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Night of the Serpent

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Night of the Serpent
Directed byGiulio Petroni
Written byFulvio Gicca Palli
Giulio Petroni
Produced byGianni Minervini
StarringLuke Askew
Luigi Pistilli
Magda Konopka
Franco Balducci
Luciano Casamonica
Chelo Alonso
Guglielmo Spoletini
Benito Stefanelli
Giancarlo Badessi
CinematographyMario Vulpiani
Silvio Fraschetti
Edited byAntonietta Zita
Music byRiz Ortolani
Release date
  • 1969 (1969)
CountryItaly

Night of the Serpent (Italian: La notte dei serpenti), also known as Nest of Vipers, is a 1969 Italian spaghetti Western film co-written and directed by Giulio Petroni and starring Luke Askew, Luigi Pistilli, Magda Konopka, Giancarlo Badessi and Chelo Alonso.

Synopsis

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In a remote Mexican village, a group of townsmen (the town's Alcalde, the town's bartender, the town's priest and the town's prostitute) conspire to rob child orphan Manuel of his inheritance, since they are all Manuel's relatives and his estranged father, who was living in USA, recently died and left a lot of money to his son. After finding out about the "nest of vipers" and their scheme to get Manuel's inheritance, Hernandez, the corrupt military commander of the Mexican army's garrison in the villa, joins the group of conspirators as their leader and devises a new plan with the intention of framing an innocent man for the future murder of the boy. Meanwhile Luke, an alcoholic ex-gunslinger suffering from a traumatic and unspoken past, is chosen by the revolutionary and small-time bandit General Pancaldo, who is a friend of Hernandez, to be the unwitting pawn of the town conspirators. However, after finding out about the group's plan and their intention of killing both Manuel and his adoptive mother María, Luke decides to get back into shape leaving alcohol and facing the conspirators and the Mexican army head on.

Cast

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Production

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The film was shot between Almeria, Cinecittà, and De Paolis Studios in Rome.[1] Franco Bottari served as production designer, while Franco Lo Cascio was second unit director.[2]

Reception

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While film director Giulio Petroni was generally dismissive of the film, several critics praised it, notably Spanish film critic Carlos Aguilar, who deemed the film as Petroni's best, and one of his favorite spaghetti westerns.[2][3] Film critic Eugenio Ercolani described the film as "fierce and tense", and noted the strong giallo influences in the script.[3]

References

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  1. ^ Gaberscek, Carlo (2007). Il vicino West : set e location del cinema western in Spagna. Ribis. p. 435. ISBN 978-88-7445-044-2.
  2. ^ a b Giusti, Marco (2007). "La notte dei serpenti". Dizionario del western all'italiana. Mondadori. p. 325. ISBN 978-88-04-57277-0.
  3. ^ a b Ercolani, Eugenio (21 August 2019). Darkening the Italian Screen. McFarland. pp. 68–9. ISBN 978-1-4766-6738-6.
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