Giuliano Gemma is Monty Mulligan, a gambler who’s had a run of bad luck, but is about to get some very good news.
His uncle has left him $300,000. There’s just one catch.
He and his estranged brother — Nino Benvenuti as Ted Mulligan — must spend six months together to split the cash.
So Monty heads West to the town of Big Peak, where his brother lives.
Within hours, thanks in part to Monty’s interference, a big bad bandit named Bad Jim has stolen Ted’s horses and burned his home to the ground.
Now the two brothers are homeless and penniless, so they turn to a life of crime.
They rob a bank and come away with bags full of pennies.
They rob a stage and come away with a pretty blonde (Sydne Rome) who’s so annoying, her father is willing to pay extra ransom if they’ll keep her a little longer.
Will things go better when they try robbing a train? And will they survive six months in order to collect the money?
A better than average comedy Spaghetti — after all, some of the comedies in the genre are barely watchable. This one will have you smiling in several spots, if not laughing out loud.
Bad Jim keeps showing up to foil the Mulligan brothers exploits. At one point, Bad Jim has the brothers stripped to the waist, then has his gang members stand behind a line in a cabin floor and toss red-hot pennies at their naked flesh. Another torture scene, where the brothers are burned with red-hot sticks of wood was apparently cut from most releases.
Torture scenes aside, there are plenty of funny gags. And Sydne Rome helps improve the scenery.
Directed by:
Duccio Tessari
Cast:
Giuliano Gemma … Monty Mulligan
Nino Benvenuti … Ted Mulligan
Sydne Rome … Scarlett Scott
Cris Huerta … Bad Jim
Julio Pena … Doctor
Antonio Casas … Barnes
George Rigaud … Mr. Scott
Also with: Dan van Husen, Luis Barboo, Victor Israel, Juan Olaguivel, Vicente Roca, Brizio Montinaro, Arturo Pallandino, José Canalejas, Rafael Albaicín, Simón Arriaga,, Joaquin Parra, Alvaro de Luna, Herman Reynoso, Agustin Bescos, Antonio Orengo
aka:
Sundance Cassidy and Butch the Kid
Sundance and the Kid
Vivi o, perferibilmente, morti
Vivos o preferiblemente muertos
Score: Gianni Ferrio
Songs: “Monty and Ted” by The Wilder Brothers
“December 24th” by I Cantori Moderni di Alessandroni
“Yes Sir” by Lilian Terry
Runtime: 103 min.
Memorable lines:
Monty Mulligan, to a passenger as his car belches clouds of smoke: “My car is like a woman. Push her too far, and she’ll boil over.”
Scarlett to Ted: “The way you swing that ax does all sorts of funny things to me.”
Whereupon she’s struck by a wood chip and pretends to be knocked out, so handsome Ted will run to her aid.
Scarlett, helping write a ransom note to her father, a banker: “A thousand dollars?”
Monty: “Yeah. Why?”
Scarlett: “You have kidnapped me for a miserable thousand dollars. If you only wanted a thousand dollars, why didn’t you kidnap the baker’s daughter?”
They settle on $10,000.
Scarlett: “Oh, by the way, I get 30 percent.”
Monty, watching Scarlett help Ted dress: “God made man. And woman uses him. Right?”
Scarlett Scott, as two suiters prepare to square off:
“A duel. They’re going to fight a duel over me. How exciting.”
Barnes: “One of them’s bound to get killed.”
Mr. Scott, eager to marry off his daughter: “Just as long as one of them survives.”
Other tidbits:
The movie was released in the U.S. as Sundance Cassidy and Butch the Kid to capitalize on the popularity of the Paul Newman/Robert Redford film.
Ohio-born Sydne Rome is the American among this cast. It was just her second film. She’d appear on one more Spaghetti, “They Call Him Amen” and gain fame as the star of Roman Polanski’s “What?” (1972).
This marked the last Spaghetti Western collaboration between director Tessari and star Gemma. In 1985, Tessari and Gemma teamed up to turn a comic book hero into a Western in “Tex and the Lord of the Deep.”