In a small monastery somewhere in Northern Mexico, a stranger (Anthony Ghidra) arrives and is looked after by the brothers. He is awaiting the arrival of Morienda, but the man is mortally wounded and is only able to hand over a playing card - this card is one of three containing the location of a treasure hidden years before. The stranger is ambushed by four men sent by the self-proclaimed "General" Munguya but quickly dispatches them. Trying to find out more, he travels to meet Munguya and makes off the second playing card, but the General and his men persue him back to town where the holder of the third card has set up a plan to secure the treasure and kill off his rival...
Writer Adriano Bolzoni was certainly no stranger to the genre, working on the script for one of the earliest Spaghetti Westerns, Sergio Corbucci's Minnesota Clay (1964), however his storyline here is nothing particularly exciting. A rather typical and always quite predictable 'hidden treasure map split into pieces' plot is combined with the usual 'self-proclaimed Mexican bandit leader' villain and a Django-esque leading character in a lawless Mexican border region setting that could be lifted from any number of the lesser genre titles. Fortunately the film has enough ideas and storyline to keep moving throughout its running time, even if it is somewhat on the slow paced side.
Director Giuseppe Vari (credited as usual as Joseph Warren) had directed several Westerns, but like the storyline his work is nothing more than generic, giving the film a decent but uninspired feel. The low budget is evident in the very limited location shots, which seem to be largely shot in an Italian quarry rather than the Spanish deserts and never seem very authentic. Roberto Pregadio (L'ultimo killer (1967)) provides a decent but again largely forgettable soundtrack.
Jugoslavian actor Dragomir Bojanic (credited as Anthony Ghidra) had appeared in Vari's earlier L'ultimo killer as a jaded retiring gunfighter (Django in many prints) - here he gets the leading role as his younger self and gives a solid performance although the script never gives him too much chance to act. A decent supporting cast including Claudio Undari (Condenados a vivir (1972)) as "General" Munguya helps to keep the film moving.
With a cookie-cutter storyline, uninspired direction and scoring and an obviously limited budget, A Hole Between the Eyes is a part of that great mass of Westsploitation films that emerged to capitalise on the success of the Leone and Corbucci productions. With some good acting and a script that manages to keep the pace going, the film certainly does not rank among the genre's worst titles but is only really of interest to Spaghetti Western fans who have worked through the many much better titles available.
Anyone famous in it? |
No-one well known. |
Directed by anyone interesting? | Giuseppe Vari (credited as Joseph Warren) - an Italian director who worked on a variety of Spaghetti Westerns, including L'ultimo killer (1967) with George Eastman and Il 13º è sempre Giuda (1971) |
Any gore or violence ? | A little blood |
Any sex or nudity? | None |
Who is it for? | Just below mid-card ranking, this is one for genre fans only. |
Visuals | Original aspect ratio 2.35:1 anamorphic wide-screen. Colour. Picture quality is strong with good colours and very good detail. |
Audio | English mono - quite muffled in places and occasionally obscured by the music making some of the dialogue unclear. |
Subtitles | None |
Extras | This disc includes:
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Region | Region 0 (ALL) - NTSC |
Availability | Only available as a double-feature with Tequila Joe. |
Other regions? | Available from New Entertainment World Germany as 'Ein Loch in der Stirn' with a good looking anamorphic widescreen print - German audio only but English subtitles available. Extra features include the Italian Super-8 print and alternate opening and closing sequences. |
Cuts? | Believed to be fully uncut. The opening title is English although there are no opening credits at all (there is a long riding sequence at the start which would be place for these, suggesting that the print used for the DVD was a title-free print). |