

Day of Anger
Lee Van Cleef has been dirty, "ugly" and downright mean... now watch him get violent.
A scruffy garbage boy becomes the pupil of famed gunfighter Talby, and the stage for confrontation is set when the gunman overruns the boy's town through violence and corruption.
Runtime
1h 53m
Language
IT
Budget
Undisclosed
Revenue
Undisclosed
Cast
Faces behind the story

Giuliano Gemma
Scott Mary

Lee Van Cleef
Frank Talby

Walter Rilla
Murph Allan Short

Ennio Balbo
Turner, Banker

Lukas Ammann
Judge Cutcher

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Gallery
Frames that sell the world






Reviews
Audience signals
The main lesson of this film may be “Never mistreat the garbage man, you don’t know how skilled of a gunslinger he is”. Kidding aside, it’s actually a great film about a character’s journey, and features a well written development hardly seen in Spaghetti Westerns, and still manages to be very entertaining. The film tells the story of Scott (Giuliano Gemma), son of a prostitute and an unknown father, who is the garbage man in Clifton, and how he rises to a position of influence in the town, thanks to the help of Frank Talby (Lee Van Cleef)’s lessons. Scott has a phenomenal arc, as he stays in between his own goals and personality and Talby’s pulling of his strings, until the inevitable confrontation between the two. The final conflict has one of the best examples of foreshadowing and character growth in the Spaghetti subgenre. Lee Van Cleef gives a compelling, but “typecast” performance of the old gunfighter teaching important lessons to a young man. It was his third time landing a similar role, the first being in For a Few Dollars More, and the second being Death Rides a Horse. The difference being that in this movie, the “teacher” plays a villainous role, causing it to stand out. Giuliano Gemma gives the performance of a lifetime, getting deep into his character of Scott. He has some of the best delivered lines in Spaghetti Western history, especially after his lessons, when he obtains an important position in the town’s hierarchy. The visible changes in posture, talking and expression as his character progresses are very remarkable. The palette in this film, contrasting with many of its genre, is especially colorful, giving it a lively, almost cartoonish feeling. Examples of this are in the gambling house scenes, that are way more vividly colored than most westerns, not only at the time, but ever. That makes the whole experience of watching very enjoyable. In conclusion, Day of Anger is a hidden gem of the Spaghetti Western. Counting with one of the few well-established character developments in the genre, great performances by two known faces of the era, and a vivid palette, this film should be able to please most audiences.
Rather than just chuck their waste out of the window, the more demure residents of “Clifton” used the services of “Scott” (Giuliano Gemma) to collect their unmentionables in a bucket on a trailer, then take it out of town for a decent burial. He’s the son of a prostitute and would probably be treated appallingly by the townsfolk even if he didn’t smell like a sewer. Things change for the better a little, though, when wandering gunslinger “Talby” (Lee Van Cleef) hits town and takes a bit of a shine to this put-upon lad. Gradually, instead of him being picked upon he starts to be able to fend for himself. What brings “Talby” to this unremarkable town? Well we soon learn that he has something of a grudge to settle of his own, but where might that leave the newly empowered “Scott” - especially when his mentor begins to feel an hitherto unknown sensation of fear, and of his young protégé, too? Sure, there are shootouts a-plenty here but unlike in so many of this genre, there is a little of the more cerebral to both Gemma and LVC’s performances as their characters display brutishness, but with a certain degree of acceptability as we watch. Of course, absolute power and all that, so it is only a matter of time before the stags have to rut but along the way there is plenty of action, a fair amount of choreographed violence and some solid supporting efforts from the likes of José Calvo’s “Blind Bill” and from Yvonne Sanson’s brothel-keeping “Miss Skill”. It hits the ground running and if you like your revenge westerns with a few twists and turns, then you could do much worse than this.
Recommendations
Films that continue this mood and momentum.

If You Meet Sartana Pray for Your Death
1968 / Western

Sabata
1969 / Western

Face to Face
1967 / Western

Tepepa
1969 / Western

Four of the Apocalypse
1975 / Western

A Reason to Live, a Reason to Die
1972 / Western

Cemetery Without Crosses
1969 / Western

The Grand Duel
1972 / Western

Bandidos
1967 / Western

Jubal
1956 / Western, Drama

Django
1966 / Action, Western

Light the Fuse… Sartana Is Coming
1970 / Western

From Noon Till Three
1976 / Comedy, Western

Blazing Saddles
1974 / Western, Comedy

The Gunfighter
1950 / Western

Surrounded
2023 / Western, Action

Monte Walsh
1970 / Western

Today We Kill, Tomorrow We Die!
1968 / Western, Thriller

Broke
2025 / Western, Drama

For a Few Dollars More
1965 / Western
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Similar Movies
Adjacent stories from the same cinematic neighborhood.

Those Dirty Dogs!
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Adios, Hombre
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The Savage Guns
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The Beast
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Arizona Colt Returns
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A Train for Durango
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Cjamango
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Gunman Called Nebraska
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Up the MacGregors
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Tequila!
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A Few Dollars for Django
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Vengeance Is Mine
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Shango
1970 / Western, Action

Thompson 1880
1966 / Western

Seven Guns for the MacGregors
1966 / Western
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