20 Things You Didn't Know About The Good, The Bad & The Ugly [1966]

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  • Опубликовано: 17 дек 2024

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  • @Edward-pu1wt
    @Edward-pu1wt Год назад +738

    Eli Wallach should have received an Academy Award for his performance. A fantastic actor, it's a rotten shame he never even received a nomination.

    • @danielmota1095
      @danielmota1095 Год назад +37

      For a while I thought he was of Mexican descent like myself , HE NAILED IT!!

    • @ManChan-w5p
      @ManChan-w5p Год назад +25

      What a shame. Thank goodness he wasn't accused of cultural appropriation.

    • @Selrisitai
      @Selrisitai Год назад +17

      Even before I began appreciating acting or knew any of the words to describe it, I was rewatching a scene from the Good, the Bad and the Ugly, and I was struck be the notion that Eli Wallach's acting was spectacular. It's no wonder he has more screen-time than the other characters. His acting is a treat, more appealing than a slutty banana.

    • @noelht1
      @noelht1 Год назад +19

      Cos it was made outside the sphere of Hollywood and the academy didn’t like that

    • @ricksmith9088
      @ricksmith9088 Год назад +2

      Definitely so

  • @milliondollarempire
    @milliondollarempire Год назад +742

    There's a reason why there's never been a remake of this film because it's just too good, unbeatable

    • @jackspring7709
      @jackspring7709 Год назад +27

      Well, it's just too good, bad and ugly to be remade.

    • @rubenoteiza9261
      @rubenoteiza9261 Год назад +26

      A remake most likely would destroy the movie careers of those trying it. You dont mess with the sacred.

    • @simonkevnorris
      @simonkevnorris Год назад +41

      It will contain an all female cast.

    • @rylaifromthenorth2964
      @rylaifromthenorth2964 Год назад +5

      Fully Agreed! And if someone tries it and it became a Flop, the Careers of the Director and Actors are unrepairable destroyed.

    • @BarryHart-xo1oy
      @BarryHart-xo1oy Год назад +4

      Very true-this is a film that stands above so many other westerns.

  • @BobGolob
    @BobGolob Год назад +672

    You see, in this world there are two kinds of people, my friend: those who love this movie and those who adore it.

  • @BwanaFinklestein
    @BwanaFinklestein Год назад +465

    The reason why Eli is so fun to watch is because Clint maintains his stoic character so perfectly. So the dynamic is magnified.

    • @rubenoteiza9261
      @rubenoteiza9261 Год назад +14

      The straight man and the clown, Abbott and Costello, Dean Martin and Jerry Lewis.

    • @electronwave4551
      @electronwave4551 Год назад +10

      I think it is more than that. I feel Eli studied all his film scripts very closely and fully related to the words, which drew in the audience's attention. He never dead-panned his scripts.

    • @Sentai7
      @Sentai7 Год назад +8

      I would agree. Eli had that real "Joker" feel of the west as Clint always had that no fear and kept the tough squint eyed look we love. Eli brought comedy to otherwise serious film. Tuco was my favorite character because of the comedic play he brought to the film.

    • @fuglbird
      @fuglbird Год назад +1

      Clint Eastwood always played the same character with his ducktail haircut and ruined a lot of movies. John Wayne also played the same character over and over again but at least his haircut was appropriate before the 1950s.

    • @rubenoteiza9261
      @rubenoteiza9261 Год назад

      @@fuglbird "Ruined a lot of movies..." You are a joke. Go play with your yo-yo and leave this discussion to mature people.

  • @morenofranco9235
    @morenofranco9235 Год назад +180

    The Good, Bad, Ugly IS THE BEST western I have ever seen. And I have seen so many.

    • @diehardcynic
      @diehardcynic 10 месяцев назад +4

      Have you seen two too many?

    • @stellviahohenheim
      @stellviahohenheim 10 месяцев назад +7

      Once upon a time in the west is a close second

    • @nbassasin8092
      @nbassasin8092 4 месяца назад +2

      @@stellviahohenheim I liked it more than Good, bad, ugly

    • @klapsigaarenbasgitaar1931
      @klapsigaarenbasgitaar1931 3 месяца назад +2

      ​@@stellviahohenheimI think it's even better because it is more profound as a commentary on the history of the West.

    • @Vlad-1986
      @Vlad-1986 2 месяца назад

      Had a horrible day and wanted some drama, so I was thinking how to rebate this, but honestly I am in the same page as you.

  • @RNFORLAW
    @RNFORLAW 3 месяца назад +16

    Best Western ever made for me. I hope they never make a remake it's perfection.

  • @Padigger76
    @Padigger76 Год назад +119

    One of the best scenes in film is the scene with Tuco running around the cemetery looking for the grave while "The Ecstacy of Gold' plays. Brilliant

    • @fletchershepherd7039
      @fletchershepherd7039 Год назад +7

      I love The Good, The Bad And The Ugly but as magnificent a movie as it is the highlight of the film is The Ecstasy Of Gold sequence. It was Tuco's film so it was fitting that he was the one searching for the grave. Blondie and Angel Eyes are too stoic but Tuco is more passionate and enthusiastic so it wouldn't have worked without him.

