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Black Eagle of Santa Fe

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Die Schwarzen Adler von Santa Fe
Directed byAlberto Cardone (as Albert Cardkiff) and Ernst Hofbauer (as Ernest Goodman)
Written byValeria Bonamano, Jack Lewis
Produced byMario Siciliano, Gunther Raguse, Wolf C. Hartwig
Starring
CinematographyHans Jura Eastmancolor, Ultrascope
Edited byHerbert Taschner
Music byGert Wilden
Distributed byConstantin Film
Release date
1965
Running time
95 minutes
CountriesWest Germany, Italy
SpracheGerman

The Black Eagle of Santa Fe (German: Die Schwarzen Adler von Santa Fe) is a 1965 West German and Italian international co-production western film directed by Alberto Cardone and Ernst Hofbauer.

Story

Ranch workers disguised as soldiers murder Indians in order to stir up trouble with the whites so the rancher can claim their land.

Production

Jack Lewis recalled that Ron Ormond asked him to write a draft of a script based on a magazine story called Fort Disaster adding Indians, cavalry and Frank and Jesse James. When Ormond passed on the screenplay, Lewis retitled his screenplay Massacre Mountain and gave it to his agent Ilse Lahn Waitzerkorn[1] who several years later leased his script to Constantin Film.[2] The Germans used the screenplay to bring back Tony Kendall as Black Eagle from The Pirates of the Mississippi with his frequent film partner Brad Harris. Joining Harris was his future wife Olga Schoberová who appeared with Harris in Massacre at Marble City.

Cast

Reception

Black Eagle of Santa Fe is considered a contemporary homage to the Karl May film adaptations.[3]

References

  1. ^ https://variety.com/1992/scene/people-news/ilse-lahn-waitzenkorn-101565/
  2. ^ pp. 108–109 Lewis, C. Jack White Horse, Black Hat: A Quarter Century on Hollywood's Poverty Row Rowman & Littlefield, 1 Jan 2002
  3. ^ "The Black Eagle of Santa Fe (Die Schwarzen Adler von Santa Fe)". spaghetti-western.net. Retrieved 2014-04-19. the film clearly follows the model of the Winnetou series