Among Vultures (German: Unter Geiern) is a 1964 Western film directed by Alfred Vohrer and starring Stewart Granger, Pierre Brice, Elke Sommer and Götz George.[2][3] It was also released as Frontier Hellcat.
Among Vultures | |
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Directed by | Alfred Vohrer |
Written by | |
Story by | Karl May |
Produced by | Erwin Gitt Stipe Gurdulic Horst Wendlandt |
Starring | Stewart Granger Pierre Brice Elke Sommer |
Cinematography | Karl Löb |
Edited by | Hermann Haller |
Music by | Martin Böttcher |
Production companies | Rialto Film Jadran Film Societé Nouvelle de Cinématographie |
Distributed by | Constantin Film (West Germany) British Lion Films (United Kingdom) Columbia Pictures (United States) |
Release dates |
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Running time | 101 minutes |
Countries | West Germany France Italy Yugoslavia |
Language | German |
Box office | 577,441 admissions (France) 1,778,713 admissions (Spain) over $3 million (Germany)[1] |
The film was a co-production between West Germany, France, Italy and Yugoslavia. It was shot at the Spandau Studios in Berlin and on location in Yugoslavia, particularly in Croatia.[4] The film's sets were designed by the art director Vladimir Tadej. The story is based on the eponymous novel by Karl May.
An American frontiersman Old Surehand and his Apache companion Winnetou expose a criminal gang who are murdering settlers and laying the blame on the local Native American tribe.
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