The story kicks off with a haunting visual: a train rolls into a station, but no one gets off. Every passenger has been massacred. The man behind the bloodbath is the psychotic bandit (played with menacing glee by Frank Wolff), who was supposedly killed a year earlier in a duel with the sharp-shooting Cat Stevens (Hill).
: Hill plays Cat as a cool, Clint Eastwood-esque anti-hero rather than the playful trickster he’d become later. Spencer’s Hutch is more of a stoic brute-force investigator than a grumpy-but-lovable giant. God Forgives... I Don't!(1967)
The history of this film is famously shaped by a stroke of luck—or bad luck, depending on who you ask. Originally, the lead role of Cat Stevens was cast with Peter Martell. However, Martell broke his foot at the start of production. Desperate for a replacement, Colizzi hired Terence Hill , marking the very first time Hill and Spencer would appear as a lead duo. The story kicks off with a haunting visual:
: Instead of comedic fistfights, we get tense poker games and lethal quick-draw duels. Why It Still Matters : Hill plays Cat as a cool, Clint
If you mention the names and Bud Spencer , most fans immediately think of slapstick brawls, bean-eating contests, and the lighthearted charm of the Trinity films. But before the comedy became their trademark, they shared a much darker, grittier screen debut in the 1967 Spaghetti Western classic, " God Forgives... I Don’t! " ( Dio perdona... io no! ).
The Brutal Birth of a Legend: Revisiting "God Forgives... I Don’t!" (1967)
: It features torture, ruthless double-crosses, and a bleak atmosphere heavily influenced by the works of Sergio Leone.