Salt in the Wound (1969) Poster

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5/10
Watch it for Kinski
Leofwine_draca20 April 2015
WAR FEVER (aka SALT IN THE WOUND) isn't a bad Italian WW2 movie but I'm not sure it's the masterpiece that other reviewers are making out. Sure it has a handful of good scenes in it but then so do lots of other films in this particular sub-genre, and it seemed quite ordinary to me for the most part.

The storyline is the most intriguing thing about it: it sees American soldiers Klaus Kinski and Ray Saunders both sentenced to death by firing squad, only to have their execution thwarted by a German attack. They escape into the countryside with a rookie soldier (spaghetti western actor George Hilton) and soon proceed to take part in various enterprises. When they reach a town they're treated as liberators by the townsfolk, but an impending German attack will soon test their mettle.

Tonino Ricci is largely mocked for his work as director for the most part but I've always found him an underrated talent. Certainly WAR FEVER is a fine looking movie in which the landscape is as much a character as the people in it. The various action sequences are all handled adroitly and the inevitable highlight comes with one of those scenes where Kinski goes absolutely crazy; it's a shame Hilton and Saunders didn't have the energy or talent to match him. But a classic? For me, WAR FEVER is a typical and ordinary Italian WW2 outing.
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7/10
Moving and entertaining Spagheti War film with a good protagonist duo : George Hilton and Klaus Kinski
ma-cortes20 March 2017
¨Il Dito Nella Piaga¨ is a Pasta War movie about a reckless trio who when is attacked their regiment they unfortunately go behind enemy lines . An coward American lieutenant called Michael Sheppard (George Hilton) commands a group to carry out the death penalty , a firing squad , against two American prisoners : Cpl. Brian Haskins (Klaus Kinski) and Pvt. John Grayson (Ray Saunders) . When , suddenly , the Nazis appear , they defend strongly themselves and then run for their lives . Later on , the trio flees , being the only force standing between advancing German troops . They , then , arrive in a little Italian town and the trio becomes into ¨liberators¨ .

George Hilton as the inexperienced lieutenant Michael Sheppard assumes the character of commando leader in this ordinary wartime movie professionally directed by Tonino Ricci , dealing with a misfit bunch who accidentally become heroes when a little town was "freed" by the trio . This stirring film packs romantic scenes , frantic thrills , perilous adventures , relentless feats , and buck-loads of explosive action and violence . The noisy action is uniformly well-made , especially deserving of mention the rip-roaring final scenes in which the motley group is really besieged , attacked by the Nazi infantry along with the powerful Tiger tanks , including some spectacular shootouts and bombing . The first half of the film allows the colorful cast of character actors to have their fun as they get their tails whipped into shape and develop shaky relationship themselves , as well as the townsfolk , as Kinski falls for a beautiful young , Betsy Bell , while Ray Saunders befriends an orphan boy , Pagani . The final part is all action , as the brave trio wreak havoc and defend against a German heavily armored squadron . Apart from the values of team spirit , cudgeled by George Hilton into his misfit group , the film is full of feats , emotion , and thrills . Fainthearted but ingenious lieutenant Hilton is leader of the motley pack together thwart the German siege that surrounds the little town , an officer with only one thirst : to liberate the Italian town against the enemy Nazi . The Uruguay-born George Hilton was a Spaghetti first-star , such as ¨ Sartana no perdone¨ , ¨Go kill and come back¨ , ¨Kitosch¨ , ¨They call me Alleluja¨ , ¨Ruthless four¨ , ¨Alleluja for Django¨ , and also played successful Giallio as ¨The strange vice of Mrs Wardh¨ , ¨The scorpion's tale¨, ¨All colors of the dark¨ , ¨My deal Killer¨ . He teams up , as co-protagonist , with the great Klaus Kinski who dominates this adventure war with his hysterical performance as a merciless soldier , he gives an overacting and puts faces and grimaces , as usual . Enjoyable as well as functional musical score by Riz Ortalani , adding an attractive but repetitive leitmotif . Adequate cinematography in Eastmancolor filmed by Sandro Mancori , a perfect remastering is extremely necessary .

