Il buono, il brutto, il cattivo

Titolo originale: Il buono, il brutto, il cattivo
Regia: Sergio Leone |
Anno: 1966
Origine: United States of America | Italy | Spain | Germany |
Generi: Western
Tag: gold | army | bounty hunter | hitman | refugee | anti hero | moral ambiguity | gallows | outlaw | gun battle | shootout | spaghetti western | graveyard | american civil war | stolen gold | complex | hidden gold | gun death | cemetary | confederate gold |
Cast: Clint Eastwood | Eli Wallach | Lee Van Cleef | Aldo Giuffrè | Luigi Pistilli | Rada Rassimov | Enzo Petito | Claudio Scarchilli | Antonio Casale | Livio Lorenzon | Sandro Scarchilli | Benito Stefanelli | Angelo Novi | Antonio Casas | Aldo Sambrell | Al Mulock | Sergio Mendizábal | Antonio Molino Rojo | Lorenzo Robledo | Mario Brega | Chelo Alonso | Fortunato Arena | Román Ariznavarreta | Silvana Bacci | Joseph Bradley | Frank Braña | Amerigo Castrighella | Saturno Cerra | William Conroy | Axel Darna | Tony Di Mitri | Gianni Di Segni | Alberigo Donadeo | Attilio Dottesio | Luis Fernández de Eribe | Veriano Ginesi | Jesús Guzmán | Víctor Israel | Nazzareno Natale | Ricardo Palacios | Antonio Palombi | Romano Puppo | Antoñito Ruiz | Aysanoa Runachagua | Enrique Santiago | José Terrón | Franco Tocci | Antonio Montoya |

Durante la guerra di Secessione, tre spregiudicati avventurieri, cercano di impossessarsi di un carico d'oro che gli permetterebbe di chiudere con la vita da pistoleri. Ma la guerra li costringerà a cambiare i loro piani.

Approfondimenti

The shoot-the-hangman's-rope gag appears to have been inspired by a similar action in the Hop-A [...] D
Charles Bronson was offered the roles of Tuco and Angel Eyes (the latter because Sergio Leone f [...] D
In the Italian version of this movie (and some U.S. LaserDisc prints), instead of "The Good", " [...] D
Henry Fonda, Lee Marvin, and Enrico Maria Salerno were considered for Angel Eyes. As with the p [...] D
Tuco's "You know what you are" at the end was sampled into Ministry's song of the same name off [...] D
Although this was the third movie in the series, there are clues that it is the prequel to the [...] D
As a non-smoker, Clint Eastwood hated smoking cigars and Sergio Leone often did multiple takes. [...] D
In the original working script, Angel Eyes was named "Banjo", but is referred to as "Sentenza" [...] D
Sergio Donati made some uncredited contributions to the screenplay. D
Although Sergio Leone never made an official sequel to this movie, screenwriter Luciano Vincenz [...] D
According to Sergio Leone, it took a lot of discussion before Clint Eastwood agreed to do the m [...] D
For the scene where Angel Eyes interrogates Maria the prostitute for information about Bill Car [...] D
When Eli Wallach arrived in Madrid, Spain, all of the hotels were full. Clint Eastwood invited [...] D
Movie director Alex Cox suggests that the cemetery-buried gold hunted by the protagonists may h [...] D
As this movie is a prequel to Eastwood's other two "Spaghetti Westerns", two hours and two minu [...] D
In the gun store, everything Tuco ( Eli Wallach ) does with the guns was unscripted. Wallach kn [...] D
In the 1960s, Hollywood still followed The Motion Picture Production Code of 1930 (a.k.a. The H [...] D
The monologue of the officer pronouncing sentence on Tuco during the hanging scene, including a [...] D
Though no specific year or date is stated in this movie, at least part of it takes place during [...] D
During the scene right before the final duel where Tuco (Eli Wallach) is running frantically th [...] D
Based on the layout of the location set, when Tuco first enters the cemetery and runs down a co [...] D
Italian censorship visa # 48356 delivered on 23-12-1966. D
For Sight and Sound's Top 250 Films of All-Time listing in 2012, Quentin Tarantino cited this a [...] D
The Union prison camp "Battleville" was inspired by the actual Confederate prison camp of Ander [...] D
Orson Welles warned Sergio Leone not to make this movie on the grounds that Civil War movies we [...] D
Blondie and Tuco's share of the gold would have had a modern value of $1,600,000 each. D
