Analyzing Evil: El Indio From For A Few Dollars More
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- Опубликовано: 26 июн 2024
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Hello everyone and welcome to the one hundred seventy-seventh episode of Analyzing Evil! Our topic for this video is El Indio from For A Few Dollars More I hope you enjoy, and thanks for watching. If you have any feedback or questions feel free to let me know below!
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#western #evil #villain - Развлечения
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you didn't do the thing where the character talks at the same time as your "hello everyone" :(
You always make My day vile! You're the Best ❤❤❤❤
Analyzing Evil; Kazuya Mishima from Tekken
Analyzing Evil; Zona From Z nation
Another raycon plug, great. See i bought my mom those ear buds an when people reccomended them they dont think about the dissonance between the older generation and newer technologies. She said she didnt get it, called me a f*ggot too. So im feeling pretty burnt on this whole deal and theres nothing about returns
For a Few Dollars More is a pretty underrated movie in the western genre, being sadly overshadowed by the other two, much more popular Dollar Trilogy entries.
A lot of the Spaghetti Western fans prefer For a Few Dollars More over The Good the Bad and the Ugly which got more public appraise.
They are both different movies though, while Few Dollars feels like a more personal darker story, The Good is an grand adventure movie through and through, why it's wider appeal.
It is easily my favorite. The first Dollar felt a bit too close to Yojimbo in its story structure to not feel derivative and the The Good, Bad and Ugly while really good just doesn't have the same emotional force as this one does. And it's all thanks to El Indio + the Colonel's additions alongside Clint Eastwood just making a trio that was unforgettable for me.
I can't believe that, I fucking love for a few dollars more, glad to see its getting at least a little more love in the comments
Few Dollars More is great imo, far better than it's predecessor imo.
The first movie is good but in the end it is just a Western remake of a Yojimbo. Good Bad And Ugly is a great film too BUT I think I do also like the second movie in the series the best.
gian maria volonté's performance as indio was so great, deep and magnetic. even more impressive when you find out he really didn't care for movies like for a few dollars more and mainly took the role for a payday like with fistful of dollars and it became his most recognized performance of all
A few dollars more is underrated imo. The showdown with Mortimer and El Indio is amazing
yeah the climax with the lockets was 🔥
The way Morricone uses the watch chimes to fade into the final duel theme is amazing.
Best movie finale ever.
to prison guard he hasn't killed: I'm letting you live, hero. That way you can tell everyone what takes place here.-El Indio
It's pretty crazy how much Sergio Leone owes Spain when it comes to making his films. For those who don't know, Franco was a big fan of westerns and gladly helped Leone make his Dollar trilogy. For example, the cemetery thatappears at the end of "The Good, the Bad, the Ugly" was built by the Spanish army.
That is very interesting because Leone's politics couldn't be further from Franco's. Leone was more of a leftist.
@@Loner-Wolf
I'm surprised that one half of the dictatorial duo that controlled the Iberian Peninsula lent a hand to the production of one of the most iconic motion pictures of all time.
I said duo because there were two separate leaders around this time that each ruled a country at the geographically left in free Western Europe without being formally elected and instead acquired and held onto their positions through unchecked aggression.
There was Franco who ruled over Spain.
Then there was Salazar who ruled over Portugal.
I think due to the incompetence of the Spanish army they had to build TWO bridges because they accidentally blew up the first one while cameras weren’t rolling.
@@MaximusR93something like that, they did had to blow it up twice, so had to rebuild it. The explosion was too heavy though and you can actually see a piece of wood almost hitting either Tuco or Eastwood
@@Loner-WolfProbably dealt with it cause he let him make his stuff.
Personally "For a Few Dollars More" is my favorite of the three. Its my favorite finale fight too. Thanks for covering Indio! Hes an underrated villain.
My fave also
My fave as well!!
