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Knives of the Avenger

I coltelli del vendicatore

Italy

1966

85 Min
Color
2.35:1
Italian
  • Currently 2.8/5 Stars.
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DIR Mario Bava

SCR Mario Bava, Alberto Liberati, Giorgio Simonelli

DP Antonio Rinaldi, Mario Bava

CAST Cameron Mitchell, Fausto Tozzi, Giacomo Rossi-Stuart, Luciano Pollentin, Amedeo Trilli

ED Otello Colangeli

PROD DES Alberto Tavazzi

MUSIC Marcello Giombini

Synopsis

After the apparent death of her husband King Arald, a viking peasant woman, named Karin, takes her son Moki into hiding from Aghen, King Arald’s enemy. But a mysterous stranger, named Rurik, begins acting as Karin’s guardian, which evetually leads to a brutal showdown between Rurik and Aghen. —IMDb

Director

Original

Mario Bava

Mario Bava was born in Sanremo, Liguria, Italy. The son of Eugenio Bava, a sculptor who became a pioneer of special effects photography and subsequently one of the great cameramen of Italian silent pictures, Mario Bava’s first ambition was to become a painter. Unable to turn out paintings at a profitable rate, he went into his father’s business, working as an assistant to other Italian cinematographers like Massimo Terzano, while also offering assistance to his father who headed the special effects department at Benito Mussolini’s film factory, the Instituto LUCE.

Bava became a cinematographer in his own right in 1939, shooting two short films with Roberto Rossellini. He made his feature debut in the early 1940s. Bava’s camerawork was an instrumental factor in developing the screen personas of such stars of the period as Gina Lollobrigida, Steve Reeves and Aldo Fabrizi.

Bava co-directed his first genre film in 1958: Le morte viene dallo spazio (The Day the Sky Exploded… read more

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Christopher Smith

2Dec10

B-movie Viking adventure from director Mario Bava is not among his best, but is an entertaining action melodrama. It lacks the trademark visual flair of Bava's masterpieces, but it has a strong story (borrowed heavily from 'Shane' - in fact, it often feels more like a western than any kind of sword-and-sandal epic) and some rousing fight scenes. Good fun for fans of Italian exploitation.

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Knives of the Avenger

By Chuck Vollers on February 26, 2011

Bava’s second Viking epic. Actually it’s a bit too small scale to really be an epic but very worth watching regardless. Almost all of the film was written and shot in a mere six days, which is probably…  read review

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