The screenplay is co-credited to Age-Scarpelli, the screenwriting team of Agenore Incrocci and [...] D
After Eli Wallach agreed with Sergio Leone that Tuco would carry his pistol on a lanyard, Leone [...] D
Blondie and Tuco used Model 1851 Colt Navy pistols that have been converted from percussion to [...] D
In the original Italian script for this movie, Blondie is named "Joe" (his nickname in A Fistfu [...] D
Due to the striking height difference between Clint Eastwood and Eli Wallach (over nine inches) [...] D
The three-man gunfight scene is called either a "Mexican standoff", or a truel. There are sever [...] D
One of the less commented about attributes that makes TGBU a great film is Leone's superbly art [...] D
According to Eli Wallach, when it came time to blow up the bridge, Sergio Leone asked the Spani [...] D
During the scene in which Tuco (Eli Wallach) is lying near a railroad track, handcuffed to the [...] D
"Pitchfork" put at thirty-second place the main theme of this movie, composed by Ennio Morricon [...] D
The trumpet theme for the "mexican standoff" at the graveyard was inspired by El Degüello - [...] D
The real location of the Sad Hill Cemetery is Carazo near Salas de los Infantes, province of Bu [...] D
Ennio Morricone's iconic theme music was designed in places to mimic the sound of a howling coy [...] D
The three principal actors are the only ones who speak actual English in this movie: Clint East [...] D
Luigi Pistilli, who plays Tuco's priest brother, usually played villains. D
There is no dialogue for the first ten and a half minutes of this movie. D
One of the hallmarks of anti-heroes is the bending or breaking of conventional moral standards [...] D
In their introductory scenes (where they are identified on-screen as the "good", "bad", or "ugl [...] D
$200,000 in gold at the 1860's rate would weigh over 660 pounds (300 kilograms). Gold was value [...] D
When Lee Van Cleef was cast again for another "Dollars" movie. He joked, "the only reason they [...] D
Shortly after Blondie brings in Tuco to the Sheriff for the first time, the Sheriff comes out w [...] D
Clint Eastwood wasn't happy with the finished movie. He later said it was bloated rather than e [...] D
Sad Hill Cemetery was a very convincing set piece constructed by the pyrotechnic crew, and not [...] D
In 1966, the Spanish Army built Sad Hill Cemetery with over 5,000 graves at Mirandilla Valley i [...] D
Sergio Leone first had Gian Maria Volontè in mind as Tuco, but the actor turned the role dow [...] D
The mini 5x7 posters that are included in the MGM two-disc DVD Collector's Set of this movie, r [...] D
Despite playing a Mexican outlaw, Eli Wallach was of Polish-Jewish descent. D
It's never explained how Angel Eyes suddenly comes to be a sergeant in the union army, although [...] D
Many fans have commented how surprising it was that Eli Wallach was never nominated for an Osca [...] D
Clint Eastwood's "Blondie" character's gun is an 1851 Colt Navy cartridge conversion revolver w [...] D
Eli Wallach and Clint Eastwood flew to Madrid, Spain together, and between shooting scenes, Eas [...] D
Ennio Morricone's soundtrack album stayed on the charts for over a year, his most commercially [...] D
According to an introduction by Stephen King in one of his books, this movie, along with the no [...] D
Included amongst the "1001 Movies You Must See Before You Die", edited by Steven Schneider. D
Tuco (Eli Wallach) tells his brother Father Pablo Ramirez (Luigi Pistilli) "Where we came from, [...] D
After the scene where Blondie (Clint Eastwood) splashes water in Tuco's (Eli Wallach's) face in [...] D
The movie specifically takes place during the New Mexico Campaign in 1862. D
This is a "prequel" to A Fistful of Dollars (1964) and For a Few Dollars More (1965), as it is [...] D
Tuco's line "When you have to shoot, shoot, don't talk!" was improvised by Eli Wallach, which a [...] D
While it's now praised as a classic, when first released in the United Sates the film was met w [...] D
