Django Shoots First (1966) Poster

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7/10
Entertaining and amusing Spaghetti Western with special appearance by secondary idol Fernando Sancho
ma-cortes23 April 2013
At the beginning of the film, "Django" (Glenn Saxson) meets up with a bounty hunter called Ringo (Jose Luis Martin) who happens to be taking the body of Django's dead father to town for a $5000 bounty . Django murders Ringo and then decides to bury the bounty hunter instead of his father , as he then takes his dad's body into town for the money. Django inherits his fathers part of the business and a score to settle with Cluster (Gazzolo). A local character named Gordon (Fernando Sancho) tells Django that he actually owns half the town since his daddy was colleague with Cluster . A bar room brawl ensues with Django getting help from a mysterious doctor (Albert Lupo) who is staying in town . Django , the Doctor and Gordon join forces and reckoning to banker Cluster and his wife (Evelyn Stewart or Ida Galli as Femme Fatal) .

This above-average Ravioli Western packs thrills , action , brawls in Terence Hill-Spencer style , crossfire and drags at times , balancing in ups and downs ; resulting to be pretty entertaining . The movie has the typical Spaghetti characters , as the violent facing , greedy antiheroes, bloody and spectacular showdowns, quick zooms , extreme baddies and being well directed . This fun story also has touches of humor as when the starring speaks with his deceased daddy and at the ending when appears a gunfighter played by George Eastman reclaiming his inherited rights . The picture is a tale of justice and revenge , as a gunfighter looks for a man in a little town and seeks vendetta against the father's killer . The basic plot is typical spaghetti western fare , but what makes this movie stand out is its style . The starring called Django , though some countries was called Trinity or Glenn Garvin , is stunningly played by the Dutch Glenn Saxson . Glenn is very fine , he ravages the screen , he jumps , bounds and leaps , hit and run . Glenn as a brave and two-fisted gunslinger is terrific , subsequently the would play similar roles in other Spaghettis ; as also starred "Il Magnifico Texano" and ¨Vete con Dios , Gringo¨ . Music original by Bruno Nicolai composes a nice Spaghetti soundtrack and well conducted and splendid leitmotif ; it's full of enjoyable sounds and emotive score , including attractive songs at the beginning and the end . There are many fine technicians and nice assistant direction , excellent production design , and atmospheric cinematography by Riccardo Pallottini , he creates a colorful scenario on the interior ranch and barren outdoors , dirty landscapes under a glimmer sun , and being shot in Elios studios (Rome) and Spain : Manzanares Del Real , La Pedriza and of course , Almeria .

The flick was professionally directed by Alberto De Martino or Herbert Martin . This Italian writer / filmmaker so consistently mixed the good with the mediocre that it became quite impossible to know what to expect from him next . He wrote/directed several Western , action and intriguing films . He is an expert director/writer of Giallo , Western , wartime , horror and all kind of genres . As he directed horror : ¨The tempter¨ . ¨Blood link¨, ¨Miami Golem¨ , ¨Holocaust 2000¨ ; Warlike : "Dirty Heroes" , Peplum : ¨Invincible gladiator , La Rivolta Dei Sette , Il Triunfo di Ercole , ¨Los Invencibles¨ and Spaghetti : ¨Sangre Sobre Texas¨, ¨Sheriff terrible¨ "Here We Go Again, Eh Providence?" . Rating : 7. Good Western that will appeal to Spaghetti fans because being filled with action , thrills , intrigue and shootouts .