  • @markbrisec3972
    @markbrisec3972 Год назад +64

    When its all said and done I have to agree that The Good, The Bad and The Ugly is probably the best movie in history... I've watched it countless times and I found something new every time.. It's realistic, its funny, its epic, it's brilliantly acted and directed, it's full of suspense, and last but not the least - it has THE BEST movie score in history, period.

    • @billbergendahl2911
      @billbergendahl2911 Год назад +6

      Quinton Tarantino has called The Good, The Bad and The Ugly "the greatest achievement in cinematic history".

    • @davidstegemoller9460
      @davidstegemoller9460 Год назад +1

      best of ALL time...pls....played the cassett many times through the 70s myself' but the score is a top five

    • @tlouishail4141
      @tlouishail4141 5 дней назад

      In the top ten

  • @IAPPEARINVISIBLE
    @IAPPEARINVISIBLE Год назад +304

    Not to mention the greatest soundtrack of all time. Thanks to Ennio Morricone.
    Once Upon a Time in the West is another great soundtrack by Morricone. The use of Fuzz guitar is somehow fitting for a period nearly 100 years before the Fuzztone was invented. Brilliant!

    • @algini12
      @algini12 Год назад +8

      I was glad he won the Oscar in his own right, for The Hateful Eight. To me, a career one like he got earlier is a hollow award, whenever it's given. He should have won at least 2 times before as well.

    • @samr.england613
      @samr.england613 Год назад +5

      Yep, soundtrack for Handful of Dollars, a Few more, and Good, Bad, Ugly, was great! Love good Spanish guitar! And you know, obviously Morricone's compositions were MORE than just Spanish guitar. Love him man!

    • @davidsherman2612
      @davidsherman2612 Год назад +1

      yup, some good songs came from those samples

    • @noelht1
      @noelht1 Год назад +3

      Once upon a time in America also a classic score

    • @mcskipper100
      @mcskipper100 Год назад +5

      What about the soundtrack to Fistful of Dynamite very sad tune but very catchy and reflects the characters of the film

  • @Ace-Of-Spades-01
    @Ace-Of-Spades-01 10 месяцев назад +58

    The Good The Bad & The Ugly is not only the best western movie of all time it’s one of the greatest movies of all time. It’s a masterpiece.

  • @mikegrossberg8624
    @mikegrossberg8624 Год назад +580

    The funny thing about Wallach's ad lib, "When you gotta shoot, SHOOT! Don't TALK" is that it's actually applicable to HUNDREDS of films, in multiple genres! Every time I see a film villain yakking at the good guy before killing him, that line is always what comes to mind! The Bond films are particularly guilty of this!

    • @ashroskell
      @ashroskell Год назад +32

      That was a preoccupation of Eastwood’s. He always hated the way western heroes illogically gave the villains every opportunity to kill them and were totally unrealistic. He said Jimmy Cagney’s villain in White Het was his inspiration, and why he always asked directors to let him shoot people in the back, refuse to let them monologue and buy time, or just take them out without ever seeing him coming. “I watched Cagney shoot a guy in the trunk of a car while eating a chicken leg and thought, That guy’s got a lot o’ nerve, I wanna’ do that.”

    • @MrDubyadee1
      @MrDubyadee1 Год назад +21

      And for those who are a bit slow on the uptake, Austin Powers/Dr. Evil drove the point home.

    • @williamowens5144
      @williamowens5144 Год назад +10

      HE STARTS MONOLOGUING!

    • @AAWT
      @AAWT Год назад +12

      Bond villains to have a tendency to wine and dine their adversary every single time for as long as is needed for him to come up with a way to escape.

    • @ashroskell
      @ashroskell Год назад +7

      @@AAWT : Yeah, even while I enjoyed Skyfall, I watched the bit with Blofeld showing off all his gadgets and, “monologuing,” and couldn’t help mentally inserting dialogue from the Austin Powers movies. We all wind up playing the role of Doctor Evil’s son. “Just shoot the guy now!?”

  • @headrockbeats
    @headrockbeats Год назад +388

    Thank god we didn't get a sequel. A masterpiece like this is too valuable to risk sullying.

    • @OneofInfinity.
      @OneofInfinity. Год назад +7

      Specially in the age we are living in.

    • @Kitty-CatDaddy
      @Kitty-CatDaddy Год назад +8

      @@OneofInfinity. All three of the stars get knocked off one by one by a female wokist who monologues during the entire movie against the 'Patriarchy'.🙄

    • @originalsklaus
      @originalsklaus Год назад

      @@Kitty-CatDaddy 🤣🤣😢😢👍👍 Agreed!!!!

    • @BarryHart-xo1oy
      @BarryHart-xo1oy Год назад +2

      You are probably right.

    • @travisfriedland9346
      @travisfriedland9346 Год назад

      I would have liked to see a sequel if for no other reason to see what happened to tuco I don't imagine we would be able to hang on to the money for too long

  • @jamesrobert4106
    @jamesrobert4106 Год назад +70

    The Good, the bad and the ugly was a masterpiece. Nothing following it could add more to the legacy.
    Imagining ANYBODY else in those roles seems inconceivable. They were flawless.

