Old Shatterhand | |
Director: | Hugo Fregonese |
Cinematography: | Siegfried Hold |
Editing: | Alfred Srp |
Runtime: | 122 minutes |
Studio: | CCC Film |
Distributor: | Constantin Film |
Language: | German Italian Yugoslav |
Music: | Riz Ortolani |
Budget: | DM 5 million |
Gross: | 36.1 million tickets |
Old Shatterhand (known as Apaches' Last Battle in the UK) is a successful Eurowestern film based on the character Old Shatterhand, written by German novelist Karl May and part of the Winnetou series. It is a West German CCC Film production co-produced with French, Italian and Yugoslav companies, and filmed in 70 mm. Financed with roughly, the film was the most expensive Karl May western. Composer Riz Ortolani used a chorus for his film score.
It was shot at the Spandau Studios in Berlin and on location in Croatia, including at the Plitvice Lakes National Park. The film's sets were designed by the art director Otto Pischinger.
Killings of innocent ranchers indicate the Apaches have broken the peace treaty. Old Shatterhand, blood brother of the Apache chief Winnetou, finds out that ruthless land grabbers did the killings, hoping to start off a war between the Indians and the settlers, and follows the trail right back to the gates of the cavalry's fort.
After the success of director Harald Reinl's Treasure of Silver Lake (Der Schatz im Silbersee) in 1962 produced by Horst Wendlandt for Rialto Film, his rival Artur Brauner from CCC Film also wanted to have his share in this upcoming series. Since Wendlandt had acquired the rights for the original Karl May novels (although none of his films ever stuck to their respective plots), Brauner was only able to make a movie "inspired by" Karl May, using some of the already known characters portrayed by American Lex Barker as "Old Shatterhand" and Frenchman Pierre Brice as "Winnetou".
American Guy Madison, who had starred in the television series The Adventures of Wild Bill Hickok, played one of the bad guys and Israeli actress Daliah Lavi was one of the "damsels in distress" before turning to a singing career, as did American Bill Ramsey, the comic part in this movie, already known in Germany for his Schlager music and later jazz songs.
One mystery remained from the movie: today no one remembers who the original singer was of the song "Nothing To Say" (Die Stunde kam) by saloon singer Rosemarie, played by actress Kitty Mattern.
In West Germany, it was the second top-grossing film of 1964, selling tickets.[1] In France, it was the 52nd top-grossing film of 1965, selling 1,013,075 tickets.[2] In the Soviet Union, the film sold tickets.[3] This adds up to a total of tickets sold worldwide.