This funny film belongs to ¨Django¨series , after successful original ¨Django¨ by Sergio Corbucci with Franco Nero , it was followed by several imitations , rip offs and cheesy copies , such as : ¨Pochi dollar per Django¨ or ¨Alambradas De Violencia¨ (1966) by Leon Klimowsky starred by Anthony Steffen , Gloria Osuna , Frank Wolff ; ¨El Mio Nome e Django¨ (1969) by Ferdinando Baldi with Terence Hill , Horst Frank , George Eastman ; ¨Django Le Bastard¨(1969) by Sergio Garrone with Anthony Steffen , Paolo Gozlino ; ¨¨Django defies Sartana¨(1969) by Pasquale Squitieri with George Ardisson and Tony Kendall ; ¨Ein Pressen Fur Django¨ or ¨Barro en Ojos¨(1971) by Edoardo Mulargia with Anthony Steffen ; and the official sequel titled ¨Il Grande Ritorno¨(1987) by Nello Rossati with Franco Nero , Christopher Connolly and Donald Pleasence .
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7/10
Another Enjoyable Trip To The Italian West
FightingWesterner13 February 2010
Easygoing saddle tramp Glenn Saxson finds his father cooling off on the back of a bounty hunter's horse. Killing the bounty hunter, he takes his father's body into town to claim the reward, where he's informed by ambitious local Fernando Sancho, that his dad was actually quite wealthy and set up by his greedy business partner. The two then team up with a mystery man, carrying a switchblade stiletto cane, to take on the murderous big-shot.

Django Shoots First is another colorful, fast-paced spaghetti western. There isn't much new here, but it's a pleasantly entertaining way to spend an hour and a half, with an adequate amount of action, plot-twists, and gun-wielding heavies.

There's also a good score by Ennio Morricone's frequent collaborator Bruno Nicolai and a neat early cameo in the film's final scene, by Italian genre favorite George Eastman, who's minus his distinctive facial hair.
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6/10
This movie has nothing to do with the original Django, yet the movie is surprising pretty good.
ironhorse_iv18 December 2014
Warning: Spoilers
Ever since Sergio Corbucci's seminal Spaghetti Western Django became a big hit in 1966 in both Europe and the United States. They have been a number of producers and distributors who sought to cash-in on the ensuing Django craze by making quasi sequels. Some of them, have nothing to do with grimy Franco Nero's avenging gunfighter who drags coffins around, and a good example of one is this movie. Django Shoots First also known as No Mercy for Django, He Who Shoots First, Django- Only the Colt was his friend, I am Trinidad, and Do not Django Shoot; has nothing to do with the Sergio Corbucci's character, other than his name happens to be Django. The movie also tries to rip-off characters such as Clint Eastwood's Man with No Name 1964's Fistful of Dollars, Lawrence Dobkin's 1966's Johnny Yuma and Gianni Garko's Sartana. In this version directed by Alberto De Martino, Glenn Garvin AKA Django (Glenn Saxson AKA Roel Bos) is hunting down the bounty-killer, Ringo (José M. Martín) for killing his father. When he finds out that Ringo has already killed his father. Django kills Ringo, and heads into the town of Silver Creek to collect the bounty. It's odd that the person that plays Ringo seem more like Django, than Glenn Saxon's character. This main character in this film seem less like Django and more like Giuliano Gemma as Ringo in 1965's Ringo. Anyways, when he gets to Silver Creek, it's there that he learns that his father actually owned most of the town along with a banker named Ken Kluster (Nando Gazzolo). Kluster tries to turn Django away, but the man is determined to stay and claim his portion of the town after discovering that his father's death was set-up. Django gets help from a mysterious stranger named Doc (Alberto Lupo), as well as some townsfolk like Gordon (Fernando Sancho) to fight Kluster, setting a war between the two camps. Only one team can survive. Who will it be? Watch it to find out! Although the synopsis seem simple, Django Shoots First is a very well scripted film with good characters with clever twists. The movie plot mirrors that of Alexandre Dumas' The Three Musketeers, but the Spaghetti Westerns add something new to it. Central characters like Django are defined not by their black and white moral code but, instead, by their moral flexibility, unpredictability, and cynicism. Simply, they were the defining anti-heroes of a genre that previously had been defined by clear cut perceptions of morality, justice, and manifest destiny. After all, Django is going after money, he really didn't earned. Could, the movie be helped if Ken Kluster was made to be more evil and Django more the hero? Yes, but it wasn't needed. Ken Kluster pretty much mirrors Django in every way. Both are willing to trick the public to get their way. Some people might hate it, but I didn't find it, unlikeable. Maybe, it gave the movie more depth. At less, it gave a pretty funny clever ironic punchline ending. Even the gun-fight action seem more realistic than a lot of Spaghetti Westerns. You have shootouts that amplified the tension by relentlessly cutting between wide shot, medium shot, close-up, and extreme close-up of characters, and a camera that sits unbearably close to character's reaction shots. Still, there were some hammy fist-fights that seem too cartoony even for my taste; mostly toward the end, where the movie morph in a near comedy with the bar room fight. The movie pacing might have done a little too long. They should had stop, after reaching the cave. For a Spaghetti Western, it's not that violent, but it didn't felt gimmicky. Not a lot of one-shot kills in here. You see all the ingredients for a good Spaghetti westerns like the pronounced use of widescreen vistas and extreme close ups. The sets and costumes all look strong and good use is made of the Spanish locations that give this film a very traditional Western feel. Indeed it was made in a Sergio Leone's style of filmmaking. The acting is pretty good for the most part. I did kinda mistake Fernando Sancho for Bud Spencer. Both are very similar in the way, they act. I'm still convince that is Bud Spencer in this film, but I might be wrong. One of the best part was George Eastman's cameo. So look forward to that. One thing; that was a bit disappointing is the female leads. Both Erika Blanc as the American Girl, Lucy & Evelyn Stewart AKA Ida Galli as femme fatale, Jessica Kluster are beautiful and alright in acting, but there are missing a lot of depth in their characters. The music score by Bruno Nicolai is beautiful and pretty catchy. While "Bolero" sung by Dino is great, it still sounds like something out of a 1960s James Bond movie. It might be a little out of place. Still, it was good enough that 2004's video game, Red Dead Revolver to use it. The movie is kinda hard to find, but most copies are decent. The DVD version that I had, had alright picture quality with some light grain throughout and some occasional print damage. The English dubbing was alright and the sound was very good, throughout the film. Although forced subtitles are not ideal and not there. Dorado Films is actually pretty good choice. Overall: This is a must-own Spaghetti Western. Recommended to genre fans.
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6/10
Not a lot to this Django knockoff
planktonrules11 February 2013
After the Franco Nero film "Django" appeared, a lot of unscrupulous movie folks began releasing movie after movie with the name Django in the title--but they had little to do with this original film. "He Who Shoots First" (also known as "Django Shoots First") is one of these faux Django films. Now I am not sure if the film was meant to be a knockoff or if, perhaps, the folks doing the dubbing just decided on their own to make it a Django film. But, at least the leading man, Dutchman Glenn Saxson looks a bit like Nero.