  • @fredfarnackle5455
    @fredfarnackle5455 Год назад +132

    I saw this film in a drive-in cinema Hawaii in 1968. I will always remember the shiver that went up my spine with the theme music reverberating around all the cars parked in front of the giant screen. Magic!👍😎🇦🇺

    • @samr.england613
      @samr.england613 Год назад +5

      I was 5 years-old in '68, but that's a great memory man!

    • @samr.england613
      @samr.england613 Год назад +2

      Never went to a drive-thru, as they were all out of biz by the time I was 16 or so...

    • @crimsonmask3819
      @crimsonmask3819 Год назад

      @@samr.england613 It was a unique experience. The one I visited a few times as a kid also had a swingset so you could watch the movie without a car, and not even sitting on an uncomfortable bench.
      I suspect the reason they were killed off is that it made it too easy for people to watch the movie without paying.

    • @robertspeakman6523
      @robertspeakman6523 Год назад +3

      I remember some drive-in movies. Don't remember the movie itself, I was busy in the back seat. 😉😇😊

    • @laryhuls3031
      @laryhuls3031 Год назад +3

      I also saw it at a drive in and hadn’t seen the first two. I was there with Lana and was paying more attention to her than the movie, though watching it out of one eye. It kept grabbing my attention, especially with the music. This was something very different from any western I’d ever seen and I was a fan of westerns. Anything that could pull me away from that little beauty has to be given some attention.

  • @eserisaacaarontaylan6136
    @eserisaacaarontaylan6136 10 месяцев назад +7

    The sound track its the greatest from the composer and writer Ennio morricone he is and and always be the greatest movie soundtrack creator in all the time he also definitely deserves so.many Oscar nominations wining awards on his Life time there is no doubt on that we truly missing him . And no one can replace him nobody. 🏆🏆😊

  • @LeeClark-d4n
    @LeeClark-d4n Год назад +101

    Eli was the star of the film, a brilliant actor. The film is a classic, great ending. Even the music is unforgettable. ❤️

  • @ferox965
    @ferox965 Год назад +75

    I can't imagine anyone else in the role of Angel Eyes than Lee Van Cleef.

    • @Bernie8330
      @Bernie8330 Год назад +1

      And yet it's the only time I ever saw him play a bad guy.

    • @god6384
      @god6384 Год назад +6

      @@Bernie8330 Lee Van Cleef is kinda like Arnold Schwarzenegger, they are a perfect fit for a villain but they keep casting them as a protagonists because of their popularity

  • @craigbaxter4595
    @craigbaxter4595 Год назад +118

    Eli was epic in this movie, I remember more of his lines than Clint or Lee. He was also a master of mixing evil and comical.

    • @samr.england613
      @samr.england613 Год назад +1

      My mom was a highly educated, genteel Southern lady, and she loved Tuco! The, 'bad boy' thing, appeals even more, perhaps, to educated ladies!

    • @scrapplepig
      @scrapplepig Год назад +3

      Like where Tuco is watching Clint dying of thirst crawling in the desert sun. Then Tuco learns that Clint heard where the gold is buried and suddenly is concerned about Clints health.

    • @jannetteberends8730
      @jannetteberends8730 11 месяцев назад +1

      Tuco is not one dimensional, that made his character so strong. He isn’t just comical. He’s also someone to fear. And someone with a past.

  • @benhur1959
    @benhur1959 Год назад +48

    A film that gets better with each viewing, and that wonderful film score cements it as one of the best movies ever made.

    • @samr.england613
      @samr.england613 Год назад

      Kind've like, "Alien", "Patton", (original) "Star Wars", "Logan's Run", "Godfather", "Jaws", "The Exorcist", "Die Hard", "Pulp Fiction", "Django Unchained", and many, many more films!

  • @arjunakorale6166
    @arjunakorale6166 Год назад +135

    As talented & as accomplished an actor as Gian Maria Volonte was (he was superb in ‘For A Few Dollars More’ & ‘Face to Face’), I’m glad that he didn’t get the chance to play The Bad / Angel Eyes in The Good, The Bad & The Ugly. Nobody other than Lee Van Cleef could have done justice to that role. Cleef was a BADASS in every way & was a bigger name than Volonte! And I’m soo happy that Eli Wallach (instead of Charles Bronson) played The Ugly. WALLACH ABSOLUTELY OVERSHADOWS EASTWOOD & OWNS THAT FILM.

    • @muhsinalhameed6408
      @muhsinalhameed6408 Год назад +4

      Sorry my friend..I think, according to this video Gian was supposed to take angel eyes while Bronson was planned for being Tuco.
      not the opposite.
      Anyway I am glad too that this iconic master piece only remains among these three giant actors.
      Clint ,Lee and Wallace.

    • @cretekastos6903
      @cretekastos6903 Год назад +8

      @@muhsinalhameed6408 No, according to this video, it was Gian lined up for Tuco, and Bronson to play Angel Eyes.

    • @01blaval
      @01blaval Год назад

      @@muhsinalhameed6408You better watch this again…

    • @01blaval
      @01blaval Год назад +4

      Watch the doc again… Bronson was supposed to play angel eyes…

    • @pavintageautoparts6221
      @pavintageautoparts6221 Год назад +17

      Fist Full was Eastwood's movie. Few Dollars More was Van Cleef's movie, and G B U was Wallach's movie.

