Fernando E. Romero is Jim Chambers, who’s out hunting with his dad when he rescues a dog from one of his father’s traps.
The young boy takes the dog home, nurses him to health and names him Buck.
That decision pays off because Buck repeatedly comes to the rescue after Jim’s dad is killed by Indians.
Jim, older sister Mary and Buck wind up trying to make it to Dawson City with the help of two brothers (John and Hank McKenzie), who have been stranded after a snow sled accident.
Once the journey is complete, they find Dawson City is ruled by crooked William Bates (Jack Palance), who has a band of henchmen willing to do his bidding and his killing.
Bates wants control over everything, including what is and isn’t printed in the newspaper young Mary starts with the help of former lawyer Tom Jarrell.
But the kids also makes friends in Dawson City, including saloon singer Sonia Kendall (Joan Collins) and a bartender named Charlie.
An odd mix of family film and Spaghetti Western, made all the more curious by the involvement of Joan Collins.
Buck is quite the hero, leaping into the middle of fights, jumping off a balcony to win a bit for Jim and Mary and moving a stick of dynamite during the climatic bank robbery attempt.
But the final showdown is right out of a Spaghetti Western and you’ll hear strains of borrowed Spaghetti scores throughout the film.
You’ll also see lots of wilderness stock footage, especially before the two kids and the brothers they travel with reach Dawson.
Joan falls for John McKenize (Manuel de Blas), one of those brothers. And I’d love to know how she wound up in this film.
Directed by:
Gianfranco Balanello
as Paul Elliotts
Cast:
Jack Palance … WIlliam Bates
Joan Collins … Sonia Kendall
Elisabetta Virgili … Mary Chambers
as Elizabeth Virgil
Manuel de Blas … John McKenzie
Fernando E. Romero … Jim Chambers
as Fred Romer
Remo De Angelis … Hank McKenzie
Ricardo Palacios … Charlie
Attilio Dottesio … Jim and Mary’s dad
Jose Canalejas … Bates’ man
Filippo La Neve .. Tom Jarrell
Runtime: 88 min.
aka:
Il richiamo del lupo
The Cry of the Wolf
Theme song:
“The Sound of the Wild”
performed by Joseph Allegro
Memorable lines:
Hank McKenzie: “You’re too lucky to be 100 percent honest.”
William Bates: “Mister, that’s the unluckiest thing you ever said.”
William Bates: “I need to make one thing clear from the very start. In Dawson City, I decide what’s news.”
Sonia Kendall: “I think Bates made a big mistake tangling with you two kids. He’d have done better to stir up a nest of rattlesnakes.”