The film starts with Django going to see his father and finding him dead--having just been shot down by a bounty hunter. Not wanting to pass up a good opportunity, Django shoots the bounty hunter and brings his dad's corpse to town to claim the reward!! Only later does he learn that perhaps his father was NOT a criminal but was up on trumped up charges by folks intend on stealing his half interest in a local gambling hall. So, for most of the rest of the film, Django needs to fight the local scum who are trying to kill him and then claim what is rightfully his.

Aside from the film having the audacity of having Django claim the bounty on his own dad(!!), I also really liked the ending as well as the music. The soundtrack was a good bit better than the average Italian western. But, apart from these things, the film had little to offer other than folks getting punched and shot. Not especially remarkable but a decent time-passer.

FYI--At one point, one of the folks says "A man can't testify against his wife" but in American law this isn't exactly true. A man cannot be FORCED to testify against his wife. But, if he wants to help the prosecution by testifying against her he is surely welcome to do so.
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7/10
This film is underestimated by the viewers
svoboda_k26 December 2020
I don't know why this well-made film is underestimated by the viewers? The rating is 6.1 and I think it had to be higher.

Director Alberto De Martino and his collaborators made a good film that can be watched several times.

Lead actors: Glenn Saxson (as Glenn Garvin / Django), Evelyn Stewart (Jessica Kluster), the legendary Fernando Sancho (Gordon) and Alberto Lupo (Doc), Nando Gazzolo (Ken Kluster) are especially credited for providing above-average acting to the audience presented a complex plot.