Lets not forget the fact that the woman who shot herself couldve just as easily have killied indigo but she didnt. she instead chose death over taking revenge and revenge is the brutality that indigo was used to. For her to kill herself to join her husband might be the only act of true love indigo has never experienced and it would be something he would never have for himself. Its actually quite poetic if you think about it, first time I saw it I thought it was a beautifull backstory. It makes sense that it would disturb him so much aswell
You keep saying Indigo, it’s Indio
That's certainly what really got to him... imagine the "love of your life" choosing death over being with you 💀
@@blackflagsnroses6013 autocorrect, the bane of many a comment.
@@blackflagsnroses6013thats hilarious I almost dont want to change it. To be fair the color “indigo” is also pretty evil 😂
This is the correct analysis of Indio, The woman opts to kill herself and follow her love over killing him. Its a choice that haunts the psychopaths thoughts forever. Sadly lost on many.
Seriously underrated villain, this one. Quite frankly, he and the Colonel absolutely elevated A Few Dollars More over Good, Bad and the Ugly. The emotional impact is just so much more potent, together with the cinematography and the music.
Making one of the protagonists family to the victim El Indio “loved” certainly gives it a more personal punch dont it?
@@stingerjohnny9951 Definitely was great to see Van Cleef have a more stoic role, rather than his usually more villainous ones, and frankly I feel he nailed it with the expressions of sadness or thoughtfulness whenever his thoughts go to said family throughout the movie. But also El Indio's actor, who while no doubt being monstrous in his own right, was always portrayed by the actor with a great deal of conflicting humanity as well. As if he felt great sorrow in his more personal private moments over what he felt 'driven' to do, but nonetheless continuing on his rampage all until the very end, when he finally realizes that his run was about to end in a very brutal fashion.
For a Few Dollars More is my hands down favorite of the trilogy. Unlike Fistful, a brilliant reimagining of Yojimbo, it's telling its own unique story, and Lee Van Cleef gets a great opportunity to play against type, but still somehow fits the mold of the Man in Black, only now instead of the perpetrator of evil, he's a savvy, charming, but dark and violent avenger.
Those men are a lot better than mine with a gun. So we'll let all of them get mixed up in a gun battle. But that won't really matter to me. Or you. Because we'll be far away, right? And we'll have all the money.- El indio. Such an amazing line befiting the best villain of the trilogy
Always remember that chime from that timepiece.
I was waiting for this. H is my favorite movie villain of all time. His introduction scene is all you need. His piercing green eyes , crazy laugh and his pocket watch music makes him a horror villain in a western movie.
Probably the most overlooked villain from the trilogy, but still one of the best westerns of all time.
Which is strange considering the actor played the villain in two of the three pictures.
"Indio" is a masterclass on how to create a great tragic villain. We are shown just enough of his backstory to understand how it is tragic, but his performance when it's all coming back to him is subdued and quiet. The audience is never manipulated in an attempt to make us see things his way (because he is evil to the core and the tragedy of his actions stems directly from that) we are just shown what happened and how even such an evil man would be shaken by it for the rest of his life.
Even though it troubles him so much, he never takes accountability for what he did, not even before the Colonel, because even in his wickedness, he is smart enough to know that what he did is unforgivable and he deserves what's coming to him (I'm not saying that he wanted to lose the final confrontation, but having all of this in his mind is what made him lose in the end)
The one thing i love about this villain is his obbesion with that music watch, always seeming to play it, the one consitent fact to his insanity, defiantly something that ingrain this villain to my mind.
El indio inedo is a really interesting villain. In my opinion is strange sense of duty to his cruelness. In the way he acts is like a sympathetic loss. Even though he is a monster, he’s my favorite villains, right next to Angel Eyes.
Some suggestions:
- Analyzing Evil: Park Yeon-jin from The Glory
- Analyzing Evil: Thor "The Swede" Gundersen from Hell on Wheels
-Analyzing Evil: Frank from Once Upon a Time in the West
Analyzing Evil: Ghidorah, from 'Godzilla: King Of The Monsters'
The swede definitely!
Yes, Frank from Once upon a Time.... Brilliant idea!
In a land ruled by lawlessness is the birth place of many villains and El Indio is one of them within the western genre.
