A Minute to Pray, a Second to Die

1968 "That's all McCord gives them!"
6.3| 1h58m| R| en
Details

A famous gunman decides to change his life around and turn himself in when amnesty is declared by the new governor of the New Mexico Territory, but a vindictive sheriff sets out to stop him from reaching the Territory.

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Reviews

Evengyny Thanks for the memories!
Raetsonwe Redundant and unnecessary.
VeteranLight I don't have all the words right now but this film is a work of art.
Geraldine The story, direction, characters, and writing/dialogue is akin to taking a tranquilizer shot to the neck, but everything else was so well done.
zardoz-13 "Sugar Colt" director Franco Giraldi's above-average Spaghetti western "A Minute to Pray, A Second to Die" is grim and cynical with a trio of Americans: Alex Cord, Arthur Kennedy, and Robert Ryan. Composer Carlo Rustichelli contributes an atmospheric score, and "Keoma" lenser Aiace Parolin makes everything look Euro-western cool. All the shots are perfectly composed with regard to the players on camera and the arena of action. Louis Garfinkle, who later provided the story for Oscar-winning Vietnam epic "The Deer Hunter," Ugo Liberatore of "The Tramplers," and Albert Band of "The Hellbenders" have written an exciting western about an outlaw, Clay McCord (Alex Cord), on the dodge. Bounty hunters flock after McCord and his partner Fred Duskin (Giampiero Albertini of "Commandos") and beat them at a mission. McCord knows Father Santana who runs the mission, and he is bringing him a bottle of whiskey. Two bounty hunters, Jesús María (Aldo Sambrell of "Navajo Joe") and Sein (Antonio Molino Rojo of "A Bullet for Sandoval"), kill the monk in cold blood. These bounty hunters are so bad that they remove the body from the head and stuff it into a bag rather than drag an entire corpse around with them. The bounty hunters try to ambush them. Sein masquerades as a priest, but Clay is too quick for them. He guns down Sein, and Fred takes care of Jesús. The fly in the ointment is that Clay suffers from tremors of the right arm, like the John Wayne character Cole Thornton did in Howard Hawks' "El Dorado." Clay takes refuge in the border town of Escondido. Incidentally, Escondido is run an imposed hombre named Krant (Mario Brega of "A Fistful of Dollars"), and he is no friend to McCord. The scene where Clay is walking with a bottle in his hand that casts the reflection of a desperado posed to shot him in the back with a rifle is neat. The story is peppered with flashbacks, and we learn how Clay turned into a swift-shooting, crack-shot of a gunslinger. Clay's poor ailing father is ridiculed and dragged unceremoniously through the streets while suffering a seizure. Clay snatches a six-gun and blasts away at the bastards.
lastliberal Why is it that Italian westerns get "R" ratings when they do the same thing that American westerns do? Does it really matter if you kill 10 or 12, or if you kill 50 or 60. Is it because the bad guy wins instead of John Wayne or Randolph Scott? Just wondering.The bad guy in this film, Alex Cord, did a lot more TV than movies, but he did a good job in this film as an outlaw who thought he had epilepsy. When ids the last time you heard that in a western? Another thing you probably won't hear in American westerns is references to the Catholic Church with words like excommunication and ordained.Yes, lot of people get killed, and the bad guy rides off into the sunset, but it was still worth the time.Also featured five-time Oscar nominee Authur Kennedy, Oscar nominee Robert Ryan, a hot Nicoletta Machiavelli, and lots of Italians.
MARIO GAUCI I found this to be an underrated, quietly compelling Spaghetti Western (also known as DEAD OR ALIVE). Despite modest credentials (apart from multi-purpose co-writer/producer Albert Band, the only notable crew member is composer Carlo Rustichelli), the film clearly benefits from the presence of its three American stars (newcomer Alex Cord is an ambiguous anti-hero, while veterans Arthur Kennedy and Robert Ryan lend a mythic quality to the proceedings) as well as the unusual plot (involving a crippled protagonist, an amnesty ruse covering a strategic clean-up of the town, and which has the law finally siding with the gunfighter against a horde of Mexican bandits).There are several tough action scenes on hand – the film is capped by a terrific climax in which the star trio is besieged inside a blazing cabin – plus a couple of outrageous moments which are something of a Spaghetti Western trademark: from the middle of the street, Cord sees a hidden gunman at a window reflected in a whiskey bottle; a man who helps Cord escape is repeatedly immersed in a pool of oil by the villains. Nicoletta Machiavelli also makes a nice impression as a village girl with whom Cord lodges; the supporting cast, then, is peppered with familiar (if largely anonymous) faces – all of them essentially genre fixtures.I wasn't aware of the fact that the English-dubbed version of the film on MGM/UA's R1 DVD was cut: I was fooled by the wrong running-time being listed on the back-cover; the film was only 99 minutes long and not 118 – apparently, Cord's character is killed in the longer Italian version!
tdk007 I saw this movie over 20 years ago and had rather fond memories of it. Catching again on Cinemax this month, I realized how little discernment I had about films back then. This is an utterly ordinary spaghetti western, with absolutely nothing noteworthy about it. Script, direction, acting, photography are all a big blah. Stick with the Sergio Leone westerns!