The mud-strewn town where Blondie brings Tuco for his first hanging is the same town from Sergi [...] D
If you listen and compare, you will notice that the individual coyote yowls at the beginning of [...] D
There are two different takes for both the Italian and the English language versions of the fil [...] D
Leone would have considered the shot unnecessarily gruesome to be included in the final cut, bu [...] D
In the scene where Blondie brings a tied-up Tuco into town to claim the bounty on him, Tuco spi [...] D
Mario Brega appears in all three of the "Dollars" movies as a henchman for the main villain(s), [...] D
According to Eli Wallach's autobiography "The Good, the Bad and Me", Sergio Leone picked him fo [...] D
The pipe that Lee van Cleef smoked as Angel Eyes is a Peterson Pipe made in Ireland. It has a " [...] D
Jack Elam turned down the role of Elam, the one-armed gunslinger who attempts to kill Tuco in t [...] D
Eli Wallach was almost poisoned on the set after drinking acid used to burn the bags filled wit [...] D
This movie was budgeted at an expensive (for the time) $1.6 million. D
In two of the deleted scenes featuring Angel Eyes (Lee Van Cleef), Simon Prescott was used for [...] D
Although Tuco is implied to be the younger Ramirez brother, Eli Wallach was fourteen years olde [...] D
When Angel Eyes questions the soldier at the destroyed fort, and Indian arrow can be seen embed [...] D
The skeleton found by Tuco inside the wrong coffin at Sad Hill cemetery was a real human skelet [...] D
Unlike Eli Wallach and Lee Van Cleef, Clint Eastwood's scenes are almost always with one of the [...] D
The large crevice in the rock ridge where Tuco finds Blondie's first campfire when tracking him [...] D
Bernie Grant was the actor who dubbed Gian Maria Volontè in A Fistful of Dollars (1964), Ald [...] D
Baker (Livio Lorenzon) was dubbed by (uncredited) anime voice actor Peter Fernandez. D
Throughout production, Clint Eastwood regularly socialized with "Spaghetti Western" veteran Fra [...] D
The town where Tuco's second hanging takes place, the town where Maria is interrogated by Angel [...] D
The third of six times that Sergio Leone worked with Ennio Morricone. Aside from the Dollars tr [...] D
Because writer and director Sergio Leone spoke barely any English and Eli Wallach (Tuco) spoke [...] D
In the English-language version, the names of the characters played by Clint Eastwood and Lee V [...] D
Because this movie was set during the Civil War, writer and director Sergio Leone wanted to pre [...] D
Sergio Leone originally titled his story "The Magnificent Rogues" and "The Two Magnificent Tram [...] D
The guns in this movie were supplied by Aldo Uberti Inc., a company in Italy. D
The price of gold in 1862 was $20.67 an ounce. On August 23, 2011, an ounce of the metal reache [...] D
When the bridge is blown up, and Tuco and Blondie are hunkered down behind sandbags waiting for [...] D
The white curtains on the Confederate coach that Tuco appropriates are more the twice as long a [...] D
In the theatrical trailer, Angel Eyes is "The Ugly" and Tuco "The Bad", which is the reverse of [...] D
The three main characters all contain autobiographical elements of Sergio Leone. In an intervie [...] D
The casting of Eli Wallach as a Mexican is often condemned as racist. It is unlikely that a whi [...] D
The trim on Confederate soldiers' uniforms identified the type of unit to which they were assig [...] D
In a 2019 reader Q&A with Empire Magazine, Quentin Tarantino said that the wide shot during the [...] D
In a 2020 interview with the Daily Mail, Eastwood revealed his still owns the iconic poncho, th [...] D
The gun store scene (Eli Wallach as Tuco) was copied from Zane Grey Theater (1956) season one, [...] D
Despite being frequently referred to as a sequel to For a Few Dollars More (1965), this movie w [...] D
There was some controversy over the casting of a white man with dark make up as Tuco. It is unl [...] D
The film was shot with a process called Techniscope. This means that you can shoot without an a [...] D