By the way, in this film, there is an action almost from the beginning to the end, which requires constant attention from the viewer. There are also quite a number of witty, funny scenes that seem relaxing.

6 screenwriters deserve great credit, including the director Alberto De Martino.

Visually, the film is above average why they are deserving: Art Direction by Pier Vittorio Marchi, Set Decoration by Franco D'Andria, Costume Design by Gaia Romanini, Cinematography by Riccardo Pallottini.

Acceptable music was composed by the esteemed Bruno Nicolai.

My recommendation is that this good, long-made ago film, must be watched carefully by spaghetti western fans. I don't think they'll complain that they spent about 95 minutes watching him. Spectator Coventry rated it even with a high rating of 8! The ratings here are whole numbers, so I couldn't rate the movie with a rating of 7.5.
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Serviceable spaghetti saga
Wizard-824 September 2013
This has nothing to do with the Franco Nero "Django" movie, though I'm pretty sure you already know that. Though this "Django" movie is not up to the Nero movie, it is a competent little spaghetti western. Certainly, it's not perfect. A number of characters are stereotypes found in other spaghetti westerns, like the goofy bearded tubby fellow who helps the protagonist. The hero is kind of smug and arrogant at times. There is a minimum of plot, which is really evident when things are wrapped up for the most part long before the very end. On the other hand, the movie does have a nice musical score, sports some good scenes of action as well as moments of suspense, and doesn't have any boring sequences. There is also a twist at the end that I didn't see coming. The movie doesn't break new ground, but it's adequate for spaghetti western fans.
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6/10
A Spaghetti Western with Plenty of Action and a Little Bit of Intrigue
Uriah434 August 2021
This film begins with a bounty hunter by the name of "Ringo" (Jose Manuel Martin) riding along in a deserted part of the country with the body of a dead man strapped to another horse trailing behind. He then comes across another man who has settled down to lunch over a camp fire eating a plate of beans. Being quite hungry he eagerly accepts the stranger's hospitality and helps himself to some food while his host takes a look at the dead body on the other horse. As the two men are talking it is soon revealed that the stranger is a man named "Glenn 'Django' Garvin" (Glenn Saxson) and he just happens to be the son of the dead man on the horse. Naturally, a gun fight ensues with Django easily killing the bounty hunter and-rather than burying his father right there-he decides to take the body to the nearest town and claim the $5000 reward for himself at the local sheriff's office. However, once he and the sheriff go to the bank for the money he is met with a hostile reaction from the bank owner "Ken Kustler" (Nando Gazzolo) and a rather icy reception from his attractive wife "Jessica Kustler" (Evelyn Stewart). Although he is puzzled by this he is soon informed by a well-meaning stranger the exact reason why and from that point on Django rejects everyone's advice to leave town in order to resolve issues he wasn't aware of before. Now rather than reveal any more I will just say that this was a pretty good Spaghetti western which had plenty of action and a little bit of intrigue to keep things interesting. Along with that it also had two rather attractive actresses in Erika Blanc (as "Lucy") and the afore-mentioned Evelyn Stewart to brighten the scenery as well-with the latter being especially treacherous. In any case, while this was clearly not a great western by any means, it was certainly good enough for the time spent and I have rated it accordingly. Slightly above average.
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7/10
Gritty Spaghetti Western with a Sense of Humor
zardoz-1316 May 2014
Warning: Spoilers
This atmospheric but low-budget Spaghetti western about a gunslinger who turns in his own father for the reward on his head is worth watching at least once. Mind you, I don't think it qualifies as a classic Spaghetti western. While it cannot compare with classics such as "Fistful of Dollars," For a Few Dollars More," "The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly," "Death Rides A Horse," "Django," "Navajo Joe" or the "Sabata" movies, "Django Shoots First" is adequate enough for fans to appreciate. Rugged, virile-looking Glenn Saxson cuts an appropriately heroic figure as the protagonist, while chubby Spaghetti western stalwart Fernando Sancho appears ideally cast as Garvin's loyal sidekick Gordon. Imagine a thickly-mustached Andy Devine without his wheezing laughter but armed-to-the-teeth, and you've got an adequate description of Fernando Sancho. No, Sancho isn't cast again as a ubiquitous Mexican bandit as he is in some many other continental horse operas. Gordon has his own reasons for riding with Garvin as he points out half-way through their sagebrush shenanigans: "You're one in a thousand. You're the performing kind. Why I'd walk a long way just to see your act." An elegantly attired former physician (Alberto Lupo of "Son of Cleopatra") with a cane that he wields when he makes a point joins . Shoot-outs and fistfights galore ensue. "Operation Kid Brother" director Alberto De Martino lacks the Leone touch, but he doesn't drag things out unnecessarily in this 82-minute outing. Scenarists Sandro Continenza of "For A Few Extra Dollars," Massimiliano Capriccioli of "Wanted," Tito Carpi of "Any Gun Can Play," Vincenzo Flamini of "$100,000 for Ringo," Giovanni Simonelli of "Johnny Yuma," and De Martino weave sufficient humor into the storyline to take the edge off some of the cruelty. This isn't a mean-spirited Spaghetti western. "The Five Man Army" musical director Bruno Nicolai's vibrant orchestral score enlivens the proceedings. "Massacre Time" lenser Riccardo Pallottini makes this western look better than it deserves, and the scenery looks spectacular. Genre regular George Eastman has a cameo near the end that is amusing.

