Trailers
Description
Django, bounty killer, hunter and repentant bandit wants to start a new life. No more bullets and blood, after years of killing and horror. Django wants to replace the sherrif and restore law and order to lawless land, but faces the history and bloodshed of his own past. Helped by the love of the daughter of a bandit Django can finally bring his life of violence to and end and spend his days in peace... If he can live that long!
Starring
Key opinion
Pochi dollari per Django is a derivative effort that attempts to capitalize on the popularity of better Spaghetti Westerns through inconsistent characterizations and borrowed tropes. While some viewers find merit in its specific action sequences and genre motifs, the overall consensus is that it lacks the cohesion and impact of the classics it tries to emulate.
| Originality | The film heavily relies on unoriginal motifs and narrative structures borrowed from Sergio Leone's Dollars Trilogy and other genre staples. | |
| Acting | The protagonist's characterization is disjointed, shifting jarringly between a cool bounty hunter archetype and a traditional lawman. | |
| Acting | Anthony Steffen delivers a performance that occasionally captures believable moments of vulnerability, though it fails to elevate the film's broader flaws. | |
| Screenplay | The narrative execution divides viewers, with some finding the plot dull and derivative, while others appreciate the inclusion of stylish, high-stakes climax sequences. |