The motion picture was well directed by Tonino Ricci , at his best . The recently deceased Tonino was an uneven filmmaker who began his career as an Second Unit Director or Assistant Director and writer, being his first film this "The Liberators" , or ¨Dedo En La Llaga¨, or original title "Il Dito Nella Piaga" . Ricci was a craftsman who directed all kinds genres , as Terror : ¨Panic¨ ; Giallo : "Cross Current" ; Western : "The Great Treasure Hunt" ,"Robin Hood, Arrows, Beans and Karate" , "Bad Kids of the West" ; Adventures : ¨Buck¨,¨Buck and the magic bracelet¨ , "White Fang to the Rescue" , ¨Robin Hood¨ , ¨Thor Il Conquistatore¨, "Raiders of the Magic Ivory" , ¨Bermudas : The cave of sharks¨ ; Action : ¨Rage¨, ¨Rush¨ , ¨Day of the sharks¨ , "Days of Hell" ; Sci-Fi : "Encounters in the Deep" and Mafia film : "The Big Family"
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7/10
Weak script, strong casting.
Sorsimus8 August 2002
One of my hobbies is watching obscure titles on old VHS tapes usually bought from flea markets and car boot sales. Most of the films are genuinely appalling, but every once in a while a gem is found.

Salt in the wound is one of them. In fact, most Klaus Kinski films are better than your average American pap. Apart from Kinski's psychotic performance, Salt in the wound also excels in cinematography. Some scenes are rescued by imaginative use of light. Also the length of the film is less than 90 minutes, which helps in keeping the viewer focused throughout.

The worst part of the film is the script. Cliched and predictable, it goes to show, that imagination in the casting and directing goes a long way.

Recommended, if you can get a copy.
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Great cast and locations make for an enjoyable WWII film
simonize-18 November 2004
I was fortunate to find the Simitar VHS edition of THE LIBERATORS. While the box cover states a running time of 85 minutes, it is indeed 77 minutes, as other reviewers have noted.

I do not remember seeing any credits throughout other than THE END; in that sense IMDb proved helpful in supplying the basics.

GEORGE HILTON is a good deal more animated than he is in many of his other films (westerns and giallo are the genre I associate him with most). In uniform and clean shaven he very much looks the part of a recent West Point graduate given his first command during the Italian campaign.

A twist of fate leads him into being responsible for the execution of two fellow American GIs; their lives were thus be intertwined - the young lieutenant will come of age, and the two battle hardened veterans will achieve a state of grace through acts of sacrifice (culminating after the deaths of those who have grown close to them).

KLAUS KINSKI is eminently watchable, and thankfully the director saw fit not to rely on dialogue, but let the camera dwell on his ravaged features. His final scene is memorable, and alone worth the price of the video.

The third piece in the puzzle is a black American actor that I have never seen before; seeing as so many black jazz and blues musicians found Europe a haven it is understandable that black actors too might have chosen Europe as a new home. I found it interesting that the film is half over before he says anything.

The actress credited as BETSY DELL looked very familiar, and so I suspect this is actually a pseudonym. Can anyone tell me who she is?

The locations were such that I felt I was seeing a side of Italy that was totally unfamiliar to me.

A note on the music: it added a lot to the film.

The flavour of the film caught the anti-establishment movement of the times, and would be a nice contrast to John Wayne's THE GREEN BERETS, made about the same time if I remember correctly.

