The Tall Women
Cast & Crew
Rudolf Zehetgruber
Anne Baxter
Maria Perschy
Gustavo Rojo
Rossella Como
Adriana Ambesi
Film Details
Technical Specs
Synopsis
A wagon train traveling in 1870 toward Fort Lafayette is attacked by Apaches led by the savage warrior Pope, and the seven survivors--all women--take refuge in a cave. Led by the courageous Mary Ann, the women set out across the Arizona desert without horses, food, or weapons. At the fort, when the wagon train fails to arrive, scout Gus McIntosh suggests that the Army send troopers disguised as hunters to rescue any possible survivors. By the time the patrol reaches the women, now six in number, they are in danger of being ambushed. McIntosh leads them to the safety of an Indian burial ground and then joins the patrol for the attack. Pope's warriors kill all the men except McIntosh, who, though wounded, makes his way back to the women's hiding place. As they start once more on their journey, Pope readies his braves for the final assault. But his chief, White Cloud, prevents the attack and grants the women and McIntosh an escort in recognition of their courage.
Director
Rudolf Zehetgruber
Cast
Anne Baxter
Maria Perschy
Gustavo Rojo
Rossella Como
Adriana Ambesi
Perla Cristal
María Mahor
Christa Linder
Luis Prendes
Mara Cruz
Fernando Hilbeck
Alejandra Nilo
John Clarke
Jorge Rigaud
Valentino Macchi
Crew
Luis Argüello
Mike Ashley
Gregorio García Segura
Marcello Gatti
Jim Henaghan
Zeliko Kunkera
Antonio López Moreno
Angel Monis
Sidney Pink
Sidney Pink
Antonio Ramírez
Mino Roli
Robert Russ
Carlo Savina
Film Details
Technical Specs
Articles
Sidney Pink (1916-2002)
Born in Pittsburgh in 1916, Pink graduated from the University of Pittsburgh with a bachelor's degree in business administration. He began his film career as a projectionist in a theater owned by his wife's family. Moving to Hollywood in 1937, Pink was hired as production budget manager for Grand National Pictures, where he worked on the Tex Ritter musical western series. He later moved to Columbia and worked as a budget manager on Lost Horizon (1937) and many small scale westerns. After a disagreement with Columbia studio mogul Harry Cohn, Pink returned to the theater side of the business as the owner of a circuit of theaters in Los Angeles where he imported foreign films.
He soon hooked up with Arch Oboler for the production of two films, Five (1951), an offbeat feature about five survivors of a nuclear war and the irredeemably strange The Twonky (1953) about a professor (Hans Conreid) whose TV set becomes possessed by a spirit of the future and takes over his household.
Pink and Oboler would strike gold with their third film, the first full-length 3-D picture, Bwana Devil (1953). With television' popularity on the rise, a movie gimmick that advertised "A lion in your lap" or "A lover in your arms!" were promotional tag lines that came on like a carnival barker in a sideshow. The story about British railway workers in Kenya falling prey to two man-eating lions, and a head engineer (Robert Stack) bent on killing the lions before they feast on his entire crew might have been routine; but the movie, which required audience members to wear cardboard 3-D glasses as lions were jumping into your laps, spears were flying and people were coming toward you in hordes was a real hot ticket. The process, which was shot in Hollywood with two enormous cameras with polarized lenses, one for the left eye and one for the right, proved to be a surprising hit; enough so that Jack Warner came out with his own 3-D production at Warner Bros. with House of Wax (1953) starring Vincent Price and dozens of 3-D films followed in the ensuing decades.
After the success of his sci-fi cult hit The Angry Red Planet (1959), Pink found himself in a quandary. By the 1960s, Hollywood was having union problems, making it difficult for an independent producer like Sid Pink to be hired by the studios. Ever resourceful, he relocated to Denmark to produce and direct Reptilicus (1962 about a pre-historic monster that comes back to life and terrorizes Copenhagen! It may have not been high art, but it proved to be popular fare at drive-ins and its success allowed Pink to pursue film production in Europe throughout the remainder of the 1960s, including one of the earliest spaghetti westerns, Finger on the Trigger (1965) starring Rory Calhoun. Pink had one more fascinating footnote to fame when he discovered Dustin Hoffman in an off-Broadway production and cast him in Madigan's Millions (1967) as a U.S. Treasury agent sent to Italy to recover money that had been stolen by a murdered gangster (Cesar Romero). Pink soon retired from the film industry and eventually returned to the United States in the mid-1970s where he settled in Florida. He is survived by his wife, Marion, his son, Philip, a daughter, Helene Desloge and four grandchildren.
by Michael T. Toole
Sidney Pink (1916-2002)
Quotes
Trivia
Notes
Location scenes filmed in Spain and Rome. Opened in Madrid in September 1966 as Las siete magnificas. Released in Italy in 1966 as Donne alla frontiera; in Austria in 1967 as Frauen, die durch die Hölle gehen.
Miscellaneous Notes
Released in United States 1966
dubbed
Released in United States 1966