IMDb RATING
6.4/10
1.3K
YOUR RATING
A Confederate officer returns home in the wake of the Civil War, where he gets embroiled in local feuds involving an unscrupulous strongman and his hired henchmen.A Confederate officer returns home in the wake of the Civil War, where he gets embroiled in local feuds involving an unscrupulous strongman and his hired henchmen.A Confederate officer returns home in the wake of the Civil War, where he gets embroiled in local feuds involving an unscrupulous strongman and his hired henchmen.
Giuliano Gemma
- Gary O'Hara
- (as Montgomery Wood)
Pierre Cressoy
- McCoy
- (as Peter Cross)
Giuseppe Addobbati
- Donaldson
- (as John Mac Douglas)
Franco Fantasia
- Sheriff George Anderson
- (as Frank Farrel)
Tullio Altamura
- Peter
- (as Tor Altmayer)
Massimo Righi
- Brad
- (as Max Dean)
Andrea Scotti
- Farmer with Donaldson
- (as Andrew Scott)
Nazzareno Zamperla
- Phil O'Hara
- (as Nicholas St.John)
Benito Stefanelli
- James
- (as Benny Reeves)
Franco Lantieri
- Slim
- (as Frank Liston)
Gino Marturano
- Confederate Henchman
- (as Jean Martin)
Nello Pazzafini
- Henchman
- (as Peter Surtess)
Bernard Farber
- Hombre de McCoy
- (as Benny Farber)
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaItalian censorship visa # 45477 delivered on 4-8-1965.
- ConnectionsFeatured in Babenco: Tell Me When I Die (2019)
Featured review
Confederate soldier Gary O'Hara (Guiliano Gemma) and his brother Phil are released from a prisoner of war camp following the end of the civil war, the barrels of their guns removed by their captors. Gary returns home to his wife Judy (Evelyn Stewart) whilst Phil is not ready to live such a quiet life and heads off west.
Gary soon decides to follow his brother to the town of Yellowstone, and to find work to support his family. On arrival, his combat prowess is soon put to practice, which brings him to the attention of local banker McCory (Pierre Cressoy). McCory offers him a ranch and money if he can kill local outlaw Blacky, which he agrees to do. Gary is taken to the local saloon and advised that Blacky is the man at the bar with his back to him. On confrontation, Blacky turns around, firing his gun - and revealing himself to be Phil O'Hara. McCory and his men open fire, leaving both brothers dead.
By a stroke of good fortune, Gary survives the ambush, his life saved by the single silver dollar in his pocket. He sets out to discover why McCory wanted Blacky dead, and to aid the local villagers that are suffering at the hands of a group of marauding bandits. Meanwhile, Judy O'Hara travels to Yellowstone in search of her husband, and soon finds herself in the unwelcome company of McCory.
As with Gemma's role in his two Ringo films, the character of Gary O'Hara would sit quite comfortably in an American made western. This is no bad thing, and he does always make for a likable hero. The same point could be levelled at the film in general - it is a likable flick, with a true old American western feel. That said, Ferrio's enjoyable whistled score clearly sits within the euro-western genre, and it does share a level of violence with its fellow Italian movies.
The story itself has a few clichés (for one thing, a fair few screen characters have been saved over the years by an inanimate object conveniently placed on their person) but does that really matter? Clearly not. And there are some great scenes, particularly both the opening (great gun-play as the brothers are released) and final sequence. From a personal perspective, I was also intrigued to note a great visual likeness between Evelyn Stewart and my own girlfriend!!! Not that that should be of any real relevance to this write up.
In summary, this is one of those nice easy to watch movies (legs up on the sofa, with a wine or beer for company), and certainly worth a few silver dollars of anyones money.
Gary soon decides to follow his brother to the town of Yellowstone, and to find work to support his family. On arrival, his combat prowess is soon put to practice, which brings him to the attention of local banker McCory (Pierre Cressoy). McCory offers him a ranch and money if he can kill local outlaw Blacky, which he agrees to do. Gary is taken to the local saloon and advised that Blacky is the man at the bar with his back to him. On confrontation, Blacky turns around, firing his gun - and revealing himself to be Phil O'Hara. McCory and his men open fire, leaving both brothers dead.
By a stroke of good fortune, Gary survives the ambush, his life saved by the single silver dollar in his pocket. He sets out to discover why McCory wanted Blacky dead, and to aid the local villagers that are suffering at the hands of a group of marauding bandits. Meanwhile, Judy O'Hara travels to Yellowstone in search of her husband, and soon finds herself in the unwelcome company of McCory.
As with Gemma's role in his two Ringo films, the character of Gary O'Hara would sit quite comfortably in an American made western. This is no bad thing, and he does always make for a likable hero. The same point could be levelled at the film in general - it is a likable flick, with a true old American western feel. That said, Ferrio's enjoyable whistled score clearly sits within the euro-western genre, and it does share a level of violence with its fellow Italian movies.
The story itself has a few clichés (for one thing, a fair few screen characters have been saved over the years by an inanimate object conveniently placed on their person) but does that really matter? Clearly not. And there are some great scenes, particularly both the opening (great gun-play as the brothers are released) and final sequence. From a personal perspective, I was also intrigued to note a great visual likeness between Evelyn Stewart and my own girlfriend!!! Not that that should be of any real relevance to this write up.
In summary, this is one of those nice easy to watch movies (legs up on the sofa, with a wine or beer for company), and certainly worth a few silver dollars of anyones money.
- How long is Blood for a Silver Dollar?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Runtime1 hour 38 minutes
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 2.35 : 1
Contribute to this page
Suggest an edit or add missing content
Top Gap
By what name was Blood for a Silver Dollar (1965) officially released in India in English?
Answer