War truly is hell.
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2/10
melodramatic combat flick
DJJOEINC27 May 2007
Warning: Spoilers
The Liberators

I just saw The Liberators Starring Klau Kinski- according to the front cover a -Hard Hitting and Real,This Is An Incredibly Good Fast-Paced War Action Movie-- I disagree- the pan and scan left the actors either as cyclops or shoulders during part of the scenes- this was an over the top melodramatic action movie that raced towards it's climax illogically.Klaus plays a rapist who smokes and is a darned good solider- he is sentenced to die- he escapes the massacre of the firing squad with a black guy that was mute for the first 30 minutes of the movie and eloquent as soon he met a charming little boy in a village and the LT who was supposed to oversee his execution... nevermind- skip this movie... Klaus's death scene was funny... in another classic moment we see a guy running -in a split second we see a shell explode and no more guy- guess he was blown to bits- but probably just a continuity error
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7/10
If you know and love Kinski
RodrigAndrisan17 December 2017
First film as director of Tonino Ricci (1927-2014). And, it's not bad. The same year, 1969, Klaus Kinski performed in "Five for Hell" (1969)5 per l'inferno (original title). In both films, Kinski is a villain, SS Colonel Hans Mueller in "Five for Hell", and American Corporal Brian Haskins/Norman Carr in "War Fever", the difference being that in "War Fever" he's doing some good deeds, killing many Germans and dying as a hero, while in "Five for Hell" it's just the opposite, he's just a mean and perverse man, killing americans. In both, he is the same special, unique, enormously talented, crazy, Klaus Kinski. Unfortunately, Riz Ortolani's music, great in many other films, this time is not. The film is also known with the title "Salt in the Wound".
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2/10
A few notches below mediocre.
Lexerot13 June 2016
This is a below mediocre war film that doesn't have much to say. It was made by Cine Azimut, which isn't famous for other hits as "Cost of Dying", "Death Laid an Egg" (real title), this one, and two others. After seeing this film, I'm not surprised he's not more well known. There is occasionally some good action and a few tense moments, but it mostly just felt heavy-handed with the message. War movies fall into the trap of their message all the time. This was a "War is hell and people sometimes become the animals war requires them to be". I think that's what they were going for, anyway. The climax is so far over the top that it was completely unbelievable, but in an over-zealous, yet somewhat touching kind of way. The shining performance came from Klaus Kinski, but even then it was a larger than life performance in a wild and woolly kind of way. I did like the location filming. Most of it was filmed in Italy and Monte Carlo, so it's got that rustic, believable old-world WWII feel, a gold star for that. Ultimately, this is not a terrible film, far from it, but it's likely not one I'll be watching again or can recommend.
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7/10
The war is within
GianfrancoSpada16 November 2023
This is a war-themed film, or rather, purportedly anti-war, different from what we're used to. Here, the purely war-related aspects-combat techniques, weaponry, uniforms-are quite neglected. Clearly, they didn't have an expert in the field, and probably didn't bother allocating a sufficient budget for this. Furthermore, it's a movie centered on psychological investigation. The setting, namely the advances of the 5th American army moving north through the Italian peninsula during WWII, is merely secondary and contributes nothing to the intended psychological exploration the director aimed to bring to the big screen.

There are numerous poorly executed or neglected details that detract from any potential strengths the film might have. The makeup, costumes, hairstyles all carry a '70s vibe that hardly makes everything else believable. Once again, perhaps these weren't the director's main focus, as they almost exclusively aimed to capitalize on a storyline that has its interesting points, but sadly, they haven't been wisely emphasized.

The actors, especially Kinski, moderately fulfill their roles, although these performances get lost in a visually flawed narrative full of imperfections and stylistic choices the director fails to control.

Technically speaking, all things related to warfare are of a very low standard, with visual stereotypes reminiscent of Spaghetti Westerns, and excessively expedient and erroneous narrative shortcuts. Weapons with infinite ammunition, soldiers from both sides dropping like flies under the enemy's endless gunfire, and a myriad of inaccuracies that undoubtedly provoke total rejection from fans of the genre towards the entire movie.

