£14.67
Only 2 left in stock.
Dispatched from and sold by RAREWAVES USA.
Quantity:1
£14.67 + £1.26 UK delivery

Other Sellers on Amazon
Add to Basket
£17.88
+ Â£1.26 UK delivery
Sold by: Newtownvideo_EU
Add to Basket
£23.81
+ Â£1.26 UK delivery
Sold by: M & L UK
Add to Basket
£27.24
+ Â£1.26 UK delivery
Sold by: DVD STORE SPAIN
11 new from Â£11.93
Have one to sell? Sell on Amazon

More Dead Than Alive [Blu-ray] [1969] [US Import]


Estimated delivery 23 Apr. - 4 May to Germany - Mainland when you choose Standard Delivery at checkout. Details
Dispatched from and sold by RAREWAVES USA.
11 new from Â£11.93

Amazon Instant Video

Watch More Dead Than Alive instantly from £2.49 with Amazon Instant Video
£14.67 Only 2 left in stock. Dispatched from and sold by RAREWAVES USA.

Special Offers and Product Promotions

  • Check out big titles at small prices with our Chart Offers in DVD & Blu-ray. Find more great prices in our Top Offers Store.
  • Note: Blu-ray discs are in a high definition format and need to be played on a Blu-ray player.

  • Important Information on Firmware Updates: Having trouble with your Blu-ray disc player? Will certain discs just not play? You may need to update the firmware inside your player. Click here to learn more.


Customers Also Watched on Amazon Video


Product details

Customer Reviews

There are no customer reviews yet on Amazon.co.uk.
5 star
4 star
3 star
2 star
1 star

Most Helpful Customer Reviews on Amazon.com (beta)

Amazon.com: HASH(0x7e244ef4) out of 5 stars 51 reviews
18 of 20 people found the following review helpful
HASH(0x7e34caf8) out of 5 stars Basic but enjoyable 13 Jun. 2005
By Gary Cross - Published on Amazon.com
Format: DVD Verified Purchase
If you're prepared to forget one of the worst music scores in movie history and the fact that this looks and plays like a TV episode, then you're in for a reasonably enjoyable time. In fact, because it plays like a tv episode, it moves along at a fair old clip. The story is a cliche - gunfighter is released from prison but can't escape his murderous past. He joins a travelling Wild West Show (owned by a wonderfully hammy Vincent Price) as a sharp-shooter, much to the ire of the current gun-sharp (who's even hammier than Price). There's a lot of talk, and the big action sequence comes at the beginning of the film which tends to throw everything out of kilter. The other factor working against this is a lack of strong villains. The jealous gun-sharp is quickly established as a cowardly blow-hard, and the only other villain of note (played by ex-grid-iron star Mike Henry) disappears after twenty minutes and stays out of the action until right at the end. Even with all this working against it, More Dead Than Alive is an enjoyable, undemanding romp. Vincent Price bites the dust in what is possibly his bloodiest on-screen death (with maybe the exception of Witchfinder General) and there's a down and dirty fight between Walker and Henry at the end (even if they do tend to throw too many things at each other). I took the risk in buying this dvd and was pleasantly surprised.
17 of 20 people found the following review helpful
HASH(0x7f563798) out of 5 stars Strange But Typical Late Sixties Western 28 Jun. 2005
By Terence Allen - Published on Amazon.com
Format: DVD
As the country changed, so does popular culture. And the Western genre, which had been a movie mainstay for thirty years at this point, began to change. The Western was traditionally one of the most stable and dependable genres. The good guys were good, the bad guys were bad, and happy endings were always in store.

More Dead Than Alive is very typical of the Westerns that took over the genre in the late Sixties and early Seventies. The good guys were not always so good, the bad guys were either not so bad, or even worse than the typical bad guy, and the ending was never a happy one.

To be really subversive, More Dead Than Alive starred a Western stalwart, Clint Walker, who came to fame as Cheyenne Bodie in the long running TV western Cheyenne. Walker plays "Killer Kane", a notorious gunfighter who is freed from prison after 18 years. Kane is determined to live a respectable, law abiding life, but can't catch a break. He can't find a job except as a sharpshooter trading off of his reputation in a Wild West travelling show owned by Vincent Price. Price already has in his employ a young sharpshooter who becomes jealous of all of the attention that Kane is getting. Kane is also being pursued by a gang of outlaws seeking revenge.

