchi in Technicolor, Techniscope with negative well processed and perfect remastering . Interior filmed at Dino De Laurentiis Cinematografica, Studios Rome and outdoor sequences filmed at Spanish outdoors located on Colmenar Viejo, and La Pedriza, Manzanares , Madrid.Carlo Lizzani's direction -under a pseudonym named Beaver- is well crafted, here he's less thought-provoking and broody and more inclined toward violence and too much action, because he's a expert on serious cinema. Lizzani directed good films as ¨Last days of Mussolini¨, ¨Bandits in Milan¨, co-directed ¨Dirty game¨, ¨The Verona trial¨, ¨chronicle of poor lovers¨ and filmed another S.W. titled ¨Requiescant¨ with Lou Castel, Mark Damon and Pier Paolo Pasolini and today he goes on directing movies. Rating : 6,5, acceptable and passable. The picture will appeal to Spaghetti Western fans.
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Reviewed by zardoz-13 7 / 10

A Sprawling Sensational Spaghetti Western Shoot'em Up That's Worth Setting Your Sights On . . .

Carlo Lizzani's "The Hills Run Red" is a Spaghetti western courtesy of well-known, international producer Dino de Laurentiis of "Conan" and "King Kong" fame who provided some better-than-average production values for this six-shooting saga. Dino went on to do several other Spaghettis, some with American talent like Burt Reynolds in Sergio Corbucci's "Navajo Joe," James Garner in the brilliant "Man Named Sledge" and Chuck Connors in Burt Kennedy's "The Deserter."

"The Hills Run Red" opens not long after the American Civil War has ended. Two ex-Confederate soldiers now in civilian clothes are driving a covered wagon hell-bent-for-leather across rock-strewn Texas terrain with a band of Union troopers bearing down on them. Ken Seagull (Nando Gazzolo of "Django Shoots First") and Jerry Brewster (Thomas Hunter of "Battle of the Commandos") decide to split up and see if their luck improves. They draw cards to determine who stays and who bails. Unfortunately, Jerry loses the bet. Ken dives off the wagon with his saddle bags stuffed full with $600-thousand dollars in Union money. Ken manages to escape while the Union soldiers ride after Jerry. The wagon hits a rock, and Jerry is thrown off it. The horses break away from the wagon, and the careening wagon plunges over a cliff. The soldiers sift through the debris of the smashed-up covered wagon but they find no money. They rough Jerry up, and he serves five miserable, back-breaking years at hard labor in Fort Wilson. All of this happens in the first half-hour.

Freed from prison, Jerry leaves with his holsters empty because the Federals refuse to return his six-guns. No sooner has Jerry left prison than an informant sends Ken a telegram about Jerry's release. Jerry rides away to his home and finds it abandoned, dust on the furniture everywhere and nobody about the premises. He locates his wife's diary and learns that she struggled to raise his son Tim (Loris Loddi of "The Grand Silence") despite encroaching poverty and not a cent of help from Seagull. About that time, gunmen start shooting up Jerry's property. In the barn, Jerry is surprised to find another gun, Winnie Getz (Dan Duryea of "Winchester 73") tosses him a revolver, with which Jerry dispatches two gunmen. Later, after the gunfight, Jerry demands to know Getz's business. Getz suggests that if he took something back to Ken that would convince him that Jerry is dead that he might get himself a job. Jerry's eyes light up because he has something that would persuade Ken that he has perished. Jerry, it seems, has a tattoo on his left forearm engraved with his wife's name. When Getz takes the circle of skin to Ken, he believes that Jerry is dead and hires on Getz despite the admonitions of his second-in-command Garcia Mendez (Henry Silva of "Johnny Cool") decked on in black leather and chewing the scenery as an insane gunslinger.

When we see Ken next, he is a wealthy horse breeder with a large herd of horses. Meanwhile, Jerry adopts different name, Houston, and rides into Austin where he wins a bundle of money at dice and learns that Ken uses the name Milton and owns two-thirds of the land around Austin. Moreover, Ken wants to take over Austin; for example, his trigger-happy gunmen have killed the only sheriff and everybody is too afraid to stand up to him until Jerry arrives in town. The saloon owner Horner (Geoffrey Copleston of "Superargo Versus Diabolicus") explains that they need a man like Jerry to help them defend themselves from Milton. Jerry takes the idea under consideration while he rides out to meet Ken. On the along he stumbles onto a little boy who can knock rocks out of the air with his slingshot. Jerry is shocked when the child uses his good luck gesture of licking his thumb and drawing a circle in the air. About that time, Garcia intervenes and forces Jerry to fight more of Ken's gunmen. Beaten and battered and on the ground, Jerry looks up after the fight and see Garcia put a gun to his head. When he urges the Mexican cutthroat to kill him, Garcia laughs and takes him to Milton's ranch where he lets him recover in an equipment shed. The irony is that Jerry has come back to square matters with Ken, but Ken doesn't know it. Jerry overhears that Ken is moving two-thirds of his horse herd to Abilene. Jerry sneaks back into town and arranges a reception for Ken's riders. The ensuing shoot'em up in a pass and the flaming balls of brush that Jerry's men rain down on Ken's gunmen is a sight to see. Predictably, Ken attacks the town and drives everybody out. The inevitable gun battle between Ken and Jerry follows.

Lizzani never lets the grass grow under anybody's boots in this fast-moving 90 minute horse opera. He is no Sergio Leone, but he has an imaginative eye for interesting camera angles, particularly in the fight between Jerry and Garcia's gunmen. The coffin on the wagon in the big shoot-out scene in town is well photographed from a variety of angles. This is a big, sprawling revenge western with scores of tough-looking galoots getting gunned down left, right, center, and sideways. Spaghetti westerns fans will find this one is above-average. The scenarists could have done a better job with Dan Duryea's mysterious gunman and his revelation after the finale.

"The Hills Run Red" has one goof and that knocks off at least a star from my rating. During the fast opening wagon chase, the filmmakers show us the Union troops riding in hot pursuit and it the far right side of the 2:35.1 letterboxed shape you can spot a wagon identical to the one being driven hell-bent-for-leather in the distance with no horses. Presumably, the producers had a second wagon modified to handle a camera and forgot to move the real wagon out of the shot.

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