Run, Man, Run

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Run, Man, Run
Directed bySergio Sollima
Screenplay bySergio Sollima
Pompeo De Angelis
Story bySergio Sollima
Produced byAlvaro Mancori
Anna Maria Chretien
StarringTomas Milian
Donal O'Brien
Linda Veras
John Ireland
Chelo Alonso
CinematographyGuglielmo Mancori
Edited byTatiana Casini Morigi
Music byBruno Nicolai
Uncredited:
Ennio Morricone
Production
company
Mancori–Chretien
Distributed byItal-Noleggio Cinematografico
Release date
29 August 1968
Running time
120 minutes
CountriesItaly
France
LanguageItalian
Box office1,000,146,000 ITL (Italy)[1]

Run, Man, Run (Italian: Corri uomo corri, also known as Big Gundown 2) is an Italian-French Zapata Western film. It is the second film of Sergio Sollima centred on the character of Cuchillo, again played by Tomas Milian, after the two-years earlier successful western The Big Gundown. It is also the final chapter of the political-western trilogy of Sollima, and his last spaghetti western.[2] According to the same Sollima, Run, Man, Run is the most politic, the most revolutionary and even anarchic among his movies.[3]

Plot

When Cuchillo returns to his hometown in Mexico he soon finds himself in prison, sharing a cell with desperado Ramirez. Thus he's present when Ramirez breaks out. He accompanies his new buddy who is killed little later by bandits. Cuchillo learns that Ramirez once rode with Benito Juárez. The killers believe Ramirez knew the whereabouts of a 3 million dollars hidden by Juarez. Now that Ramirez is dead they presume he has bequeathed his secret to Cuchillo. But Cuchillo makes it hard on them to catch him.

Cast

Soundtrack

For contractual reasons, Nicolai is credited with the film's music, but Ennio Morricone actually composed it.[4]

References

  1. ^ Fisher, Austin (2014). Radical Frontiers in the Spaghetti Western: Politics, Violence and Popular Italian Cinema. I.B.Tauris. p. 220.
  2. ^ Antonio Bruschini. Western all'italiana: The specialists. Glittering images, 1998. pp. 68–70. ISBN 88-8275-034-5.
  3. ^ Christian Uva, Michele Picchi. Destra e sinistra nel cinema italiano. Edizioni Interculturali S.r.l., 2006. p. 223. ISBN 88-88375-66-X.
  4. ^ Run, Man, Run (Run Man Run: 35 Years Running) (DVD). Los Angeles, California: Blue Underground. 1968.

External links