Antonio Margheriti (1930–2002)
Author of The Wild Geese [1978 film]
About the Author
Image credit: spaghettiwestern.net
Works by Antonio Margheriti
The Sci-Fi Invasion! (Cosmos- War of the Planets, Assignment Outer Space, Voyage to the Prehistoric Planet, Warning From Space) (2006) — Director — 10 copies
Cannibal Apocalypse [1980 film] — Director — 8 copies
50 Movies: Suspense Classics — Director — 6 copies
Gladiators: Four Film Collection — Director — 4 copies
Death Rage [1976 film] 4 copies
Satan der Rache — Director — 2 copies
The Squeeze aka Diamond Thieves [1978 film] — Director — 2 copies
8 Westerns-I Will Fight No More Forever, Wild Women, Blood Money, Young Pioneers, Wanted, Sartana in the Valley of Death, The Daughters of Joshua Cabe, Buddy Goes West — Director — 1 copy
I Diavoli dallo Spazio 1 copy
Piranas asesinas 1 copy
Un Angelo Per Satana [DVD] 1 copy
Mister SuperInvisible [1970 film] — Director — 1 copy
The Last Blood [1983 film] — Director — 1 copy
The Ark Of The Sun God 1 copy
Lightning Bolt {movie} — Director — 1 copy
10 Movie Pack: Adventure — Director — 1 copy
La Freccia d'Oro 1 copy
War of the Planets 1 copy
Associated Works
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Canonical name
- Margheriti, Antonio
- Other names
- Dawson, Anthony M.
- Birthdate
- 1930-09-19
- Date of death
- 2002-11-04
- Gender
- male
- Occupations
- film director
- Nationality
- Italy
- Associated Place (for map)
- Italy
Members
Reviews
Antonio Margheriti, under his Anthony M. Dawson alias, delivers a fun Vietnam war epic that riffs on both Apocalypse Now and The Deer Hunter. The film sees the jaded Captain Morris (David Warbeck) going behind VC lines to destroy a transmitter that is broadcasting anti-American propaganda. He teams up with a small group of renegade soldiers, including Sergeant George Washington (Tony King) and Cuban Carlos (Bobby Rhodes), who lead him up river to the transmitter location. Also with the group show more is war correspondent Jane Foster (Tisa Farrow). The screenplay by Dardano Sacchetti unashamedly uses the structure of Apocalypse Now and many of its key scenes in slightly adapted and amended form. Sacchetti and Margheriti, however, add plenty of typically unique Italian touches so plenty of splattery gore effects, spectacular explosions and a final left-field twist involving Morris's old friend Carol (the great Margie Newton). The dialogue is bombastic, the situations slightly ridiculous and the approach to weapon-handling and firing approximating children playing at war. The performances are decent with Warbeck and Farrow solid and downbeat as the leads leaving it to Tony King to dominate proceeding as the ultra-macho and improbably named George Washington. Margheriti's approach appears focussed on creating a fun, adventure movie that avoids any anti-war messaging, but a theme around the futility of war can't help but seep through. Overall, however, "L'ultimo Cacciatore" (The Last Hunter) is a ridiculously silly, ridiculously over the top, but ridiculously fun slice of Vietnam lunacy. show less
“Nella Stretta Morsa del Ragno” is considered by many to be an inferior remake by director Antonio Margheriti of his previous Gothic masterpiece, “Danza Macabra" (Castle of Blood). That’s unfair as the latter film very much stands on its own feet as a slice of fantastically overblown Gothic romance. The story, by a combination of Giovanni Addessi, Bruno Corbucci and Giovanni Graimaldi, sees a debauched Edgar Allan Poe (Klaus Kinski) and journalist Alan Foster (Anthony Franciosa) show more making a bet with the sinister Lord Thomas Blackwood, that Foster cannot spend a night in Blackwood’s supposedly haunted castle. Foster accepts the bet and shortly after arriving at the castle encounters the beautiful Elisabeth (Michèle Mercier) and her buxom, raven-tressed friend, Julia (Karin Field). It isn’t long before Foster finds himself in the midst of a ghostly dance macabre.
Although the storyline has more than a passing resemblance to “Castle of Blood", it is Margheriti’s, beautiful and full-blooded amalgamation of Gothic staples that makes “Nella Stretta Morsa del Rango” a beautifully atmospheric film. His approach is terrifically arch with all the stylish Gothic staples in place from cobweb shrouded tombs, to billowing white curtains, flickering candelabra and a doomed romantic heroine in flowing gowns. The film has a highly stylised look thanks to the some superb widescreen photography which helps generate an appropriately ethereal and atmospheric mood. Thiat mood is further enhanced by an entrancingly odd, but fitting, score by Riz Ortolani. Both Michèle Mercier and Karin Field are great as the romantically inclined heroine and her knife-wielding nemesis. Anthony Franciosa makes for a reliable lead while Klaus Kinski delivers a wild and delirious cameo turn as a violent, whisky-sodden Edgar Allan Poe. Overall “Nella Stretta Morsa del Ragno” brings little originality to the Gothic horror romance and the story has a tendency towards slowness and repetition. What Antonio Margheriti does, however, is to hone the key Gothic tropes into their purest form, delivering a lavish, rich, beautiful and highly stylised film. show less
Although the storyline has more than a passing resemblance to “Castle of Blood", it is Margheriti’s, beautiful and full-blooded amalgamation of Gothic staples that makes “Nella Stretta Morsa del Rango” a beautifully atmospheric film. His approach is terrifically arch with all the stylish Gothic staples in place from cobweb shrouded tombs, to billowing white curtains, flickering candelabra and a doomed romantic heroine in flowing gowns. The film has a highly stylised look thanks to the some superb widescreen photography which helps generate an appropriately ethereal and atmospheric mood. Thiat mood is further enhanced by an entrancingly odd, but fitting, score by Riz Ortolani. Both Michèle Mercier and Karin Field are great as the romantically inclined heroine and her knife-wielding nemesis. Anthony Franciosa makes for a reliable lead while Klaus Kinski delivers a wild and delirious cameo turn as a violent, whisky-sodden Edgar Allan Poe. Overall “Nella Stretta Morsa del Ragno” brings little originality to the Gothic horror romance and the story has a tendency towards slowness and repetition. What Antonio Margheriti does, however, is to hone the key Gothic tropes into their purest form, delivering a lavish, rich, beautiful and highly stylised film. show less
2022 movie #118. 1967. Mad scientist shrinks people to doll size. Why? Who knows but he must be stopped. Besides what's mentioned on the poster this movie has bad acting, cheesy dialog, spaceships that look like toys, laser hand guns that shoot flames and wild hairdos.
Spies & war in South Africa. Slow-going. IMDB: "A British banker hires a group of British mercenaries to rescue a deposed African President from the hands of a corrupt African dictator."
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Associated Authors
Statistics
- Works
- 45
- Also by
- 1
- Members
- 214
- Popularity
- #104,032
- Rating
- 3.5
- Reviews
- 6
- ISBNs
- 7