However, setting aside all these aspects, fundamentally, I believe it's a modest film that deserves more than just a passing grade since making a war-themed film when the real intent is a psychological investigation of characters-soldiers who each, in their way, carry their social, human, or racial condition-is no easy feat.
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5/10
Kinski admirers beware ..........
merklekranz21 March 2021
For Klaus Kinski admirers "TheLiberators" is surely a film to avoid. It is perhaps the most unrealistic war movie ever. You will not believe what is appearing on the screen. Kinski and two other American Soldiers successfully defending a small Italian village from a German infantry and tank assault. In addition to the totally unbelievable script, the dubbing is appalling, especially for Kinski, who sounds more like John Wayne than himself. Throw in some kind of religious theme that appears out of nowhere, and a melodramatic middle of the film, where tears flow, and you pretty much have an idea that this is going to be a disaster of epic proportions. There is absolutely no reason to watch "The Liberators", other than Klaus Kinski, and his performance it totally ruined by the atrocious dubbing. Avoid. MERK
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6/10
Salty.
morrison-dylan-fan9 December 2019
Warning: Spoilers
With Christmas coming up,I started trying to think of a title that a friend would enjoy viewing over the holidays. During this,I began looking for a Italian movie to view for the night,and spotted a WWII flick I think he would enjoy,which led to me rubbing salt in the wound.

View on the film:

Going into battle on what is clearly not a huge budget, debut co-writer/(with Piero Regnoli) director Tonino Ricci & cinematographer Sandro Mancori make invented use of Riz Ortolani's tingling echo score in loading a immerse atmosphere, via tightly held corner shots next to bombed-out buildings,and tracking shots following the soldiers walking in the bushes attempting to not be seen. Sending a tank in on the spotted trio, Ricci gives the action scenes a crunch by keeping to restrained whip-pans creating a closeness in combat between the trio and German troops.

The lone figures fighting to keep a small town liberated against the Germans, the writers bring thrills to the front line from the war within the trio, as the completely disconnected from letting anything hit him Haskins falls in love,whilst Sheppard gains a drive to protect the town, and touchingly, after having suffered from horrific racism, Grayson finds a orphan who looks to him as a father figure.

Joined by Klaus Kinski pounding the hollowness within Haskins, Ray Saunders gives a stand out performance as Grayson, whose warmth for the orphan boy remains bright against the troops,and the racism which has been salt in the wound.
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1/10
Pile of Excrement
ETO_Buff31 May 2019
What a horrendous stinking pile of excrement this thing is! In the process of maintaining this list I've sat through dozens of really bad films. If this is not the very worst one, it is definitely in the top three, because there are two others that are possibly neck-in-neck with this one. For other bad films I have given specific examples of what makes them bad, but I'm not going to let this one take any additional time out of my life by doing that. It's that bad.
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10/10
Klaus Kinski Vs. The Tank!!
Steve_Nyland20 February 2006
Wow. I had to watch it again to be certain, and sure enough this is one of the finest movies about war I have ever seen. That it was made as part of the Italian Euro War phenomenon of 1967 - 1970 is even more remarkable & results in a rating score that is perhaps a bit inflated, but totally earned. Don't let the low budget deceive you: this movie is a masterpiece.

The highlight of the film for me is during the climactic battle scene where three Yanks (George Hilton, Ray Saunders, and the insane Klaus Kinski) hold off a battalion of Waffentroops in a display of scrotal fortitude that needs to be seen to be believed. At one point Klaus goes bonkers, single handedly charges into an approaching German Panzer column & takes no prisoners. The rage seething from Kinski's every pore is infectious, making viewers howl with glee as he metes out death and for about a minute Klaus becomes a physical embodiment of the Hell that is war. It is a frightening, hilarious and exhilarating moment that has no precedent and nothing since quite like it.

The version I located is the 93 minute English language print of SALT IN THE WOUND, which ends on a very poignant note with George Hilton saluting a nameless cross in a generic looking American WW2 cemetery in the Italian countryside. Europe is dotted with such places, which are a physical reminder of how the world faced down evil, with American blood watering the roots of freedom for people in other lands. Another great testament to Kinski's brilliance as an actor is how even with his voice dubbed by some guy that sounds like Bert from "Sesame Street" he *STILL* plays an American G.I. that comes across as more real than any American actor could have done. That his character is a seemingly worthless, unredeemable maggot on society makes the final show of bravado in the face of the enemy even more prescient. We are, after all, a nation of killers. Kinski & the director/writer are merely messengers reminding us of this.

