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殺しが静かにやって来る
殺しが静かにやって来る

殺しが静かにやって来る

19681h 45m★ 7.5西洋ドラマ

あらすじ

賞金稼ぎを生業とする残虐な無法者集団。彼らは無垢の人々をも手にかけ、一顧だにしない冷酷さを持っていた。彼らに夫を殺された未亡人は、ひとりの男に復讐を依頼する。サイレンスと呼ばれるその男は、幼いときに両親を殺され、自分も声帯を切り裂かれて声を失っていた...。『続・荒野の用心棒』と並ぶセルジオ・コルブッチ監督の代表作にして、マカロニ史上に残る異色カルト・ウエスタン。モリコーネの悲哀に満ちた音楽も印象的。

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興行収入: $53,074 (0億円)

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キャスト

Jean-Louis Trintignant
Jean-Louis Trintignant
Silence
クラウス・キンスキー
クラウス・キンスキー
Loco (Tigrero)
Frank Wolff
Frank Wolff
Sheriff Burnett
Luigi Pistilli
Luigi Pistilli
Pollicut
Vonetta McGee
Vonetta McGee
Pauline
Mario Brega
Mario Brega
Martin
Carlo D'Angelo
Carlo D'Angelo
Governor
Marisa Merlini
Marisa Merlini
Regina
Maria Mizar
Maria Mizar
Blonde Saloon girl
No Image
Marisa Sally
Black-Haired Saloon Girl

スタッフ・制作会社

監督: Sergio Corbucci

脚本: Sergio Corbucci / Mario Amendola / Bruno Corbucci

音楽: エンニオ・モリコーネ

制作: Attilio Riccio / Robert Dorfmann

撮影監督: Silvano Ippoliti

制作会社: Les Films Corona / Adelphia Compagnia Cinematografica

TMDB ユーザーのレビュー

John Chard
John Chard
★ 7

For all I know he is the devil. The Great Silence is directed by Sergio Corbucci and Corbucci co- writes the screenplay with Mario Amendola, Bruno Corbucci and Vittoriano Petrilli. It stars Jean-Louis Trintignant, Klaus Kinski, Frank Wolff, Luigi Pistilli, Vonetta McGee and Mario Brega. Music is by Ennio Morricone and cinematography by Silvano Ippoliti. Snowhill, Utah - Winter at the turn of the century, and the local villagers have succumbed to thievery purely to survive. But with that comes bounties on their heads, which brings into the area the bounty hunters who are a law unto themselves. Enter the mute gunfighter known as Silence, who has a deep rooted hatred of bounty hunters... Something of a cult classic and massively popular in Spaghetti Western fan's circles, The Great Silence is as perpetually cold as the snowy landscapes that surround this tale. Death is a financial commodity, greed and corruption stalks the land, while the shades between right and wrong are as blurry as can be. The violence cuts deep, none more so than with the famous finale that closes down the pic with a pneumatic thud. The photography captures the winter scapes perfectly and is in tune with the narrative drive, while maestro Morricone lays a ethereal musical score over proceedings. There's some daft goofs such as a dead man blinking and manacles that mysteriously disappear, and not all the acting is of the standard that Kinski and Wolff provide, but this is one utterly unforgettable bowl of Spaghetti. Its reputation in the pasta circles well deserved. 8/10

Wuchak
Wuchak
★ 7

_**Killers in the snow of the (Italian) Old West**_ In 1898, a mute gunfighter called Silence (Jean-Louis Trintignant) comes to a snowy town in northern Utah where ruthless bounty hunters clash with fugitives in the hills. He accepts a job from a widow (Vonetta McGee) to take out Loco (Klaus Kinski), the man who slew her husband. Directed & co-written by Sergio Corbucci, “The Great Silence” (1968) ranks with the better Spaghetti Westerns due to several highlights: The awesome snowy setting, a moving score by Ennio Morricone, the silent protagonist, the uniquely beautiful Vonetta McGee (a rare black woman in a prominent role in an old Western), the dastardly villain played by Kinski and the shocking climax. It influenced future Westerns, like “The Claim” (2000) and “The Hateful Eight” (2015). As with most Italian Westerns from back then, the English dubbing is serviceable at best. The only issue I have on this front is the voice used for Kinski’s character, which seems incongruous. The movie runs 1 hour, 45 minutes, and was shot about 15 miles from the border of Austria in northeastern Italy (San Cassiano & Cortina d'Ampezzo), as well as the flashback done at Bracciano Lake, Rome, with other stuff done in Elios Studios, Rome. GRADE: B+

CinemaSerf
CinemaSerf
★ 7

Set against a really effective wintry, hostile, background this tells the story of revenge - and that's always best served cold! A woman "Pauline" (Vonetta McGee) and her family are the victims of unscrupulous bandits. Bent of avenging their heinous behaviour, she hires an equally ruthless and deadly enforcer of her own (Jean-Louis Trintignant) to even the score. This anonymous, mute, gunman is very adept at settling scores, and as the bodies gradually pile up, it looks like a confrontation with the bounty hunter/killer "Tigrero" (Klaus Kinski) cannot be long for the waiting. This is a film that you need to watch with a blanket. The freezing scenarios are used superbly to create a sense of isolation, desperation and the frequent presence of blood spattering the snow helps further illustrate the violent and brutal nature of the lives of the late 19th century Utah citizens - only marginally on the human side of civilisation. The dubbing isn't the best, but the dialogue isn't actually that important. It's the whole look and feel of this film that resonates really well. Kinski and his maniacal eyes, the mute Trintignant (did he just not want to learn any lines?) and the sparing interventions of local kingpin "Pollicut" (Luigi Pistilli) and sheriff "Burnett" (Frank Wolff) all add richness and general unpleasantness to the whole thing. What also helps here is unpredictability. The narrative does not just plod along with the usual hero/anti-hero inevitability to it. The story is alive, it has an authenticity and duplicitousness to it that holds the attention really well before a bleak and, frankly rather savage, denouement that is entirely fitting! It's a great big screen experience!

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