The camp guard who says 'more feeling' to the prisoner musicians is actually saying 'piu forte' [...] D
Although Clint Eastwood was top-billed in this movie, Eli Wallach has the most screentime. D
The whole "Man With No Name Trilogy" was what the studio concocted to mesh together three Weste [...] D
The type of cigar Eastwood smokes is called a cheroot. The source of these cigars has been deba [...] D
"The Good, the Bad and the Very Ugly" is the title of an autobiography by Sondra Locke, who liv [...] D
Sergio Leone: [Large circles covered in pave stones] D
As an Italian-made movie of that era, the sound was not recorded live. The actors and actresses [...] D
In the cemetery ring, the three men begin to position themselves for the shoot-out. Angel Eyes [...] D
The prisoner musicians forced to play and sing while Wallace beats Tuco in the POW camp is remi [...] D
The grips on Clint Eastwood's pistol have an inlaid silver rattlesnake. His pistol in For a Few [...] D
Leone loved the look of intense blue eyes on his actors, especially those with dark complexions [...] D
Although Blondie (Clint Eastwood) is labelled "the good" in this movie, he kills eleven people [...] D
Sergio Leone: [close-up] D
In addition to the train scene, Tuco (Eli Wallach) cheated death in the first scene where Blond [...] D
Last film of Enzi Petito(1897-1967). D
When Tuco is having his handcuffs cut off on the train rail, writer and director Sergio Leone i [...] D
The train features an armored car with a mortar-type cannon. These were actually mounted on tra [...] D
When Blondie (Clint Eastwood) and Angel Eyes (Lee Van Cleef) are travelling to the cemetery, Bl [...] D
The streaming version (and possibly the disk as well) retains the odd color shift of the origin [...] D
This movie is included on Roger Ebert's "Great Movies" list. D
Sergio Leone revealed in a biographical piece that Eastwood's soon to be iconic poncho was a la [...] D
The snake-handled gun-grip Blondie (Clint Eastwood) used here is on a Navy Colt, but the same g [...] D
Eli Wallach found the scene where Tuco confronts his friar brother, Pablo, difficult to perform [...] D
Eli Wallach claims that Sergio Leone decided that Tuco would carry his pistol on a lanyard and [...] D
Clint Eastwood wore the same poncho through all three "Man with No Name" movies without replace [...] D
Clint Eastwood, Mario Brega, Benito Stefanelli, Aldo Sambrell, Lorenzo Robledo, Frank Braña, [...] D
From the time that Blondie, Tuco, and Angel Eyes enter the stone circle at Sad Hill to dual, to [...] D
The Italian title for the film, IL BUONO, IL BRUTTO, IL CATTIVO, translates as THE GOOD, THE UG [...] D
Cameo: Chelo Alonso. She had a brief appearance as the wife of Stevens, the man visited by Ange [...] D
Once again, as was the case with For a Few Dollars More (1965), Lee Van Cleef was a replacement [...] D
This film is in the Official Top 250 Narrative Feature Films on Letterboxd. D
No a single word is spoken during the first 10 minutes of the movie. D
Though Angel Eyes carries a period correct revolver (model 1858 Remington), he has cartridges i [...] D
Shot in the Spanish desert, with 1,500 Spanish soldiers as extras. D
Lost scenes include Tuco continuing his search for Blondie in a Texican pueblo while Blondie is [...] D
By the time filming had completed, Clint Eastwood had grown tired of Sergio Leone's perfectioni [...] D
Watch close in the "truel" scene where Lee Van Cleef is slowly moving his hand towards his pist [...] D
(At around two hours and thirty-five minutes) Blondie (Clint Eastwood) covers up a dead soldier [...] D
Filming had a short delay when Clint Eastwood refused to turn up for work until writer and dire [...] D
Four scenes were cut from the original English-language release and never dubbed into English f [...] D
The following guns were used in this movie. 1. Blondie (Clint Eastwood) used a Colt 1851 cartri [...] D
During production, Clint Eastwood suffered from heat exhaustion multiple times, as he wasn't ac [...] D
The movie remains the highest rated movie on IMDb not to receive a single Oscar nomination. D