  • @danabogue1804
    @danabogue1804 Год назад +34

    " There are two kinds of people in this world Tuco. Those with loaded guns.......and those who dig!!! YOU DIG"!!!!!!!! Monumental classic!!!!!!!!

    • @paulcunningham9081
      @paulcunningham9081 Год назад

      😂😂😂

    • @d.e.b.b5788
      @d.e.b.b5788 9 дней назад

      There will forever remain the debate about the best line of the film. Mine is, 'When you have to shoot, shoot. Don't talk'.

    • @dreadlord5581
      @dreadlord5581 5 дней назад

      @@d.e.b.b5788 Dead heat for me.

  • @DoctorEnigma01
    @DoctorEnigma01 2 месяца назад +4

    I first saw this movie when I was 10 years old and 50 years later it still remains my favorite movie of all time. No sequel could have done it justice and you can’t have one without Clint

  • @peterschattmann8298
    @peterschattmann8298 Год назад +24

    A masterpiece doesn't need a sequel.

  • @christophergrat6986
    @christophergrat6986 Год назад +32

    To see Clint, Eli and Lee cameo as the 3 gunmen in the beginning would have been shocking and amazing at the same time! It would still be regarded as a classic I think.

  • @jackspring7709
    @jackspring7709 Год назад +22

    Every now and again I take that film off the shelf and watch it again: it is just as good today as it was over half a century ago.

    • @samr.england613
      @samr.england613 Год назад +2

      Try not to remind us of how old we now are! :)

    • @jackspring7709
      @jackspring7709 Год назад

      @@samr.england613 Lol :D

    • @paulcunningham9081
      @paulcunningham9081 Год назад

      @@samr.england613 Well compared to Clint Easwood now we are still all only spring chickens. lol If I live to be 90 I will be a happy man. Or 98 like Eli Wallach who was still mobile and telling stories and making jokes until the very end. :-) Two remarkable men really.

  • @armandoanderson3536
    @armandoanderson3536 Год назад +16

    Sergio Leone did a wonderful job with the Civil War scene while giving homage to the fallen soldiers. I watched this movie dozens of times since I was a kid and would always doze off during this scene being that the movie was really long then wake up during the cemetery scene. But when I watch it now, the part where Clint Eastwood gives a dying soldier a puff of his cigar was truly touching and convinced me Leone really did his research and captured the human side and tragedy of such immense loss of life that was the Civil War.

    • @paulcunningham9081
      @paulcunningham9081 Год назад +2

      Yes Leone was a brilliant director and a character in his own right. He made a masterpiece despite numerous problems on set with the language barrier and no money to pay for things during production etc etc. lol Because of this members of the cast were on the verge of leaving and multiple times. lol Most swore NEVER to work with him again. lol

  • @brerrabbit9585
    @brerrabbit9585 Год назад +10

    My candidate for best Western of ALL time. Perfect in every sense of the word.

  • @kstep4768
    @kstep4768 6 месяцев назад +7

    The Good , The Bad,and The Ugly movie was a masterpiece. It is best left alone and no sequels.

  • @reedburke7762
    @reedburke7762 Год назад +71

    Poor Eli brushing with death with the run away horse and the train incident. He must have been a great horseback rider, a mile with his hands tied behind his back? WowI can’t think of anyone contributing more than Eli in this fantastic film. RIp Eli, we miss you.

    • @kirbyculp3449
      @kirbyculp3449 Год назад +3

      Eli wrote an autobiography. He preferred to work on the stage but did movies for the money.

    • @samr.england613
      @samr.england613 Год назад +2

      I don't know, but, it could've been a stunt-man doing these things. Don't get me wrong, love Eli Wallach's acting.

    • @RealHogweed
      @RealHogweed Год назад +4

      @@samr.england613seeing how the train scene and the bridge explosion were filmed without stunt doubles, I’m willing to wager that wallach was on that horse

    • @samr.england613
      @samr.england613 Год назад

      @@RealHogweed How do you know that the two scenes were filmed without stuntmen? Just asking. Or did I miss something here in the thread?

    • @RealHogweed
      @RealHogweed Год назад

      @@samr.england613 if i remember correctly there’s an interview somewhere that confirms the train near-accident (or wallach wrote about it in his autobiography). Regarding the bridge explosion I’m not entirely sure, now that you mention it.

  • @richarddestefane4101
    @richarddestefane4101 Год назад +91

    The Good, The Bad, and the Ugly is one of my all time favorite films. It was masterfully created and the parts played by all characters were just perfect. I would have loved seen a sequel. I suppose that it is too late now.

    • @geoffsclassiccars
      @geoffsclassiccars Год назад +5

      Technically the good the bad and the ugly is a prequel to a fist full of dollars and a few dollars more

    • @meanQueen1215
      @meanQueen1215 Год назад +18

      Please don’t ask for one…they’re ruining everything now days

    • @criddyla696
      @criddyla696 Год назад +3

      @@meanQueen1215you are so right … we have this masterpiece, no one should ever make a sequel..

