1. Spaghetti Western Series: Sabata (1969) - The Rosendale Theatre
Set in the Old West, the story revolves around Sabata, a sharpshooter and gambler who is hired by a group of townspeople to protect their bank from a ruthless ...
2. Sabata (Gianfranco Parolini, 1969): The Best of the Bad
Jun 27, 2018 · By the time Parolini's film (the first in an eventual Sabata trilogy) arrived in 1969, the spaghetti western was an established commercial ...
3. Sabata (1969) directed by Gianfranco Parolini • Reviews, film + cast
Sabata is one of the most enticing films of the genre, and one that gave birth to a much loved and reoccurring icon of the Spaghetti Western. It sees Parolini ...
Several pillars of society have robbed an Army safe containing $100,000 so they can buy the land upon which the coming railroad will be built. But they haven't reckoned on the presence of the master gunslinger, Sabata.
4. Sabata - Kino Lorber Theatrical
Filmed in Spain and Italy, Sabata is another of producer Alberto Grimaldi's (The Good, the Bad and the Ugly) hard-hitting western, a series that began as an imi ...
The stylish and action-packed spaghetti Western classic SABATA (1969) stars Lee Van Cleef (For a Few Dollars More, The Good, The Bad, and the Ugly) as a mysterious, steely-eyed gunslinger who recruits a traveling musician with a rifle-rigged banjo and a drunken knife thrower to help retrieve a stash of U.S. Army gold. Filmed in Spain and Italy, SABATA is a hard hitting western, a series that began as an imitation of the Hollywood genre, but along with Leone's westerns, established a new screen star the Western "anti-hero."
5. Ehi amico... c'è Sabata, hai chiuso! - The Spaghetti Western Database
Filming locations · Stengel's House · Sabata approaching · Sabata above the Rambla · Banjo tries to escape ...
From The Spaghetti Western Database
6. Sabata | Rotten Tomatoes
A group of thieves rob a safe of $100,000 and plan to use the money to purchase some land near a proposed railway line. The crooks think they've gotten away ...
A group of thieves rob a safe of $100,000 and plan to use the money to purchase some land near a proposed railway line. The crooks think they've gotten away with their crime, but they haven't figured on Sabata (Lee Van Cleef), a violent bounty hunter with no scruples and a strong desire for cash. He teams up with both his partner, Banjo (William Berger), and a local bandit named Carrincha (Pedro Sanchez). Sabata's fast draw and quick wits make life hell for the thieves.
7. Sabata (1969) - Cast & Crew — The Movie Database (TMDB)
Sabata (1969) · ← Back to main · Cast 11 · Crew 25 · The Basics · Get Involved · Community · Legal · Global.
Several pillars of society have robbed an Army safe containing $100,000 so they can buy the land upon which the coming railroad will be built. But they haven't reckoned on the presence of the master gunslinger, Sabata.
8. Sabata (1969) - Mike's Take On the Movies
Jul 15, 2019 · Sabata (1969) · Van Cleef's title character Sabata comes across as a sharp shooting opposite of Eastwood's Man With No Name. · A reward of $5000 ...
With the arrival of Leone’s A Fistful of Dollars, the so called spaghetti western genre was born and would continue to evolve and bend the accepted way westerns were filmed, written, acted an…
9. A Western Movie Review by Jonathan Lewis: SABATA (1969). - Mystery*File
Aug 18, 2016 · Who is Sabata? He’s first and foremost a character portrayed by Lee Van Cleef. He’s also a drifter, gunfighter, friend, schemer, and ...
Reviewed by JONATHAN LEWIS:
10. Lee Van Cleef in "Sabata" (1969) at The Rosendale Theatre!
When: Fri., Sept. 20, 7-8:30 p.m. ... Lee Van Cleef is back! Lee Van Cleef stars as a mysterious gunslinger in one of the greatest Spaghetti Westerns of all time- ...
Lee Van Cleef in "Sabata" (1969) at The Rosendale Theatre! Lee Van Cleef is back!
11. The Sabata Chronicles - The Spaghetti Western Database
Feb 24, 2016 · The First Movie: Sabata (1969). Sabata accidentally witnesses a bank ... The second Sabata movie, Adios Sabata, is set in Mexico and, as ...
The character of Sabata was created for the movie Ehi amico... c'è Sabata, hai chiuso! (in English simply called Sabata). It was producer Alberto Grimaldi who came up with the idea for the movie. In 1969 the production of spaghetti westerns was plummeting, but the first Sartana movie, If you meet Sartana, pray for your death had done remarkably well. The first Sartana was a tongue-in-cheek affair, violent but playfull, a sort of 007 goes spaghetti. The hero was depicted as a man with almost supernatural shooting abilities and weaponry closer to a Bond movie than a spaghetti western. Gianfranco Parolini, the director of the first Sartana movie, was at odds with his producers and therefore gladly accepted Grimaldi's offer to direct an alternative Sartana movie.