While watching the Union soldiers attack the Confederates on the bridge Blondie laments to Tuco abou [...] D
At the end of the movie in the original version of two hours and eleven minutes, there is a final sh [...] D

Connessioni

Nessun dato in archivio

Domande

Nessun dato in archivio

Errori

During the three-way showdown (also known as a "Mexican standoff"), Tuco slowly pulls his pistol fr [...] D
When the runaway Confederate carriage first appears in the desert you can see someone steering it. [...] D
Every gun makes its own tune, says Blondy as he leaves Angel Eye's gang to find Tuco and the gun he [...] D
Blondie's rifle is a 1866 Winchester 'Yellow Boy'. Although the production team removed the wood fo [...] D
When Tuco prepares a bath that's been deserted, he pours bath salts into a tub already full of wate [...] D
The body in the grave would only have been in the ground about a month, and would not have been red [...] D
All of the railroad cars seen are four-wheeled. This design had fallen out of favor in the United S [...] D
The man pointed at as the Confederate General Sibley (by the hotel owner) is actually a Confederate [...] D
When the Sheriff unrolls the wanted poster in Tuco's face the poster clearly has a photograph of ve [...] D
Although his name is never given, Tuco calls Clint Eastwood's character 'Blondie' throughout the mo [...] D
When Angel Eyes invites Tuco in to eat, he hands Tuco a bottle. As Tuco lifts it up to drink from i [...] D
When Tuco and Blondie are carrying the crate with the explosives on the stretcher, it has turned ab [...] D
When Blondie and Tuco are carrying the explosives on the stretcher, at first the stretcher is missi [...] D
Tuco is wearing a Confederate uniform after he kills Wallace but is later seen in town wearing diff [...] D
Before blowing up the bridge, when Tuco tells Blondie that the money is on the other side of the ri [...] D
The film depicts the series of skirmishes that culminated in the Battle of Glorieta Pass in 1862.Th [...] D
When Tuco is apprehended in the beginning by Blondie and the Sheriff compares the wanted poster to [...] D
In the final scene at the Sad Hill cemetery, there seems to be a large stone sarcophagus right at t [...] D
When Angel Eyes first enters Stevens' house, an electrical tower can be seen in the background over [...] D
When the POW camp commandant is upbraiding Angel Eyes for his treatment of the Confederate prisoner [...] D
When Tuco and Blondie are under the bridge in waist-deep water strapping dynamite to the supports, [...] D
There are two scenes where a character, Blondie in the first and Angel Eyes in the second, come fro [...] D
The kind of urban decimation shown in this film did not exist in the west during the Civil War. The [...] D
Tuco examines a Belgian 10.4mm Galand revolver in the gun shop. This gun was not invented until 186 [...] D
When Wallace escorts Tuco on the train to their destination, presumably another prisoner-of-war cam [...] D
Although it makes for more tense and thrilling action, Blondie's and Tuco's walking through main st [...] D
The POW band guitarist is shown strumming his instrument, but the soundtrack guitar is "finger-pick [...] D
The Commendant of the Union prisoner of war camp is referred to as "Captain" but he wears the shoul [...] D
Angel Eyes offers Tuco some of Bill Carson's tobacco. When Tuco reaches into the tobacco holder to [...] D
During the battle over the bridge numerous cannon are firing at the Confederates, however, many of [...] D
After Angel Eyes is shot the second time, his gun falls at the front side of open grave towards the [...] D
During Tuco's beating in the POW camp, one of the fiddlers stops playing. The singers behind him ar [...] D
The scene where Blondie, Angel Eyes and his gang are in the town being abandoned by the Confederate [...] D
When the rhythmic music stops and Tuco is choking after screaming "Blondie", a person walking to th [...] D
In the final scene when Tuco is shot down by Blondie, the position of the rope changes while hangin [...] D
