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  1. Bolognini considered either Franco Nero or Peter Martell for the role, and eventually decided to have Fulvio Frizza, the head of Euro International Films (the film's distributor), choose the actor based on photographs of the three men. Frizza chose Nero, who was reluctant to appear in the film because he wanted to perform roles in more "serious ...

  2. May 26, 2011 · Franco Nero: No escaping Django. 'In Germany they call all my movies Django': Franco Nero tells how everywhere he goes, even today, people shout Django, the name of the 1966 film he credits...

  3. One of the key case-studies Frayling employs in his analysis is Sergio Corbucci’s 1966 western Django, which starred the (then) unknown actor Franco Nero as a lone gunman who wreaks vengeance on warring clans in a desolate

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  5. Jan 1, 2013 · CAPRI, Italy — Franco Nero had no inkling that when he started filming the original Django movie nearly 50 years ago that he’d be making history. There was no real script, the budget was at ...

  6. Franco Nero, the original Django from the 1966 Italian film, was rumored for the role of Calvin Candie, but instead was given a cameo appearance as a minor character. Nero suggested that he play a mysterious horseman who haunts Django in visions and is revealed in an ending flashback to be Django's father; Tarantino opted not to use the idea.

  7. www.imdb.com › title › tt0060315Django (1966) - IMDb

    Django: Directed by Sergio Corbucci. With Franco Nero, José Bódalo, Loredana Nusciak, Ángel Álvarez. A coffin-dragging gunslinger and a prostitute become embroiled in a bitter feud between a Klan of Southern racists and a band of Mexican Revolutionaries.

  8. On the Mexico-United States border 100 years ago in the year 1866, a drifter (Franco Nero), wearing a Union army uniform and dragging a coffin, witnesses Mexican bandits tying a runaway prostitute, María (Loredana Nusciak), to a bridge and whipping her.

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