As the action unfolds in "Django Shoots First," Garvin (Glenn Saxson of "Go with God, Gringo") guns down Ringo, (José Manuel Martín) the black-clad, bounty hunter who shot his father for a $5-thousand reward. The ill-fated bounty hunter rides into Garvin's campsite, and Garvin guns him down. Afterward, Garvin takes the body of his father back into town and collects the loot. Garvin is surprised when he learns that his father owned half of the town with another man named Ken Cluster. The dastardly Cluster wants Garvin out of the way and dispatches his gunslingers to kill him. Eventually, Cluster frames Garvin for the murder of a bank cashier after one of his henchmen brings him the same knife that our hero uses to kill one of Cluster's henchmen during a nocturnal shoot-out in the desert. Rather than surrender to the local authorities, Garvin shoots it out with them and skedaddles out of town with a posse on his tail.

The posse pursues Garvin to Cluster's ranch where Mrs. Jessica Cluster (Evelyn Stewart of "Adios Gringo") allows him to hide in her bubble bath when the sheriff storms into her house. An amusing moment occurs when Garvin parades around in a dressing gown with his gun belt strapped thwart his hips. Cluster assembles a small army of gun hands to track down Garvin. Doc warns Garvin not to trust Jessica, and he reveals that Jessica is really his wife. Jessica rides to where Ward (Guido Lollobrigida) is hiding and instructs him to deposit the loot in her name in a bank. Garvin,Doc, and Gordon prepare a little reception for Cluster's men. After our heroes ambush Cluster's men, Garvin rides after Ward. These scenes resemble something out of an American B-movie western with the hero catching up with the fleeting outlaw, bull-dogging him off his horse, and the two smashing each other with their fists. Eventually, Garvin and Gordon conceal the loot that Kluster stole from his own bank, but Jessica discovers the money, too. The ending is clever because our heroes believe that they have made off with the loot for Mexico.

"Django Shoots First" is an average Spaghetti western.
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5/10
DJANGO SHOOTS FIRST (Alberto De Martino, 1966) **
Bunuel197617 June 2006
This Spaghetti Western isn't as bad as it's been described in "Stracult", a compilation of essays on Italian B-movies that I purchased at the 2004 Venice Film Festival, but it's certainly not anything special either! Glenn Saxson is a cheerful lead in the Errol Flynn vein, which is incongruous for the genre - at least in this early phase, before comedy set in with the Terence Hill/Bud Spencer films!