At the end in the graveyard is shown a close up of Blondies hand, showing his shirt sleeve. The fab [...] D
The cartridges seen on Angel Eyes' bandoleer did not only not fit his percussion cap revolver but w [...] D
The dummy used for Corporal Wallace as he is dragged under the train, doesn't match his size in wid [...] D
When Angel Eyes throws the shovel at Tuco by Arch Stanton's grave, he nearly hits Tuco in the head. [...] D
You can see a car passing by in the background when Tuco is balancing on the cross on the graveyard [...] D
On a number of occasions someone is shown fanning the hammer of a revolver. This was never done, as [...] D
Tuco is ambushed by three bounty hunters with one of them firing an anachronistic Winchester rifle [...] D
When Tuco and Blondie ride their coach up to the mission to recuperate from the desert several powe [...] D
Civil war guns did not use lit fuses, they used pull lanyards. D
Blondie is shown cleaning his (historically incorrect) revolver by simply running a brush through t [...] D
When Blondie shoots the rope at Sad Hill Cemetery there is no muzzle flash from his rifle. D
One of the three bounty hunters that shoots Tuco's horse has a piece of grass in his mouth just pri [...] D
When Blondie says, "Your spurs," and shoots the last of the three ambushers in the hotel, the man f [...] D
At the end of the movie Blondie flips up the long-range leaf sight on his rifle but the cross membe [...] D
Blondie lights a cannon to fire at Tuco but the cannon is facing the graveyard, the opposite direct [...] D
A man in Tuco's profession should have realized before engaging in the final three-way showdown tha [...] D
Blondie and Tuco would not have been able to carry down the amount of explosives that Eros Bacciucc [...] D
When the POWs march into camp, they cause the short bridge to bounce violently. Marching troops sho [...] D
In the store scene with Tuco, he and the owner pass by several crates of black powder marked "ACME. [...] D
Although the song the prison camp band plays is moving and heartfelt, the melody and orchestration [...] D
Angel Eyes uses a 1858 New Army Model Remington revolver, a cap-and-ball revolver commonly used dur [...] D
The American flags flown by the Union army have 50 stars, 97 years too late for the film's setting. [...] D
The bounty hunters that Blondie saves Tuco from at the beginning are waiting for Tuco to come ridin [...] D
In the cemetery scene when Tuco is balancing himself on the cross, you can see a person standing in [...] D
When Blondie is comforting the dying Confederate soldier near the end of the film, he gives him two [...] D
The battle-scenes show at least two Gatling guns, forerunner to the machine gun. The Gatling gun wa [...] D
In what is one of the most famous guitar parts in all of cinematic history - the standoff at the gr [...] D
When Blondie kicks the lid off of Arch Stanton's grave, the lid slides sideways along the ground. B [...] D
Blondie and Tuco are seen using dynamite to destroy a bridge. Dynamite wasn't invented until 1867, [...] D
Blondie goes from town to town handing Tuco over to the authorities and then saving him without eve [...] D
After Blondie tells Angel Eyes of six being a perfect number because it is the number of bullets hi [...] D
In the shop Tuco picks up an Italian-made Bodeo M1889 pistol - made more than 25 years after the ye [...] D
Angel Eye's sidearm is clearly a cap & ball black powder revolver -- the bullets in his gun belt wo [...] D
The second hat shot off by Blondie also briefly separates the actor's toupee from his head. However [...] D
Tuco and Blondie blow the bridge using what appears to be dynamite, first used after the war ended. [...] D
At the start, when Angel Eyes is first seen, the boy stops the burro and the well's cross beam is i [...] D
When Tuco throws Wallace and himself of the train, he does so in full view of a few dozen men. The [...] D
During the preparation of the charges on the bridge supports, they are connected in series, and Blo [...] D
Blondie is seen shooting Tuco's rope with a Sharps 1874, 12 years too late for the film's setting. [...] D
