Karin Dor is Mabel Kingsley, a young woman determined to clear the name of her father, a major in the cavalry.
He had been assigned the task of escorting a gold shipment from Fort Dawson. Only he never returned and the gold has disappeared.
During a court hearing, the prosecuting attorney argues that Maj. Kingsley has hidden the gold somewhere in Mexico and might be alive and enjoying his newfound riches.
After hearing her pleas and seeing a letter she says will help clear her father, the judge gives Mabel two months to prove that’s not the case.
She’ll get some help, from Old Shatterhand (Lex Barker), who knows the danger she’s put herself in by revealing the existance of that letter.
And she’ll get help from the Indian chief Winnetou, who was with Maj. Kingsley when he died and knews precisely what happened to the gold.
They set out to find it, along with a three-man cavalry escort, plant expert Lord Castlepool and scout Sam Hawkens.
But they won’t be along.
The same outlaws who hounded Maj. Kingsley are now on Mabel’s trail, led by the vicious Murdock (Rik Battaglia).
And the Sioux Chief Red Buffalo would like to get his hands on the gold because of all the guns and ammunition it could buy for his tribe.
The final Winnetou film gets off to an fine, action-packed start, with Lex Barker back in the saddle as Old Shatterhand and a lovely leading lady in Karin Dor.
And though Old Shatterhand avoids killing his outlaw pursuers by stirring up a bunch of bees at one point, it’s more violent than your standard Winnetou film.
A cavalry officer is viciously whipped at one point and nearly drawn and quartered. Another scene features members of the bandit gang being strangled by snakes.
Unfortunately, the film loses it way and much of its credibility the closer our heroes get to their destination.
For instance, Winnetou knows of a special plant he and his friends can rub on their horses to keep the reptiles away as they ride through the Valley of Snakes. He assures his friends their pursuers are ignorant of that ploy.
Then comes the trip into the Valley of Death, which is filled with natural gas. Natural gas that can ignited, Winnetou says, by an evil thought.
Oh, my.
Directed by:
Harold Reinl
Cast:
Lex Barker … Old Shatterhand
Pierre Brice … Winnetou
Ralf Wolter … Sam Hawkens
Karin Dor … Mabel Kingsley
Eddi Arent … Lord Castlepool
Rik Battaglia … Murdock
Vojislave Govedarcia … Red Buffalo
Voyo Goric … Wojo Govedarizu
Clark Reynolds … Capt. Cummings
Vladimir Medar … Sheriff
Milan Sosa … Meadows
Brank Spoljar … Maj. Cranfield
Kurt Waitzmann … Col. Bergson
Heinz Welzel … Judge
Sima Janicijevic … Maj. Kingsley
Also with: Vladimir Leib, Ilija Ivezic, Ivo Kristof, Nikola Gec, Vladimir Bacic, Sime Jagarinac, Miroslav Buhin, Valent Borovic, Mirko Kraljev, Dusko Ercegovic, Rajko Zakarija, Drago Sosa, Vladimir Simac, Stjepan Spoljaric, Slavica Orlovic, Vida Jerman
Runtime: 89 min.
aka:
Winnetou und Shatterhand im Tal der Toten
Man with the Long Gun
The Valley of Death
Music: Martin Bottcher
Memorable lines:
Sorry, I watched a foreign language version of this film.
Trivia:
* This marked the 11th and last Winnetou film released during the 1960s. It marked Lex Barker’s seventh film as Old Shatterhand and the fifth Winnetou movie directed by Harold Reinl. The series started with 1962’s “Treasure at Silver Lake.”
* Around age 70, Pierre Brice reprised the Winnetou role for a two-part German television miniseries called Winnetous Rückkehr (Return of Winnetou). Brice died in 2015 at age 86.
* Karin Dor was married to director Harold Reinl and had key roles in two other Winnetou films — “The Treasure of Silver Lake” (1962) and “Last of the Renegades” (1964) — and in the “The Last Tomahawk” (1965), a remake of “Last of the Mohicans.”