The film seems slow at times, and features a conclusion that is sure to upset traditional Western fans. Everyone does their best, but the film seems too smart for it's own good. Actors walk directly into the camera, there's a touch of spaghetti western in the dialogue and direction, which really doesn't go with the nature of the film, and the film seems to really be a subversive parody masquerading as a serious Western. More Dead Than Alive is not the worst Western, but many will find it to be slightly below average.
8 of 9 people found the following review helpful
HASH(0x7f315768) out of 5 stars "never holster an empty gun" 3 Dec. 2008
By Seahorse - Published on Amazon.com
Format: DVD
Made just before the "wild bunch" this features several bloody shoot-outs with Vincent Price getting a gun (in slow-mo) emptied into him. Much of the movie has Walker unsuccessfully re-starting his life after leaving prison. His past as gunfighter keeps him from getting hired anyplace where he is known. His limited work is ruined by old enemies and some new ones, it is hard to keep track of how many people want him dead. A friendly carnival owner (price) is only out to exploit him while his other young sharpshooter tests Kane's skills and patience. Painfully, he meets a good, loving woman, that he knows he can't have around when his past frequently catches up to him. The beginning hanging/prison break scene gets the movie off to a good start. My favorite scenes are when "killer kane" teaches the young cocky fast-gun lessons that are soon to be tested for real, and kane's ending fight with former "tarzan" Mike Henry. Clint Walker is his usual cool self with Vincent Price good in a totally different role. 16x9 dvd video is a little dark, but good audio.
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful
HASH(0x7e34cf30) out of 5 stars "Never holster an empty gun" 29 Jun. 2015
By Seahorse - Published on Amazon.com
Format: Blu-ray
Made just before the "wild bunch" this features several bloody shoot-outs with Vincent Price getting a gun (in slow-mo) emptied into him. Much of the movie has Walker unsuccessfully re-starting his life after leaving prison. His past as gunfighter keeps him from getting hired anyplace where he is known. His limited work is ruined by old enemies and some new ones, it is hard to keep track of how many people want him dead. A friendly carnival owner (Price) is only out to exploit him while his other young sharpshooter tests Kane's skills and patience. Painfully, he meets a good, loving woman, that he knows he can't have around when his past frequently catches up to him. The beginning hanging/prison break scene gets the movie off to a good start. My favorite scenes are when "killer Kane" teaches the young cocky fast-gun lessons that are soon to be tested for real, and Kane's ending fight with former "Tarzan" Mike Henry. Clint Walker is his usual cool self with Vincent Price good in a totally different role. 16x9 dvd video is a little dark, but good audio. Update! The Bluray picture blows away the dvd and not just clarity, but now is not so dark and murky as before. Extras feature a short but decent interview revealing that he was supposed to play Forrest Tucker's role in "Barquero" but backed out because of the Van Cleef character's un-heroic deeds. We almost got to see Warren Oats, Lee Van Cleef, and Clint Walker in the same movie! Theatrical trailer promotes the film well.
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful
HASH(0x7e34f0fc) out of 5 stars About the Rating? 15 July 2009
By D. Nuce - Published on Amazon.com
Format: DVD
Why is this film rated R? That is the biggest question I have to pose in this review. I have researched this movie thoroughly and have found differing information. It was originaly rated GP (the equivalent of PG-13) in 1969. A 2005 re-rating saw it rated R for some violence...
Is it really a rated-R movie? No one seems to know. Some comment on its hard-edged graphic violence. Others say that although the violence was bad for the time, by todays standards the blood shown on screen really isn't that bad and only needs a PG-13... One reviewer even commented that the film was extremely clean and differed from the trashy movies of today in that it can be watched without a remote...
One reviewer mentioned that the DVD version was edited, another said that it contained both the edited and non-edited versions on different sides of the disk.
[...] called it Questionable for children...
So the question arises, "Is this really a rated-R movie."
The answer:
I don't know.
I have not seen this movie and would appreciate it if someone would write a review detailing the violence, sexual content, and language contained in this film, as I am (a Clint Walker) considering buying it for family viewing...
Any information would be appreciated...
A teenage film buff.
Were these reviews helpful? Let us know


Customer Discussions



Feedback