Cubussoli
Very very predictable, including the post credit scene !!!
RipDelight
This is a tender, generous movie that likes its characters and presents them as real people, full of flaws and strengths.
Dynamixor
The performances transcend the film's tropes, grounding it in characters that feel more complete than this subgenre often produces.
DipitySkillful
an ambitious but ultimately ineffective debut endeavor.
ma-cortes
This is a Paella/Ravioli Western about a classic theme , the usual confrontation between cattlemen and homesteaders . A strange and weary cowboy named Clint comes to defense peasants in their struggle against the nasty owners , as the gunfighter fighting to stifle the conflicts between homesteaders and cattlemen who hire hired hands . Clint Harrison (Jorge Martin) is a gunman who goes back to his little town he leaved years earlier to find that his mother and son have moved away to get away from his bad reputation . In order to make amends he tracks his family down and ends up in the middle of a war between a humble farmers as McKinley (Beni Deus) and a wealthy rancher called Walter Shannon (Walter Barnes) alongside his sons Don (Pinkas Braun) and Dave Shannon (Paolo Gozlino) and hoodlums (Fernando Sancho) who wish to get his hands on their lands even if it means murdering . Even though Clint promises his spouse (Marianne Koch of A fistful of dollars) to never use his gun again he is forced to when the rancher's hoodlums begin killing the farmers in a series of violent shootouts.Acceptable and watchable tortilla Western in which a drifter resolves a conflict between a bunch of settlers and wealthy owner . Well crafted and passable Western realized in traditional style with an interesting screenplay written by Jose Antonio De La Loma and the same filmmaker Alfonso Balcazar , including memorable dialogue and some phrases in ¨Shane¨ style . Italian-Spanish-German co-production full of familiar drama , action , exaggerated characters, crossfire and lots of shots . The film packs father-son relationship , violence , shootouts , high body-count and and results to be quite entertaining . It's a middle-budget film with good actors , technicians, production values and pleasing results . There is plenty of action in the movie , guaranteeing some shoot'em up or stunts every few minutes . It's an exciting western with breathtaking showdown between the starring Jorge Martin and his enemies Paolo Gozlino and Fernando Sancho . Acceptable acting by Jorge , ¨George¨ , Martin as a gunslinger that has been running from vengeful foes for years. The film is well starred by Spaghetti star as the Spanish George Martin who worked much for Alfonso Balcazar's factory such as ¨Clint the strange¨, ¨The return the Clint¨, ¨Oeste Nevada Joe¨, Thompson 1880¨ , ¨Taste of killing¨, ¨A pistol for Ringo and ¨The return of Ringo¨ . Furthermore , appears ordinary secondary of Spaghetti/Paella Western as Spanish players : Beni Deus , Miguel De La Riva , Xan Das Bolas ,Gustavo Re , Luis Barboo , as Italian actors : Renato Baldini , Paolo Gozlino , Remo De Angelis and many others . Special appearance by Spaghetti idol , Fernando Sancho as a cruelly baddie role as Mexican bandit is terrific , subsequently the would play similar role in other Spaghetti . The picture well photographed by Victor Monreal , though is necessary a fine remastering because the film-copy is washed-out . Mostly filmed in sweeping scenarios on location in Aragon Pyrinees , Lerida, and a Western village located in ¨Splugues De Llobregat¨ , it resulted to be the location where were shot lots of Western produced and directed by Catalan people as Alfonso Balcazar , J.J. Balcazar , Jose Antonio De La Loma , Juan Bosch, Ignacio F. Iquino and Julio Buchs , among others , because Almeria was too far and the landscapes bear remarkable resemblance . There are many fine technicians and nice assistant direction and excellent production design by the usual Juan Albert Soler , he creates a good scenario . Very enjoyable musical score by Nora Orlandi , including catching songs .This motion picture also titled "Clint the Nevada's Loner" - USA , "Clint the Stranger" or ¨Nevada Clint¨was professionally directed by Alfonso Balcazar who managed to make a fluid , witty and agreeable SW . Allfonso alongside his brother Juan Jose Balcazar produced and directed a lot of Chorizo or Butifarra Western , most of them starred by Jorge Martin or Robert Woods ; such as 1972 The return of Clint , 1972 Judas... ¡Toma Monedas! , 1968 Sartana no Perdone or Sonora , 1967 With Death on Your Back, 1966 Dinamita Jim , 1965 Doc, Manos de Plata , 1965 Viva Carrancho , 1965 Five Thousand Dollars on One Ace .
Wizard-8
Some of the previous posters have mentioned that this movie gets some inspiration from the American western "Shane". The final sequence of this movie certainly copies the ending of "Shane", but other than that the movie goes its own way. Though the way it goes - a tale about a ruthless rancher squeezing his neighbors out of the way - will seem quite familiar to many western fans. The movie does have a couple of good action sequences - a saloon fistfight and an explosive gun battle in the city streets. What's unusual about this western is how more American it feels than your typical spaghetti western, from its direction to its music. But in the end, if you don't mind seeing this familiar story again, you will probably get some enjoyment from this western.
