Gladiators 7
{{distinguish|Gladiators Seven}}
{{Infobox film
| name = Gladiators 7
| image =
| alt =
| caption =
| native_name =
| director = Pedro Lazaga
| screenplay = {{plainlist|*Sandro Continenza
- Bruno Corbucci
- Alberto De Martino
- Giovanni Grimaldi{{sfn|Kinnard|Crnkovich|2017|p=65}}}}
| story = {{plainlist|*Alberto De Martino
- Italo Zingarelli{{sfn|Kinnard|Crnkovich|2017|p=65}}}}
| based_on =
| producer = {{plainlist|*Anacleto Fontini
- Italo Zingarelli{{sfn|Kinnard|Crnkovich|2017|p=65}}}}
| starring = {{plainlist|*Richard Harrison
| narrator =
| cinematography = {{plainlist|*Bitto Albertini
- Eloy Mella{{sfn|Kinnard|Crnkovich|2017|p=65}}}}
| editing = Otello Colangeli{{sfn|Kinnard|Crnkovich|2017|p=65}}
| music =
| studio =
| distributor = Metro Goldwyn Mayer
| released = {{Film date|df=yes|1962|10|11|Italy|1964|5|7|United States}}
| runtime = 105 minutes
| country = {{plainlist|*Spain
- Italy{{sfn|Bowker|1983}}}}
| language =
| budget =
| gross =
}}
Gladiators 7 is a 1962 film directed by Pedro Lazaga. The film has several elements from Akira Kurosawa's film The Seven Samurai.
Plot
A Greek gladiator seeks revenge for the murder of his father and finds his lover captured by an evil tyrant.
Cast
- Richard Harrison as Darius
- Loredana Nusciak as Aglaia
- Livio Lorenzon as Panurgus
- Gérard Tichy as Hiarba
- Edoardo Toniolo as Milon
- José Marco as Xeno
- Barta Barri as Flaccus
- Nazzareno Zamperla as Vargas (credited as Tony Zamperla)
- Franca Badeschi as Licia
- Enrique Ávila as Livius
- Antonio Molino Rojo as Macrobius
- Antonio Rubio as Mados
- Emilia Wolkowicz as Ismere
Production
The film was partially shot on some of the locations where El Cid was filmed.{{sfn|Kinnard|Crnkovich|2017|p=67}} Parts of the film were shot in Spain.{{sfn|Labanyi|Pavlović|2015|p=249}}
Release
Gladiators 7 was released theatrically in Italy on 11 October 1962 with a 105 minute running time and in the United States on 6 May 1964 with a 92 minute running time.{{sfn|Kinnard|Crnkovich|2017|p=67}}
Reception
In contemporary reviews, "Tube." of Variety found the film to have a cliche screenplay with "stiff acting" and "mechanical dubbing".{{cite book|title=Variety's Film Reviews 1964-1967|volume=11|publisher=R. R. Bowker|isbn=0-8352-2790-1|year=1983|at=There are no page numbers in this book. This entry is found under the header "April 29, 1964"}} "Tube." noted that among the action sequences, the best involved a bout between a bull and a bare-handed gladiator but that the film was "erratic in tempo and dramatically heavyhanded{{sic}}." A review in the Monthly Film Bulletin stated that "the customary ingredients of colour, passion, and swordplay, here lavishly applied, add up to a lighthearted and lusty swashbuckling film."{{cite magazine|magazine=Monthly Film Bulletin|title=Sette Gladiatori, I (Gladiators 7), Italy/Spain, 1962|publisher=British Film Institute|volume=31|issue=364|date=May 1964|pages=77–78}}
References
=Footnotes=
{{reflist}}
=Sources=
{{Refbegin}}
- {{cite book |ref={{harvid|Bowker|1983}}
|title=Variety's Film Reviews: 1964-1967
|publisher=Rr Bowker Llc
|isbn=0835227901
|year=1983
}}
- {{cite book
|last1=Kinnard
|first1=Roy
|last2=Crnkovich
|first2=Tony
|title=Italian Sword and Sandal Films, 1908-1990
|publisher=McFarland
|isbn=978-1476662916
|year=2017
}}
- {{cite book
|last1=Labanyi
|first1=Jo
|first2=Tatjana
|last2=Pavlović
|title=A Companion to Spanish Cinema
|publisher=John Wiley & Sons
|isbn=978-0835227902
|year=2015
}}
{{Refend}}