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  1. Stranger Django (Franco Nero) rides into the middle of a border fray between Mexican bandits and the Ku Klux Klan. Director Sergio Corbucci Screenwriter Sergio Corbucci, Bruno Corbucci Production ...

    • (18)
    • Western
  2. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Franco_NeroFranco Nero - Wikipedia

    Francesco Clemente Giuseppe Sparanero (born 23 November 1941), known professionally as Franco Nero, is an Italian actor, producer, and director. His breakthrough role was as the title character in the Spaghetti Western film Django (1966), which made him a pop culture icon and launched an international career that includes over 200 leading and ...

  3. Bódalo was born in Córdoba, Argentina, the son of Rome -born actress Eugenia Zúffoli and Spanish actor and singer José Bódalo, Sr. [1] His birth in Argentina coincided with his family's artistic tour, but he soon moved to Madrid, where he began studying medicine. He made over 120 film and TV appearances between 1930 and his death in 1985.

  4. Django Shoots First. Django Strikes Again. Django the Bastard. Django the Condemned. Django Unchained. Django, Prepare a Coffin.

  5. Manfred R. Köhler. Frederick Stafford, Chris Howland, Harald Leipnitz. Spy film. West German-Italian-French co-production [4] Agent X-77 Orders to Kill. Maurice Cloche. Gérard Barray, Sylva Koscina.

  6. Sep 10, 2012 · It's a clean- up-and-paint-the-town-blood-red revenge drama with a difference. Nero's mud-spattered ex-Yankee soldier, first seen squelching towards a US-Mexican border ghost town, a coffin ...

  7. Un estuche de guitarra, un libro, un vaso de tequila, una navaja suiza. Pero un ataúd, nunca. Franco Neros beautiful blue eyes cut through the mud and filth that’s soaked into this movie. The plot is very slight but it’s entertaining and swift at 90 minutes with a great last shot. A coffin-dragging gunslinger and a prostitute become ...

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