Still, the revenge/control-of-a-Western-town plot is fairly engaging - though it has nothing whatsoever to do with the original DJANGO (1966; whose 2-Disc LE Set via Blue Underground, incidentally, I should be receiving soon) - and even includes some nice, original touches: Django taking his outlaw father's corpse (after dispatching the bounty hunter who murdered him) to town to pick up the reward money for himself; a "Three Musketeers"-like subplot involving a beautiful but wicked woman (Evelyn Stewart) and her former husband, friend of the hero, who warns him against her; an amusing double-twist at the end in which, first, heroine Erika Blanc outwits a fleeing (i.e. uncommitted) Django, thus making sure that he goes back to her - followed by a reprisal of the film's opening sequence with the arrival of a new gunslinger in town, this time to challenge Django's own authority! The climax, set inside a graveyard, is also effective - as is Bruno Nicolai's bouncy score.

Having said that, the film is too slowly-paced and, even at a little over 90 minutes, it feels protracted - particularly the silly bar-room brawl towards the end!
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4/10
Almost a good Spaghetti Western
lotekguy-124 September 2021
As most genre fans expect, there's no overlap between this incarnation of a Django and Franco Nero's original. Glenn Saxon straddles the fence between laconic and dull in the wronged hero role. The plot begins with a clever twist on his revenge motive, but meanders for most of its duration. After the natural point for a rousing and satisfying ending, the film drags on for about 15 minutes to accomplish what should have taken 3-5, at most. That drops this below the average for these generally enjoyable, even when not memorable, imported oaters.
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8/10
Another great Django-movie!
Coventry14 January 2007
Warning: Spoilers
Although no authority in the field, I've seen enough Italian westerns to know that they're ALWAYS worth peeping if only for A) the music, B) the women and C) the violence which is more gritty and relentless than in westerns produced in any other country. The legendary work of Sergio Leone and Sergio Corbucci naturally state this theory the most, but even all the obscure and low-budget genre efforts coming from this country are worth tracking down. Particularly the numberless "Django" rip-offs/unofficial sequels are immensely entertaining, like for example this exciting & surprisingly humorous adventure directed by Alberto De Martino. Glenn Saxson (a Dutch guy) takes over the title role of cult icon Franco Nero and, although not half as charismatic as Nero, he does a fairly adequate job as the indefeasible gunslinger hero who – like the title implies – always shoots first and never ever misses his target. The screenplay of this film is compelling and actually rather clever, and there isn't a single dull moment throughout the entire playtime. We meet Django as he recovers his father's dead body from a bounty hunter. Since there was the huge reward of $5.000 on his head, Django decides to collect the money himself instead of respectfully burying his father in a last resting place. Shortly after his arrival in town, however, he learns that his father wasn't a criminal at all, but a businessman framed by his former partner & bank owner Kluster. With the help of a few friends he met in the saloon, Django stays to avenge his father and claim his rightful inheritance which is about 50% of the entire town. You may anticipate all the regular ingredients of Spaghetti Westerns, like outrageous bar fights, grisly vendettas and violent ambushes, but there's also room for original sub plots in this film! One of Django's accomplices, for example, hides a mysterious secret that only gets revealed late in the film and then neatly fits in with the main storyline. Also, the film's whole climax (and particularly the comical epilogue) is very spectacular and creative. Bruno Nicolai's musical score is phenomenal as usual and both Ida Galli & Erica Blanc provide the required female beauty. "Django Shoots First" is a minor must-see for die-hard fans of this sadly extinct Italian genre.
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8/10
a solid, entertaining example of the genre
spider8911921 May 2016
This spaghetti western has a great story-line that grabs you from the get-go, and keeps you interested til the end.

The performances from the actors are about average for the genre. The most recognizable euro-western actor in the film, Fernando Sancho, is OK in this movie, but not as good as he usually is. Of course, one always has to keep in mind that the portrayal is not his alone, since the voice in English is done by someone else.

The movie has a very good spaghetti-style music score, nice camera work, some riveting scenes, and a great revenge plot with some unique elements and a couple of twists. The end was a real kick. I was going to give it a 7 out of 10, but then the ending made me want to push it up a notch.

If you are a fan of spaghetti westerns, and not just the well-known ones, you will most likely really enjoy this one.
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