The more I think of the changes in the Italian version the less I like them, especially the elimination of red sun and last twenty seconds.
I wonder if the “Bang Bang” scene with A. Lawrence (?) and Maribel del Pozo was inspired by the 1966 Cher/Nancy Sinatra song.
The Curious Case of Rossana Rovere
1963 to 1970 she’s credited in six movies, ‎three of which are SWs: Sapevano solo uccidere, Garringo and Arriva Sabata.
According to IMDb she plays Saloon dancer Meg (some time ago I corrected this error on SWDB, now IMDb is right too), redheaded Sarah and Sabata’s sister Patricia respectively, but checking photos one realizes that there’s something wrong
The three actresses are regularly credited Ana Castor, Tania Alvarado (pics from Django sfida Sartana and Il corsaro with Robert Woods) and regularly credited Maria Villa (pics from Sexy Cat, 1973).:
And here is Rossana Rovere, not to be confused with Gina: pics 1, 4 and 5 are from Istituto Luce archives, 2 and 3 from Il demonio (1963) and Sapevano solo uccidere.
In Garringo she is credited only in the Italian version, maybe for co-production reasons, but in Arriva Sabata her name is on Spanish poster too near to Steffen, PLL and Fajardo despite the fact that also the 2nd female character Manolita is played by another actress!
Just try making sense of that…
So, although it’s hard to believe, the thread below shows Maria Villa, Tania Alvarado, Ana Castor, Manja Golec, Lisa Halvorsen and not even a picture of Rossana Rovere!!!