zardoz-13
Writer & director Alfonso Balcázar appropriated the vintage Alan Ladd oater "Shane" and retooled the characters for a more satisfying though less tragic conclusion. A swift-drawing, straight-shooting hombre, Clint can neither elude his deadly reputation nor the gunslingers that crave to kill him so they can acquire a name for themselves. This Spanish lensed Euro western boasts some fantastic Montana-style, Grand Teton-type mountains with snow-capped peaks. The treacherous, unrepentant villains headed up by expatriate American actor Walter Barnes and Iberian actor Fernando Sanchez challenge the hero right up to the final showdown. "Five Giants from Texas" scenarist José Antonio de la Loma collaborated with "The Man from Oklahoma" scribe Helmut Harun and Balcázar on this traditional melodrama that is predictable for the most part but nevertheless rewarding.Like George Stevens' "Shane," "Clint el solitario" is rooted in the Hollywood sagebrushers of the 1950s instead of Sergio Leone's Spaghetti westerns of the 1960s. Indeed, Balcázar doesn't wear a growth of stubble on his jaws like the traditional, hard-boiled Spaghetti western protagonist. The Hollywood counterparts for "Clint el solitario" abhorred wanton violence and discouraged the use of firearms as a means to obtaining a reputation. John Sturges' "Gunfight at the O.K. Corral" preached the hazards of riding the gunslinger's trail, living alone, and dying because another man was faster on the draw and his bullet straighter. The protagonist here is a clean-shaven gunman who wants to reform, settle down with his estranged wife and help her raise his young son on a ranch, but violence overshadows his best efforts, forcing him to resort to firearms and violence. "Fistful of Dollars" heroine Marianna Koch and Francisco José Huetos play the widow and her young son and both are convincing, especially Huetos.As "Clint el solitario" unfolds, our hero Clint Harrison (George Martin of "Red Blood, Yellow Gold") is trying to put distance between himself and three riders. Clint gallops into a town and demands that a barkeep tell him where he can find his estranged wife Julie (Marianna Koch) because he wants to start over. Initially, the barkeeper refuses, until the three gunmen barge into the saloon and threaten to kill Clint. Clint complains that their brother wanted to prove that he was faster on the draw and that he had no option but to kill him. The barkeeper brandishes a rifle and covers the trio and tells Clint where he can find his wife. Clint rides off to Saddle Rock and finds himself in a town bristling with trouble between the local cattle baron and several farming families. The reason for this enmity is that the farmers have erected a dam to irrigate their crops and the cattle cannot get enough water.The moment that Clint rides into town, he recognizes the villains. Trigger-happy Ross (Fernando Sancho of "Zorro the Avenger") nearly kills a barber for giving him a bad haircut. As the foreman for the Shannon ranch, Ross shoots up the town in a rage because one of his men died at the hands of the farmers and he wants to kill the sheriff. The crippled son of Shannon, Don (Pinkas Braun), disarms Ross after the sheriff meets them in the street with Clint watching the showdown from the saloon veranda. Don surrenders Ross' firearms and his own but then stabs the lawman to death. This comes as a surprise not only to us but also to Clint.Eventually, Clint makes it out to the Green Circle spread where he reunites with Julie, but she refuses to have anything to do with him. Clint hands over his gun to her in an act of contrition. "Think it over Clint," Julie warns him, "because I won't give them back, so if you're thinking of fooling us, you better ride out now for everybody's sake." Clint doesn't budge. "I'll give you no cause to be sorry," he vows. He tells his young son Tom who doesn't know that he is his father that: "The important thing is to have a home, that's all that counts." Clearly, "Clint el solitario" qualifies as a status quo western. Initially, Julie's neighbor, Bill O'Brien (Gerhard Riedmann) suspects that Clint is on Shannon's payroll. Bill wants Julie, but she wants only to share his friendship, not is affection. The writers have done an admirable job of taking the "Shane" formula and spitting up the family from "Shane" so that the gunslinger hero can come between Julie and Bill. Unmistakably, Julie sees Bill only as a friend. Tom loves tagging along with Clint. Their friendship cools when Clint and he ride into Saddle Rock to trade corn at the general store for goods. Shannon's gunmen scare the storekeeper so that he doesn't accept Julie's goods and Tom is mortified when Clint doesn't retaliate against them for damaging their goods. Eventually, Shannon (Walter Barnes of "Rio Bravo") frames a rancher, McKinley (Beni Deus) of rustling his cattle. Shannon has the new sheriff under his thumb so they take him to jail and prepare to hang him. Indeed, Shannon wants to do everything with the law as a shield so that the government doesn't interfere. Shannon is rather cagey as a Euro-western villain. McKinley's son opposes the hanging and dies for his efforts. Shannon's gunmen dynamite the dam and drag a helpless farmer behind a wagon. Clint cannot tolerate this injustice and kills the crippled Don. Shannon sends his army of gunmen against the homesteaders in Saddle Rock, and Balcázar stages a massive gunfight with several men dying and the town virtually destroyed. Later, Clint guns down both Ross and Shannon in a duel. After the dust has settled and scores of men lay dead, Clint pulls out and rides off into the sunset with young Tom charging after him, calling to him the same way Brandon de Wilde did in "Shane." "Clint el solitario" allows Clint to reunite with Julie and Tom and live happily ever after.
heybhc
This rather American-looking spaghetti western has an unusually large German contingent in the cast; Pinkas Braun as the crippled brother, Gerhard Riedmann as the devoted neighbor, and of course the lovely Marianne Koch (A FISTFUL OF DOLLARS) as Julie, Clint's distant wife. Also, it looks as if it was filmed in Bavaria, standing in for Wyoming. In keeping with its SHANE roots, George Martin (very good here) is Clint, a notorious gunslinger, trouble following him everywhere. All he wants is to settle down with his wife and son (who doesn't remember him), but he rides into a range war. The Shannons, led by pa Walter Barnes and their foreman, the great Fernando Sancho, want the valley for their grazing herds. The farmers and small ranchers don't want to leave. Sound familiar? Into this scenario rides Clint, promising his wife he will leave the violent life behind. Complications ensue. This one's pretty good. Wild East has put together two prints, and some of the lines of dialogue here are in German, subtitled in English. The print is nicely widescreen, if not the exact o.a.r., and a nice picture gallery of posters of the film round out the package. This one is especially recommended to the fan of pasta oaters, but all western fans should get a kick out of this winner.