… and Giuliano Gemma’s mule is also called ‘Sartana’ in ‘Day of Anger’ (1967)
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For me these 4 together would be worth around USD 150 - 200 even without the box
Blood River/Ten White Men and One Little Indian (Gianfranco Baldanello) music Piero Umiliani 1974
Awkward Hands (Rafael Romero Marchent) music Antón García Abril 1970
Challenge Of The Mackennas/Badlands Drifter/Amen/A Dollar and a Grave (León Klimovsky) music Francesco De Masi 1970
Vengeance For Vengeance/Revenge For Revenge (Mario Colucci) music Angelo Lavagnino 1968
Dear Stanton,
Thank you for a most educational post, you wonderfully providing even more information on this topic than requested, an approach always to be treasured--and eagerly anticipated.
I must also inform you, Sebastian, that, "The Complete Sartana", the much-prized--especially by me!--Special Collector's Booklet included in my newly-arrived Arrow Blu-ray "The Complete Sartana", contains a most-, if not entirely, complete spaghetti-western production timeline, extending all the way to 1979, I believe (I don't have this precious item with me at present), so, if you can obtain a copy yourself, it would doubtlessly immeasurably aid you in creating your own desired similar timeline, although I am powerless to explain why this timeline lacks any mention of both the notable "A Bullet For Sandoval" (1969), and the magisterial "The Grand Duel" (1972), one of the last truly classics of one of cinema's greatest subgenres.
Lastly, I would like to ask anyone reading this if they could name for me a spaghetti western I once saw advertised as the last offering of an all-night TNT Spaghetti-Western marathon in late August or early September,1993. It was one of the later--much later--and last-- films of the first Italian-Western era, released in 1977, and, to a degree, built around the appearance of the ghost of Davy Crockett at the Alamo. Is this (at least) most interesting-sounding latter-day spaghetti western familiar to anyone?