A Stranger in Paso Bravo (Italian: Uno straniero a Paso Bravo, Spanish: Los pistoleros de Paso Bravo, also known as Paso Bravo) is a 1968 Italian-Spanish Spaghetti Western film directed by Salvatore Rosso. It was the first and only film directed by Rosso, who had previously been assistant of a number of directors, notably Pietro Germi.[1] The film was remade in 1969 by Antonio Margheriti as And God Said to Cain; despite being the same story and having the main characters sharing the same names, the two films list different screenwriters.[1] The film underperformed at the Italian box office, grossing only 34 million lire.[2]
A Stranger in Paso Bravo | |
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Directed by | Salvatore Rosso |
Written by | Lucio Battistrada Fernando Morandi Eduardo Manzanos Brochero |
Produced by | Francesco Carnicelli Arturo Marcos |
Cinematography | Alfonso Nieva Gino Santini |
Music by | Angelo Francesco Lavagnino |
Release date |
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Running time | 97 minutes |
Country | Italy |
Language | Italian |
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