Kinski and Ray Saunders play two American soldiers who have committed murders so heinous that they are condemned for execution before a firing squad. George Hilton portrays the green as grass West Point graduate student playing soldier, who takes custody of the pair and finds himself on a strange journey reminiscent of THE DEFIANT ONES after the execution party is ambushed by German troops. The trio learn to hate each other's guts with respect and take shelter in a fortress like city in Ye Olde Italy that has been waiting for liberation by allied forces, leading to an awkwardly appropriate scene where the three are welcomed as conquering heroes. Surprises await as German forces target the town for annihilation & the three find out that the townspeople's first impression of them as heroes was absolutely correct.

The majority of these Italian Euro War movies are Spaghetti Westerns with tanks instead of horses. This one is different. Sure, there is the sort of heavy handed larger than life characterization of the main players which the best of the Spaghetti's are all distinguished by. There is also an intoxicating artiness to certain shots: Misty battlefields, the ancient Italian village, bizarre footage of the Panzer tanks crashing down trees in a way that makes them seem to burst right out of the screen. The film has a cartoonish hyper reality to it that makes the authenticity of costuming or equipment secondary to the moments created -- another quality shared with a Western. But at the end there's a lump in your throat, and you actually do understand something about the nature of war & the men that fought it. It is unexpectedly moving and totally unique.

Most of the Euro War movies I have encountered have a sort of imposed emotional impact that never quite resonates, artificially added onto what are essentially popcorn crunchers. I'm actually working on a theory about why the genre seems to be so universally ridiculed, which is that the writers & directors sought to add weightiness to their B-grade genre thrillers by having them be about the weightiest subject of all, World War II. The annoyance comes in having the movies essentially result in an entertainment rather than a documentary about the horrors of combat with cleverly simulated battle scenes, like PLATOON or ALL QUIET ON THE WESTERN FRONT. The Italians seemed more interested in providing entertainments than lessons in history. And certainly could not have cared less about painting an accurate picture of how being caught up in such a situation would literally change a man, finding both the worst and best in their human character even without them realizing it was happening.

Well, here is one that does, and it deserves to be seen by modern day audiences restored to it's complete length (Calling Blue Underground??). People might actually be able to learn something from it, and reflect upon the price that must be paid to confront tyranny. SALT IN THE WOUND neither truly glorifies war nor does it completely condemn the practice, just examines how it profoundly shapes the men who fight it, and the change of pace will catch even the most jaded viewer off guard.

10/10
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A complete disaster of a movie...
julie keilty1 April 2002
If you ever want to check out a complete disaster of a movie, just for laughs, then this is the champion of all champions. What was an accomplished actor like Klaus Kinski thinking of, when he was offered this movie?

Personally speaking, the plot is not even worth discussing, that's if there is even a plot in the film. But two things are worth talking about. Firstly, it has the worst direction, that I have ever seen in a movie. And secondly, the cinematography in it is so bad, that it makes even The Blair Witch Project look fantastic. Summing this movie up is so simple. Badly acted, badly directed and badly photographed. Basically, a complete disaster

This is a film which is extremely hard to find on video. I would consider this to be one of the "holy grails". Perhaps the reason for this is because it's so bad. Rating:0/10.
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Great Little Italian War Flick
SgtSlaughter5 July 2003
Warning: Spoilers
A highly picked-on, but nearly perfect Italian WWII drama / action piece with a first-rate cast and some fantastic action footage. The film is so good, that it was basically re-made by Enzo Castellari years later as DEADLY MISSION.

During the waning days of World War II in Italy, an inexperienced American officer is assigned to supervise the execution of two military prisoners. Their truck is ambushed by the Germans, and only the officer and the prisoners escape. They accidentally "liberate" an Italian village.

