
Luis Barboo
Multiple people share this name — showing the most well-known match (Acting).
Acting · Born 1927-03-20 · age 74 at death · Vigo, Pontevedra, Galicia, Spain
Luis Barboo (20 March 1927 – 30 September 2001) was a Spanish actor. He played Baxter Gunman in Per un pugno di dollari (1964). He played Truto in The Demons (1973), and Caronte in La Maldición de Frankenstein (1973), both directed by Jesús Franco. He played Red Hair in Conan the Barbarian (1982), directed by John Milius and written by Oliver Stone.[5] He appeared in Spanish films like O camiño das estrelas: Galicia (1993), directed by Chano Piñeiro and starring Sabela Páez and Gustavo Salmerón,[6] and Supersonic Man (1979), directed by Juan Piquer Simón
Titles

A Fistful of Dollars

Conan the Barbarian

God Forgives... I Don't!

The Wind and the Lion

The Big Gundown

Hannie Caulder

The Case of the Scorpion's Tail

Attack of the Blind Dead

Soldier of Fortune

Female Vampire

The Call of the Wild

The Light at the Edge of the World

Doc

Satan's Blood

Bad Medicine

Dracula, Prisoner of Frankenstein

The Demons

The Loreley's Grasp

Night of the Werewolf

The Ugly Ones

I picari

China 9, Liberty 37

Blood and Sand

Mystery on Monster Island

Journey to the Centre of the Earth

The Erotic Rites of Frankenstein

Supersonic Man

Night of the Skull

Antony and Cleopatra

Cannon for Cordoba

Arizona Colt Returns

The Trouble with Spies

Comin' at Ya!

Sugar Colt

A Dog Called... Vengeance

For Better or for Worse

Killer Adios

Dead Men Don't Count

The Protectors

The Sea Pirate

A Bullet for Sandoval

Cristóbal Colón, de oficio... descubridor

Lovers of Devil's Island

Me has hecho perder el juicio

Hands Up, Dead Man! You're Under Arrest

The Big Hit of Surcouf

Los días de Cabirio

The Witches Mountain

Curro Jiménez

Between God, The Devil and a Winchester

Manuela

Red Gold

Death Haunts Monica

Man Who Cried for Revenge

The Man Who Killed Billy the Kid

Dolls for Sale

B. Must Die

Dirty Game in Casablanca

El río que nos lleva

They Paid with Bullets: Chicago 1929