Five for Hell (Italian: Cinque per l'inferno, also known as Five Into Hell) is a 1969 Italian "macaroni combat" war film starring John Garko, Margaret Lee and Klaus Kinski.[1] Italian cinema specialist Howard Hughes referred to it as a derivative of The Dirty Dozen (1967).[2]
| Five for Hell (Cinque per l'inferno) | |
|---|---|
Spanish DVD cover | |
| Directed by | Frank Kramer |
| Screenplay by | Renato Izzo Gianfranco Parolini |
| Story by | Sergio Garrone |
| Produced by | Paolo Moffa Aldo Addobbati |
| Starring | John Garko Margaret Lee Klaus Kinski Aldo Canti Sal Borgese Luciano Rossi Sam Burke |
| Cinematography | Sandro Mancori |
| Edited by | Giuseppe Bellecca Uncredited: Gianfranco Parolini |
| Music by | Vasili Kojucharov Elsio Mancuso |
Production companies | Società Ambrosiana Cinematografica (SAC) Filmstar |
| Distributed by | Paris Etoile Film |
Release date | 18 January 1969 |
Running time | 95 minutes |
| Country | Italy |
| Language | Italian |
Gianni Garko is a fun-loving leader of a bunch of oddball G.I.s whose mission is to steal the German's secret attack plans from a villa behind enemy lines, where they run into a brutal Nazi commander.
This film introduced, as it was typical in spaghetti combat films, a very particular and self parodic humour, using also elements inherited directly from the Spaghetti Western, such as the hero using eccentric and odd weaponry, such as an iron baseball.
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