    • @samr.england613
      @samr.england613 Год назад +3

      Yep. It's too late now. Unless, God forbid, effing Disney gets a hold of it!

    • @kirbyculp3449
      @kirbyculp3449 Год назад

      "How about Baby Tuco?"
      "Great Idea, we'll make millions!!"
      Chanting in unison, "Baby Tuco, Baby Tuco, Baby Tuco!"

  • @Luka2000_
    @Luka2000_ Год назад +19

    Even after 60 years this movie is still a masterpiece and one of the best movies put on screen ever

  • @TUCOtheratt
    @TUCOtheratt Год назад +2

    I have been a fan of this movies for decades but learned several new things about it from watching this video! Excellent RUclips video production!👍

  • @sergiozammel8261
    @sergiozammel8261 Год назад +10

    I am sooo glad that Sergio Leone slithered his way ad lib to get this movie made !!! This movie is an Epic masterpiece !! And Tuco will live in my memory as long as I have one !!! God bless those who made this Great, Great western !!

  • @RabbiSteve
    @RabbiSteve Год назад +13

    Love this channel. Westerns are my favorite (read a lot of them also). And your essays are outstanding. Thank you. Looking forward to watching this one.

  • @marton_dobo
    @marton_dobo Год назад +18

    As a kid I watched this movie every week, I loved it so much. I even turned the whole thing into a comicbook, drawing every scene from memory.

    • @michyg.
      @michyg. Месяц назад +1

      Do you still have it?

    • @marton_dobo
      @marton_dobo Месяц назад

      @@michyg. Unfortunately not, lost it over the years

    • @michyg.
      @michyg. Месяц назад +1

      @@marton_dobo oh no! That was your personal treasure! So sorry

  • @robertahall4960
    @robertahall4960 Год назад +7

    Never want any kind of sequel to this great movie....don't mess with perfection. Thanks

  • @nathangregory_
    @nathangregory_ Год назад +18

    The three films (Spaghetti Westerns) placed Mr. Eastwood on the map and were the turning point in his career that made him a bankable actor and created his future success in both acting and directing, not to mention producing his own films.

  • @HEKVT
    @HEKVT 6 месяцев назад +4

    I watched the whole Man With No Name trilogy and Good Bad and Ugly is so fantastic, I loved it, Eli and Eastwood had such an amazing chemistry.

  • @martinschulz9381
    @martinschulz9381 Год назад +4

    Good that they left it alone. Making a pilgrimage to 'Sad Hill cemetery' is the only thing I have on my bucket list.

  • @aliuyar6365
    @aliuyar6365 Год назад +12

    This was the film of my youth. Nothing can surpass it.

  • @kingkongz88
    @kingkongz88 Год назад +3

    So good to see comments praising Eli Wallach. He has always been the film for me. Even when I was a young boy and love Sergio's films, Eli was the character that stayed in my mind after this movie. His scenes were outstanding. One of the states greatest character actors.

  • @colz5203
    @colz5203 Год назад +2

    Wow interesting video, one of my favourite movies of all time and I didn’t know a lot of this thanks!

  • @davidwood2911
    @davidwood2911 Год назад +3

    From David A.Wood: Thank you very much for critiquing my third favorite Western movie, Sergio Leone's "The Good, The Bad, and The Ugly." I quite simply love this movie as I have faithfully seen it ever since 1974 when I was 10-years-old. I always enjoy the cinematic critiques that are shown on RUclips. Please do keep up the good work! Goodbye for now and have a nice Holiday Season 2023.

  • @lesvitraux
    @lesvitraux Год назад +2

    THIS is a great video. And it is a great reason for RUclips existing.

  • @antonnym214
    @antonnym214 Год назад +3

    This, Tombstone, and Lonesome Dove are my favorite westerns. Always a treat to watch this with friends and lots of popcorn!

  • @Madhu2405
    @Madhu2405 Год назад +7

    What an informative video😊. Thanks. I have stopped counting the No of times I have watched this movie. Greatest of the triology👍🏼!

  • @pesym80
    @pesym80 Год назад +5

    Great movie. My favorite western. Scene where Tuco runs between graves with Morricone music give me chills every time.

  • @the5elements566
    @the5elements566 Год назад +3

    Thank you for bringing to light the hidden things about the Bad the Good and the Ugly. So much surprising info ! Best of luck on your channel.

  • @USERID412-k7n
    @USERID412-k7n Год назад +4

    Thanks for the most interesting and informative "behind the scenes" video I've ever watched. I'm especially pleased it covered my all-time favorite serious oater (Blazing Saddles tops the cowboy comedies) from ANY continent. It even provided the ringtone for my phone.

    • @samr.england613
      @samr.england613 Год назад

      What in the eff does Mel Brooks', "Blazing Saddles" have to do with Leone's so-called, 'Spaghetti Westerns'?

    • @USERID412-k7n
      @USERID412-k7n Год назад

      Nothin'. Just a random thought while I was typing. Hence the parentheses. Why are those "so-called" Spaghetti Westerns? The term has become a genre identifier as much as noir, romcom, etc.

