The best Giulio Baraghini’s western movies

Giulio Baraghini

Giulio Baraghini

We present our ranking of the best Giulio Baraghini’s movies. Do you love cinema? Or are you looking for a movie of your favorite actor to watch tonight? Surely you have some to see or that you did not know yet about Giulio Baraghini.

The Great Silence

The Great Silence
7.7/10
  • Genre: ActionWestern
  • Release: 21/02/1968
  • Character: Man in Saloon
A mute gunslinger fights in the defense of a group of outlaws and a vengeful young widow, against a group of ruthless bounty hunters.

Holy Water Joe

Holy Water Joe
4.6/10
  • Genre: Western
  • Release: 11/12/1971
  • Character: Jim
A gang of robbers armed with a union army cannon rob the bank holding bounty Killer Acquasanta Joe's earnings to date. He pursues, crossing and double crossing along the way.

A Man Called Apocalypse Joe

A Man Called Apocalypse Joe
6.2/10
  • Genre: Western
  • Release: 04/12/1970
  • Character: Sheriff Floyd
Travelling actor and gunman Joe Clifford inherits a gold mine from his uncle. Returning to claim the mine, he finds town boss Berg, his uncle's murderer, controls it instead. Clifford sets about avenging his uncle, recovering the mine and freeing the town from Berg using both shooting and thespian skills.

The Stranger That Kneels Beside the Shadow of a Corpse

The Stranger That Kneels Beside the Shadow of a Corpse
4.9/10
  • Genre: Western
  • Release: 27/11/1970
  • Character: 2nd Sheriff (uncredited)
This peculiar spaghetti western from prolific director Demofilo Fidani (using the pseudonym "Miles Deem") deals with a man named Blonde (Chet Davis) tracking bounty hunter Lazar (Hunt Powers) to the mining town of Lamazos. The evil town boss, Barret (Gordon Mitchell), wants Lazar dead, so he sends a group of assassins to murder him. Lazar survives, and Barret ends up offering him $100,000 to leave town. Lazar accepts the money and travels on to a remote shack, where he tortures an old man (Ettore Manni), making him a slave. What Lazar doesn't know is that the old man is Blonde's father, and he pays for his mistake with his life, leaving the man and his gunslinging son rich after the obligatory showdown. Fidani's film is unusual in its almost hallucinatory lack of logic, creating a surreal effect aided by the cinematography of Aristide Massaccesi, who would go on to some notoriety as cult director "Joe D'Amato."

God Is My Colt .45

God Is My Colt .45
4.4/10
  • Genre: Western
  • Release: 18/11/1972
  • Character: Ramon Bradley
God Is My Colt .45

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