During the final show-down by Tuco, Blondie and Angel Eyes at the cemetery, Tuco has no bullets in [...] D
When Tuco walk down the street to confront Angel Eyes' men, he suddenly turns and pulls his pistol [...] D
Before Blondie enters the water for the first time his coat is already wet. He was walking through [...] D
Blondie and Tuco walk down the street of the desert town to confront the Angel Eyes' gang. At the b [...] D
The horse that Tuco is shot off of disappears. D
When Tuco rejoins his fellow outlaws after robbing the gun store, he comes in and puts his hand int [...] D
When Angel Eyes enters the house at the beginning you can see a radiant station antenna in the back [...] D
As Blondie and Tuco are setting the explosives to blow up the bridge, they are in sight of both the [...] D
In the retreat scene in the town a large unit of Confederate foot infantry is shown as marching wit [...] D
When Tuco and Blondie seek Angel Eyes in the deserted town, they discover a note that says "see you [...] D
Before the final gunfight, as Tuco is standing in the circle, he lowers his hand to the level of hi [...] D
When Tuco is balancing on the cross at the end, the knot of the noose is above his head when shown [...] D
Angel Eyes' horse is a trotter, distinguished by its high-stepping gait. This horse was trained for [...] D
When Tuco jumps back on a train, after having used it to cut his chains, the film is sped up. [...] D
Right after the scene where Blondie places the rock in the middle of the courtyard, (presumably con [...] D
Near the end of the film, when Tuco's head is in the noose in the cemetery, the tightness of the kn [...] D
Angel Eyes is seen smoking a pipe, which is clearly a Peterson 'System' pipe. Peterson was founded [...] D
When Angel Eyes is interrogating the prostitute, a photo of Geronimo can be scene on the wall. This [...] D
In the opening, when Eli Wallach is shown in close-up, he has an obvious cap or crown on a tooth. [...] D
When Blondie is lifting the heavy bags of gold to load them on his horse, you can see a parked car [...] D
At the Sand Hill Cemetery, Tuco is sitting on the ground next to Strantons grave marker, there is a [...] D
When Tuco tests a revolver behind the gun shop on human silhouette targets, the sound effects are o [...] D
After Tuco ambushes Blondie in the hotel room and is about to force him to hang himself, he makes B [...] D
Blondie is cleaning his pistol barrel with a wire bore brush. As one so familiar with shooting, he [...] D
When Tuco is shooting at Blondie's canteen in the desert, the sound of the shots does not match the [...] D
Angel Eyes' grip on his spoon changes from overhand to underhand back to overhand while he chats wi [...] D
The date of death on Arch Stanton's grave is 3 February 1862--a few months before the setting of th [...] D
After setting the explosives under the bridge, Tuco and Blondie jump into a foxhole and are perfect [...] D
In the prison camp scene where the musicians are playing while Tuco is being beaten by Angel Eyes, [...] D
When Tuco enters the gun shop, he hangs the "CLOSED" sign at a downward-right angle on a nail on th [...] D
Blondie shoots Angel Eyes' hat into the grave and it lands on his chest. In the next shot, the hat [...] D
After the final showdown, Blondie reveals that he emptied Tuco's revolver the night before. However [...] D
When Tuco (Ugly) runs up to the carriage filled with dead bodies, he opens the gate to the carriage [...] D
During the bridge scene with the explosives, the fuse is often seen in the water. Would this mean i [...] D
Tuco has Blondie put his head through a noose and the way the rope is looped around the roof beam c [...] D
Tuco is seen inspecting a Galand Revolver, invented in 1868. D
When the two armies battle at the bridge, the Confederates are using the flag with the blue criss-c [...] D
If each gold coin had approximately 1 troy ounce of gold in it worth $20, $200,000 implies there we [...] D
The character "Jackson/Bill Carson" is referred to as a member of the 3rd Regiment in the Confedera [...] D
