Day of the Assassin

Summary

Day of the Assassin (Spanish: El día de los asesinos) is a 1979 American-Spanish-Mexican action film directed by Brian Trenchard-Smith, who called it "a trainwreck of a movie."[1]

Day of the Assassin
Directed byBrian Trenchard-Smith
Carlos Vasallo
Screenplay byRobert Avard Miller
Based onTraitors in the Lake
by Robin Estridge
Produced byCarlos Vasallo
Robin Lubin
Ika Panajotovic
StarringChuck Connors
Glenn Ford
Richard Roundtree
Jorge Rivero
Susana Dosamantes
Henry Silva
Andrés García
CinematographyLeopoldo Villaseñor
Edited byKeith Stafford
Music byBebu Silvetti
Production
companies
Noble Production Inc.
Plata Films
Producciones Esme
Distributed byAmerican National Enterprise (US)
Líder Films (Spain)
Release date
1979
Running time
94 minutes
CountriesUnited States
Spain
Mexico
LanguageEnglish

Premise edit

Various treasure hunters journey to Mexico to find a fortune at the bottom of the ocean.

Cast edit

Production edit

Day of the Assassin was shot in Mexico and was an international co-production between Mexico, Spain and the United States. According to Trenchard-Smith, the original director was to be Leslie Martinson, who had just made Missile X – Geheimauftrag Neutronenbombe for producer Ika Panajotovic. However, Martinson left the project when his deposit did not arrive. Martinson and Trenchard-Smith shared the same agent; he persuaded the producers to hire Trenchard-Smith on the basis he had made "a Bruce Lee film" (in actuality a documentary about Lee produced in the wake of his death, The World of Kung Fu); the producers thought they were getting Enter the Dragon director Robert Clouse and were disappointed to discover it was Trenchard-Smith.[1][2]

The female lead was meant to be Jill St. John, but she left the project when her deposit did not arrive. She was replaced by Susana Dosamantes, who was dating Carlos Vasallo, the film's Spanish producer.[1]

Trenchard-Smith says Glenn Ford was to be paid $100,000 for two days' work and that his friend, Taylor Lacher, would be given a role. This part had been promised to the writer, Robert Avard Miller, who was subsequently given a smaller part.[1]

Trenchard-Smith was fired during the sixth and last week of filming after refusing to shoot a sequence in which Chuck Connors' character shoots and kills several guards while committing a robbery, as he was concerned that such a scene would prevent audiences from rooting for his character. Vasallo took over for the final few days, and is credited as co-director on some prints of the film.[1][2]

Reception edit

In his review of the film "Vern" said "The story is all made up of things you’ve seen a million times before, but I like these kind of things... it’s a pretty crappy movie and didn’t really keep my interest the whole time, but there’s something about it. I like those types of competing experts movies, it’s a good slumming cast and there’s just kind of a cool vibe to it."[3]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e Trenchard-Smith, Brian (20 December 2014). "Brian Trenchard-Smith (Drive Hard) Talks the Dark Side of Co-Production – and the Time Glenn Ford Squeezed His Balls". Talkhouse.
  2. ^ a b Trenchard-Smith, Brian (2022). "Chapter 27 - Dia de los Assassinos". Adventures in the B Movie Trade. Trenchard Publishing.
  3. ^ Vern (2 May 2009). "Day of the Assassin". Vern's Reviews on the Films of the Cinema.

External links edit

  • Day of the Assassin at IMDB
  • Day of the Assassin at Letterbox DVD
  • Trailer of film at You Tube