Kill Them All and Come Back Alone
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Kill Them All and Come Back Alone

1968 1h 40m ★ 6.3 (37 votes) Released

During the American Civil War, a Confederate prisoner, Clyde McKay, attempts to steal a box of gold from a Union prison camp. He is aided by a group of prisoners and a prison guard but he is double-crossed along the way.

Director

Enzo G. Castellari

Screenplay

Francesco Scardamaglia

Screenplay

Tito Carpi

Screenplay

Enzo G. Castellari

Rating
6.3
Runtime
100 min

Production

Fida Cinematografica
Centauro Films

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Audience Reviews

C
CinemaSerf
★ 6/10 Mar 28, 2023

I always reckoned Chuck Connors just came along ten years too late to be a "Tarzan". He has precious little acting ability but would have been great rolling around in a loin cloth, or swinging through the trees with a knife between his teeth. Well, to be fair to that image - it's sort of what he ends up doing here in this very routine spaghetti western. He is "Clyde" who is charged with pinching an huge gold consignment being held by the Yankee army during the American civil war. Allied with half a dozen pretty disparate cutthroats and an even more duplicitous union captain "Lynch" (Frank Wolff) we now follow their escapades as betrayal begets betrayal and killings become routine as they search for the loot. It's all very cheap, cheerful and predictable - and Connors must have a jaw made of wrought iron. Francesco De Masi is no Ennio Morricone so we haven't even a quirky or original score to rely on to help this as it limps along to a denouement that matters not. The production - especially the editing - is really basic, but it might have worked better had the cast, dialogue and story been a bit more robust. As it is, though, well it just passes the time, that's all.

Keywords

spaghetti western

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