In the re-instated scene where Tuco gives his identity papers to one of the Confederate guards, he [...] D
In one scene, Tuco praises Lee and damns Grant out loud to the troops coming out of the desert. How [...] D

Frase

Maria: Is that you Bill? Bill! [She runs into a [...] D
Blondie: [appearing beside Tuco] Were you gonna [...] D
Tuco: [to Corporal Wallace] I like big fat men l [...] D
Angel Eyes: Why are you going under the name Bil [...] D
[Tuco spits on the ground as he's carried into t [...] D
Tuco: I don't know, soon as I hit the desert I'm [...] D
Tuco: [thinking the cavalry they've met are Conf [...] D
Tuco: I'm very happy you are working with me! An [...] D
Baker: Here, this is for you. You did a good job [...] D
Blondie: Put your drawers on, and take your gun [...] D
Union Captain at the Bridge: We have two attacks [...] D
Blondie: If you shoot me, you won't see a cent o [...] D
Angel Eyes: [Tuco is about to be hanged] Even a [...] D
Blondie: [watching the soldiers fighting on the [...] D
Tuco: [trying to read a note] "See you soon, id. [...] D
Tuco: [trying to read a grave that is marked "Un [...] D
Tuco: What about our parents? Father Pablo Rami [...] D
Tuco: [Sitting by the dry, dehydrated Blondie's [...] D
Tuco: I'm looking for the owner of that horse. H [...] D
[as they set out across the desert] Tuco: What [...] D
Sheriff: [shows Tuco the wanted poster] So you'r [...] D
Tuco: There are two kinds of spurs, my friend. T [...] D
Tuco: Even the armies are afraid to march throug [...] D
Stevens: What does he pay you for murdering me? [...] D
Angel Eyes: [to Wallace] Be sure these two get g [...] D
Tuco: I'll kill you! Blondie: [gasps out in a w [...] D
Tuco: Hey! Hey everybody look! He's giving him t [...] D
Tuco: If you work for a living, why do you kill [...] D
Blondie: Where are we going? Tuco: Where? Where [...] D
[surveying some Civil War carnage] Blondie: I'v [...] D
Blondie: Two hundred thousand dollars is a lot o [...] D
Tuco: There are two kinds of people in the world [...] D
Blondie: You see, in this world there's two kind [...] D
Jackson: [trying to tell in which grave the gold [...] D
Blondie: If your friends stay out in the damp, t [...] D
[a dying man has information Tuco wants] Tuco: [...] D
[first lines] Stevens: You're... from Baker? [ [...] D
Blondie: You may run the risks, my friend, but I [...] D
Bounty Hunter: [three bounty hunters have corner [...] D
[Tuco is in a bubble bath. The One Armed Man ent [...] D
Union Captain at the Bridge: Whoever has the mos [...] D
Tuco: You never had a rope around your neck. Wel [...] D
Blondie: I mean our partnership is untied. Tuco [...] D
[to Tuco] Blondie: [clicks his tongue] Such ing [...] D
Union Captain at the Bridge: You'll all turn to [...] D
One-armed Union soldier: [Wallace and Tuco are a [...] D
Tuco: [in the cave where his friends Pedro, Chic [...] D
Tuco: You want to know who you are? Huh? You wan [...] D
[last lines] Tuco: [shouting] Hey, Blond! You k [...] D
Angel Eyes: [as Wallace is beating Tuco] How's y [...] D
Blondie: It's not a joke, it's a rope, Tuco. Now [...] D
Cpl. Wallace: [showing Tuco the Rebel spy tied t [...] D
Union Captain at the Bridge: [swinging a bottle [...] D
Union Captain at the Bridge: [to his surgeon] Ca [...] D
Pardue the Hotel Owner: This morning l heard the [...] D
Tuco: [to his brother the priest] While I'm wait [...] D
Union Captain at the Bridge: The Rebs have decid [...] D
Blondie: [counting Angel Eyes' men] One, two, th [...] D
Tuco: [to Corporal Wallace] I told you once, fri [...] D
Tuco: I never hurt anybody! Officer: ...wanted [...] D
Tuco: Ah, my belly's full. Nice guy, my brother. [...] D
Blondie: The way I figure, there's really not to [...] D
Tuco: I got a good sense of where I'm going. Tuc [...] D
Blondie: Every gun makes its own tune. D
Blondie: [With Tuco's gun pointed at him, Blondi [...] D
Tuco: [tied up and laying on the porch of the sh [...] D
Tuco: I would like to piss, it's rough. I've bee [...] D

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