    • @samr.england613
      @samr.england613 Год назад

      @@USERID412-k7n TMK, they were called Spaghetti Westerns because they were directed by an Italian and filmed in the deserts and semi-deserts of Spain.

  • @martinmowbray4304
    @martinmowbray4304 Год назад +42

    Eli was the real star of that movie. Still in my top five films of all time.

    • @germanchris4440
      @germanchris4440 Год назад

      Poor judgment, but strangely that's the twisted way people see it today.

  • @sigmann66
    @sigmann66 10 месяцев назад +3

    Great cast. Hard to imagine without the three.

  • @ryansenger408
    @ryansenger408 Год назад +2

    That was fantastic. Great Synopsis. One of my top 20 films all-time. Thanks for the backstory.

  • @edwardhalpin7503
    @edwardhalpin7503 Месяц назад +3

    One scene which is always overlooked is Tuco's meeting (confrontation) with his brother the priest. It's powerful, soulful and leaves not only his brother, but the audience itself reeling. In my opinion that scene alone pushes this movie into the realm of masterpiece

    • @diegograssi9269
      @diegograssi9269 Месяц назад

      …and this is connected at another great movie moment, the dialogue with the Good when they are leaving the monastery, at the end tje Good says something like focus on the money now, the music start and Tuco smile …

    • @MrDengrot
      @MrDengrot 4 дня назад

      Nine years? So nine years..

  • @nikjanevmusic
    @nikjanevmusic Год назад

    Great informative video

  • @richardburchell7312
    @richardburchell7312 Год назад +7

    So well done this is so compelling to watch
    Carry on your fantastic work 👏

  • @TrevorDennis100
    @TrevorDennis100 Год назад +5

    I'm so glad I found your channel. TGB&U is one of my all time favourite movies, and one of the few that I have watched multiple times. I remember going to the cinema to see Fist Full of Dollars with some school friends when I was 16 years old, and we were all completely blown away. The Spaghetti Western immediately took on cult status for us, and was all we talked about for ages after seeing each movie. You mentioned an argument involving Lee Van Cleef in a previous video, so I am going to go find that as soon as I post this comment. You can count me as a new subscriber as well.

    • @umakantgajjewar8898
      @umakantgajjewar8898 Год назад +1

      Your comment reminded me of going to watch movies with school friends around when we were teenagers. So much fun !
      So I can understand how you guys must have felt/enjoyed/had fun.

  • @Chesterton7
    @Chesterton7 Год назад +4

    Absolutely fascinating. A masterpiece film with many strange and amazing backstories.

  • @goat51
    @goat51 Год назад +2

    I saw this movie at the highway 39 drive in in the late '60s in So. Calif. It was a memory I'll never forget. I fell in love with Clint's movies and have seen them all.

  • @thewatcher5271
    @thewatcher5271 Год назад +3

    That Was A Good Video & You're Right, I Didn't Know Any Of Those Things About It. Thank You.

  • @charlesarizona
    @charlesarizona Год назад +1

    Finally a Tube video that packs in the facts with no waste of time. Thanks.

  • @naturalmax8474
    @naturalmax8474 Год назад +7

    the greatest Western ever made....period

  • @CallousCoder
    @CallousCoder Год назад +8

    Hé hated it? I call it the best western ever. It’s a masterpiece!

    • @MrDengrot
      @MrDengrot 4 дня назад

      Don´t think that´s true. He might have had some opinion perhaps

  • @harrydrury4734
    @harrydrury4734 7 месяцев назад +3

    Im glad they didn't make a part 2 .
    I really think it would have had a bad influence on The GOOD , BAD , and UGLY .
    What a masterpiece !

  • @billbergendahl2911
    @billbergendahl2911 Год назад +7

    This is my all time favorite movie. My favorite scene being after Blondie rescues Tuco for the second time and leaves him stranded in the desert.

    • @paulcunningham9081
      @paulcunningham9081 Год назад +1

      My favourite scene was after being hell bent on revenge and killing him very cruelly and slowly the way Tuco's menacing demeanour totally changed as soon as he knew that blondie knew the name on the grave ? lol Don't die blondie. I'm your friend ? Fantastic acting and this instant total transformation was amazing to see. :-)

  • @jonathanbrown4465
    @jonathanbrown4465 Год назад +121

    Great film. Eli Wallach was definitely the best character (and actor) in the film.

    • @stephenduke412
      @stephenduke412 Год назад +6

      I named my kitten TUCO after a certain character in this movie

    • @Talsedoom
      @Talsedoom Год назад +10

      Hearing that he wasn't meant to be there gives me chils. He literally stole it. This whole movie was his story.

    • @petervdveenmuis
      @petervdveenmuis Год назад +6

      And Lee van Cleef.

    • @BarryHart-xo1oy
      @BarryHart-xo1oy Год назад +4

      Very true-Tuco is definitely the most sympathetic character in the movie.

    • @samr.england613
      @samr.england613 Год назад +1

      My mom was a professor of political science and history, a highly educated and sophisticated woman, very cultured, genteel Southern lady, all that.... But she absolutely LOVED the character of Tuco! The "bad boy". It's so funny and fascinating! Women, that is, just saying. I reckon we men often like the, 'bad girls" too. As Eagles guy put it: "I've been lookin' for the daughter of the Devil himself, I've been lookin' for an angel in white, but I need both!"