Really, I went into THE LIBERATORS with very low expectations and was wholly impressed. The movie features a fine story, with unique subject matter. It was refreshing to see an Italian war film that did not focus on commandos on an "impossible" mission; here, the characters are, for the most part, just as dirty as the Germans, but we are allowed to see past their crimes. Kinski (CHURCHILL'S LEOPARDS) is basically an atheist who looks out for himself. He is completely anti-war, anti-killing, anti-God - because he was brought up badly and had to fend for himself for most of his childhood. He cares only to fend for himself and come away from every situation, no matter how bad, on the winning side. However, he finds himself sacrificing for a beautiful young Italian girl he falls in love with. Ray Saunders, on the other hand, is a victim of racial bigotry who finds acceptance from a young Italian orphan and learns that not all men are cruel bigots. Finally, Hilton (DESERT BATTLE) starts out as an ambitious, jump-to-attention officer who finally learns that a man's social status doesn't define who he is - it is his character. Kinski and Saunders turn out to be some of the finest men he ever knew, sacrificing their lives in a final battle.

All three characters have shed of religion, too; Saunders believes in God, and brings it up during his explanation of racial prejudice to the Italian orphan. Even Kinski (Yes, KINSKI!) goes from atheist to some form of belief (clutching a cross on his stolen dog tags, staring skyward, as if questioning God's existence) before he meets his fate. This is something you don't see often in modern cinema, and NEVER see mentioned in an Italian war movie. I thought it was pretty cool to see an Italian filmmaker - especially Ricci - throwing a religious sentiment into this film. It's not hammered into the viewer, just mentioned so subtly - and honestly - that you won't notice till after the moment has passed. But the way faith is presented will leave anyone thinking about what they've just seen or heard and questioning their own faith. Sorry to push this point so much, folks, but this is something REALLY unique in an Italian war movie and it blew me away more than the action, drama and technological side of the picture.

While, for the most part, THE LIBERATORS is an anti-war story, it's also got a fine action side. The final combat scene, set in the streets of an Italian village, is one of the best action pieces I've seen. Filled with explosions, loud gunfire (perfect Italian sound effects), dizzying photography, crashing music, a few tanks and dozens of dying German soldiers - it's a great, fabulously edited 10-minute piece. It's very predictable, but so well-filmed that you won't care at all. The earlier action scenes are just as good, but not quite as big or loud as this one.

The movie features some great Italian scenery, showing the countryside and village as good as it looked in the 1940s. The music score is above-average, and cinematography is first rate. One shot of Kinski's blood-smeared face plastered in front of a German tank is, easily, the most memorable face shot from any Eurowar film I've seen. The props are a little wrong (The American Tommy Guns look like toys); Germans drive in American tanks (as usual) and wear ill-fitting uniforms. These are just minor nitpicks which don't strike against the film too much.

I saw THE LIBERATORS on a copy of a NTSC home video from Simitar. It's a well pan-and-scanned copy, with somewhat faded colors, a rather soft image quality and some splices and lots of scratches throughout. It's a pretty average-quality video, at least for an Italian release, but the movie deserves better. The video ran a mere 77 minutes, so it's missing 15 minutes from the original print. Most cuts are supposedly of graphic violence, gore and nudity which were not allowed in US theaters in the late 1960s. As the film exists on video now, it makes perfect sense, but a restoration is in order (and, apparently, underway) and would smooth out some rough spots. The end, in particular, makes little sense. It is a badly edited mix of scenes of the Italians being liberated, cutting to landscape shots as a narrator reads from the Biblical book of Genesis. This makes absolutely no sense at all to me, as the music kept switching and the editing was rather sloppy. In fact, the narrator sounded a lot like John Huston (maybe), so perhaps Simitar randomly cut in scenes from Huston's epic THE BIBLE? I don't know, but it's awfully strange cutting.

THE LIBERATORS is a great anti-war / action flick (if there can be such a thing), with a fine lead cast, great performances all around, a fine script and story, fine action scenes and is just a pretty solid flick in all departments. Most critics criticize it without fail, and I don't understand why. It's easily becoming one of my favorite Italian war movies and I highly recommend it.

RATING: 9/10.
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