Django Kill (Italian: Se sei vivo spara also known as Django Kill!... If You Live, Shoot! and Oro Hondo) is a 1967 Italian spaghetti western. Despite the fact that it has "Django" in its title (outside of Italy), the movie has nothing to do with the Django movies. It is well known for the surrealistic violence and for the psychedelic editing of Franco "Kim" Arcalli. Phil Hardy defines it as "the most brutally violent spaghetti western ever made". Describing the film, Christopher Frayling says that "the violence was of an extraordinarily savage kind". Antonio Bruschini writes that "this film is the first western to offer a sample of truly horrendous scenes". Marco Giusti defines the film as the most violent, bizarre and "pop" ever filmed in Italy.
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