  • @waltercruz6560
    @waltercruz6560 Год назад +5

    I wasn’t around when this move was out in theaters, but got to see a screening of it at a theater in the early 2000’s. The theater even had those old wooden seats. The audio also sounded very old school. The whole experience gave me chills.

  • @nealnomis6194
    @nealnomis6194 Год назад +9

    The Trilogy rests forever as Masterpieces.

  • @mikegrossberg8624
    @mikegrossberg8624 Год назад +5

    Sometime in the 80's, a local movie theatre held a "Spend A Day With Clint Eastwood" show: all three "Dollars", and "Hang Em High". The theatre was PACKED!

  • @sarbaazchabahar
    @sarbaazchabahar Год назад +3

    One of my all time favorite. A masterpiece👍✌️

  • @spek2554
    @spek2554 Год назад

    Thanks for your research and reporting. Thus is the best review of the movies i have ever seen. I subscribed.

  • @rdt1104
    @rdt1104 Год назад +4

    Good video, thanks!
    All I could add is : Ennio Morricone

  • @jeffercinadams9026
    @jeffercinadams9026 Год назад +2

    Absolutely brilliant film - perfect errors included! One of the top 10 greatest of all time. May be the greatest Western

  • @ericdane7769
    @ericdane7769 Год назад +17

    "God's not on our side, because he hates idiots."
    favourite line from the movie, it's philosophical AND hilarious.

    • @jesperroulund7353
      @jesperroulund7353 11 месяцев назад

      - ...id...id...id....
      - Idiots. It's for you.

  • @DarrylRuiz-s1w
    @DarrylRuiz-s1w Год назад +3

    Saw all 3 in.1967.I was 14 and they were the greatest movies I had ever seen and still are

  • @stephenremington8448
    @stephenremington8448 Год назад +2

    This is great! I'd love to see you do one on the Once Upon A Time In The West sequal, Fistful of Dynamite.

  • @fisterklister
    @fisterklister Год назад +7

    Lee Van Cleef was my absolute favorite. So cool.

  • @eserisaacaarontaylan6136
    @eserisaacaarontaylan6136 10 месяцев назад +2

    Does great spaghetti Western movies including with the all crew members they are the one and ONLY in all time nobody can replace them nobody else they deserve definitely in all the pictures they made on there life time many of Oscar nominations wining awards. There is no doubt on that. 👍👍🇮🇹🇮🇹☝️☝️🍝🍝👍☺️

  • @mrandrat625
    @mrandrat625 Год назад +8

    A fourth Dollar film couldn't have lived up to this epic film, I'm glad there wasn't a final sequel.

  • @frankstefini3392
    @frankstefini3392 Год назад +2

    Absolutely my favorite all time western.

  • @amero888
    @amero888 11 месяцев назад

    wow thank you so much for the great video and information of one of my best all time movies ❤❤

  • @themanfromdystopia807
    @themanfromdystopia807 Год назад +8

    I've always been obsessed with Spaghetti Westerns which is weird because I'm not much of a fan of regular westerns. I'm also a huge fan of Akira Kurosawa and the whole Samurai/Chambara genre so Fist Full Of Dollars and the Dollars trilogy was a marriage made in heaven as far as I'm concerned. Add a soundtrack by Ennio Morricone and it just doesn't get any better than that!

  • @helmsman6542
    @helmsman6542 Год назад

    What an interesting and good review of this old, bloody good, classic - thanks mate!

  • @Blupearl2003
    @Blupearl2003 Год назад +5

    This was the first movie I ever saw Eli Wallach in. The next time I saw him he was playing Benjamin Franklin. My 8 year old mind was blown. It really taught me how actors can get deep into a role.

  • @skibsteds
    @skibsteds Год назад +1

    Well, this is the RUclips channel I never knew I needed! - As a BIG western fan I do know a lot of these facts, but your videos are a really great source of information, and very cool to watch. Thank you!

  • @krisdunwoody7037
    @krisdunwoody7037 Год назад +4

    Great Music helped make this Film Great!

  • @1kmkmkmkm
    @1kmkmkmkm Год назад

    Very nice detailed video! Thank you

  • @almost_harmless
    @almost_harmless Год назад +46

    This movie blew my mind when I snuck a peek at it without being allowed by my parents, back when I was around 11. Dad had a VHS of it and it had an 18 rating, so it was too good an opportunity to miss out when they were out of the house. Eli Wallach did steal the show, though I remember being fond of Clint and in awe of Lee van Cleef too. They are my fav movie icons to this day and this movie is close to the top, only surpassed (in my opinion) by the amazing "Once Upon a Time in the West".

    • @JB-yb4wn
      @JB-yb4wn Год назад +4

      You watched 2 films too many.

    • @almost_harmless
      @almost_harmless Год назад

      @@JB-yb4wn Haven't we all.

