Gladiators 7

{{distinguish|Gladiators Seven}}

{{Infobox film

| name = Gladiators 7

| image =

| alt =

| caption =

| native_name =

| director = Pedro Lazaga

| screenplay = {{plainlist|*Sandro Continenza

| story = {{plainlist|*Alberto De Martino

| 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

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}}