By Lee Pfeiffer
In the 1960s, Chuck Connors was a big star in his native America. After spending a few years in professional baseball, Connors entered the acting profession His husky build and good looks got him noticed and he began to land prominent supporting roles in a wide range of films. In the 1960s, he became one of the biggest American TV stars by playing the title role in the long-running classic Western TV series "The Rifleman". When that show finally left the air, Connors returned to feature films. Among them was a little-noticed European Western titled "Kill Them All and Come Back Alone", one of many such movies inspired by the success of Sergio Leone's "Dollars" trilogy. The film's release in the U.S. was rather haphazard and the primary distributor was a company named Fanfare Films. As evidenced by this marketing poster, the promotion for the movie was lackluster and botched. Connors was the above-the-title leading man, yet the company managed to spell his name wrong. So much for hiring Mr. Magoo as a proofreader!