    • @ridley8340
      @ridley8340 Год назад +2

      @@almost_harmless I think you missed the subtle joke :)

    • @almost_harmless
      @almost_harmless Год назад

      @@ridley8340 Probably :D

    • @Voltaire2261
      @Voltaire2261 Год назад +1

      ​@@ridley8340that's from Charles Bronson in the train track scene

  • @peterlamont1533
    @peterlamont1533 Год назад

    Fascinating history! Thanks so much for this back story.

  • @jaycotton7142
    @jaycotton7142 Год назад +26

    I saw that movie over 100 times during it's original theatrical release. Back in the olden days, there were no videos or DVD's and it was as good as gone for a long time so I watched it a lot ! Then videos and DVD's came out and I still watch it. Best score and best director award go to ...

    • @Tempestzzzz
      @Tempestzzzz Год назад +1

      Yup moviegoers were GIANTS that walked the Earth back then. No stupid VHS and DVD. You had to go back to the movie house or drive-in.
      You can't tell kids that anymore. They have no idea.....no idea.🤣

    • @confuseatronica
      @confuseatronica Год назад +1

      BUNS OF STEEL from sitting in theater seats

    • @samr.england613
      @samr.england613 Год назад

      Oh God! The 1960s and 70s are now referred to as the, "Olden Days"? My dad was born in 1932, and he referred to the 1920s and BEFORE, as the, "Olden Days"! Jesus beloved Christ, how time flies! (Notice that dad didn't refer to his OWN time as the old days!)

    • @davidsherman2612
      @davidsherman2612 Год назад +1

      only thing I've watched more than this movie is the trailer park boys

    • @einundsiebenziger5488
      @einundsiebenziger5488 Год назад

      ... during its* release (it's = it is) ...

  • @HTHTucoTheRat
    @HTHTucoTheRat Год назад

    I can't believe I overlooked this vid. You just got a new sub! 😁

  • @crimsonmask3819
    @crimsonmask3819 Год назад +4

    Much as I love all the big stars of these movies, Eli Wallach is my favorite actor in any movie he's in, hands down. I had no idea he wasn't the first choice in GB&U, and can't imagine the movie without him.

    • @taylordw
      @taylordw Год назад +1

      There wouldn’t have been a movie without Wallach

  • @oneyebat7839
    @oneyebat7839 Год назад +2

    Here, I thought I was the only one who loved this movie. This was one of the best Western movies Eastwood ever made and I can remember going to the one-screen Movie theater in our small town, I can still smell the popcorn. I'm glad I watched this because there was so much I never knew about the making of this movie. Man did he make the right call to rebuild that bridge.

    • @samr.england613
      @samr.england613 Год назад +3

      Really? You thought you were the only one who loves this film? Come on OneEyedBat! Get real!

  • @LazyMasquerade
    @LazyMasquerade Год назад +5

    13:08 - Damn, they put her hands on backwards 😅

  • @MillerMeteor74
    @MillerMeteor74 Год назад

    That was the fastest 17 minutes ever. Bravo. Fascinating stuff. Thank you.

  • @zmanr2090
    @zmanr2090 Год назад +10

    Best western ever!!! As long as it on, everytime I see it on, I watch it, record it, can't help it. And Eli killed it, he had more screen time than anyone, he really was the star, and hella funny. So many memorable lines.

    • @samr.england613
      @samr.england613 Год назад +3

      I've always found it amazing that, IMO, and apparently yours, too, the best Westerns ever made were directed by an Italian, and filmed in the deserts of Spain! (And Sergio Leone, the director, showed nit and grit, horseshit and flies, mud and grime, buck teeth and facial scars, made it real!) Unlike many silly Hollywood productions and portrayals of the Old West, where everybody has perfect teeth, they're all clean and 'nice and friendly', you know, the bs John Wayne version of the American Old West, which is not total, but bullshit in many respects.

  • @davidtremaine8076
    @davidtremaine8076 16 дней назад

    Thanks for this video. I enjoyed it very much. This is one of my favorite movies. Sergio Leone was a great director and I think he was right to vote down a sequel to The GBU. There are enough bad sequels and remakes of old classics already.

  • @johnschaefer2238
    @johnschaefer2238 Год назад +4

    In November of 1977 having watched TGTB&TU on TV I had a t-shirt made up of the Arch Stanton grave marker. I wore it first chance I had to my classes at Nassau Community College on Long Island. Had 2 professors and about 5 or 6 fellow classmates remark that they loved the shirt. Never thought I’d get that reaction but just goes to show how popular that film was in 1977 and today!

  • @joseluisparrenomartinez6545
    @joseluisparrenomartinez6545 Год назад

    Excellent video!!! Congratulations!! Regards from Barcelona.

  • @yabbadabbadoo8225
    @yabbadabbadoo8225 Год назад +7

    You'd think having seen this flick at age 12 in 1970 it would become a bit droll 53 years later?
    Not so, as I've aged I've looked deeper into the performances and script. It really is a master piece to this very day.

    • @paulcunningham9081
      @paulcunningham9081 Год назад +1

      I am 66 now and I think exactly like you do about it. :-)

  • @84imreplica
    @84imreplica Год назад +5

    The Good, The Bad, & The Ugly is my all time favourite movie, and I agree that Wallach stole the show. I've lost count the number of times I've watch this movie over the years.