I honestly think A Few Dollars More is one of the best westerns ever made. Indio is such a disturbing villain. Awesome video
this movie is my favorite in the trilogy. it is the most underrated but overall I think it is Indio who makes this movie special. For a Few Dollars More makes all the characters have much deeper meaning than the other two in my opinion.
El Indio is basically what would happen if you took the Joker, and put him in a Wild West setting. He’s a deranged, sadistic, sociopath madman who sows chaos and destruction wherever he goes.
No, El Indio is not like the Joker. The Joker is mentally villain who lost his identity, commits different acts and chaos for no reason but to get attention from the only person he cares about; Batman. El Indio is criminal who does what he wants along as it fills his needs or protects him. Their similarities are that they both lost themselves somewhere in their life, are feared and are crazy, but they are totally different characters.
@@VVguy1or maybe that’s just his opinion from what he observed from the character in the film.
This. Indio was really groundbreaking for movie villains back then. He was not motivated by money or beefs with the law he was just unhinged and chaotic, a total contrast to Groggy who was more like a classic western villain
Oh my goodness, one of the best villains next to Lee Van Cliff
On the topic of Sergio Leone movies, you've got to do Frank from Once Upon a Time in the West. My personal favorite Leone villain, if only for Henry Fonda's acting.
Brilliant choice for a villain! I saw A Few Dollars More recently, and El Indio and his portrayal was one of the highlights for me
The Man With No Name Trilogy are my Fvorite films since I was a child. Indio is such a forgitten villain, and such an excellent one. Well done, btw! You gave me new appreciation for a film I've seen a million times. Cheers!
Some suggestions:
- Analyzing Evil: Professor James Moriarty from Guy Ritchie's Sherlock Holmes series.
- Analyzing Evil: Sir Crocodile from One Piece.
- Analyzing Evil: Cell from Dragon Ball Z.
DBZ is a must imo but Frieza seems like the best first pick. Ideally we'd get videos for Frieza, Cell, and Majin Buu
A video on the characters and themes from Memento would be very interesting to see.
Some villains you could analyze in a future video:
-John Du Pont, from Foxcatcher
-The Major, from Hellsing
-Shogo Makishima, from Psycho Pass
-Jadis, the White Witch, from Narnia
The world of Hellsing would be a fun one, there's so much evil in that universe even beyond the Major
@@N_o196 Incognito from 'Hellsing' has some strange similarities to Elon Musk.
Shogo is a fantastic subject.
Love this trilogy.
My suggestion would be Shogo Makishima from Psycho-Pass.
Thanks for covering this one, VileEye! That musical locket still makes me feel uneasy, so ominous and threatening…I love it! If I may please make a few suggestions:
- The Northman(2022) overall, bc even the hero commits some pretty brutal acts
- Batiatus, Glaber, Crassus, Lucretia, and/or Illythia from Spartacus(2010-2013), any one of them will do
- Guy De Lusignan and Reynald De Chatillion from Kingdom Of Heaven(2005)
- Mason Verger from Hannibal(2001)
Please, thanks, and keep up the awesome work!
Future villains to analyze: Helmut Zemo, Khan Noonien Singh, Professor Moriarty, Charles Augustus Magnussen and Herr Starr
Fantastic video, El Indio is one of those villains that you despise yet still end up pitying. I struggle to think of any other villain that shares that with him. Also, I recommend doing a video on Tai Lung from Kung Fu Panda. Tai Lung is a perfect example of how a parental figure’s expectations and pride could lead their child down a dark path.
That watch chime is so haunting and epic
Another great film and another great video! I’d love to see one done on either or both Nina Meyers from “24” and Jenny Schecter from “The L Word.” They’re both two of my favorite villains who’s actions definitely fit into the category of evil.
Next video: Shang Tsung from Mortal Kombat or Sephiroth from FF7. You could also do Agent 47 from Hitman or Richard Kuklinski from The Iceman
This is one of my favorite movies- the whole "trilogy" is my favorite! So awesome that you did a video on him! Also, I'm a huge fan!
I remember watching the trilogy as a kid with my dad and For A Few Dollars More was by far my favourite due to the final showdown between El Indio and the Colonel. Just such a great movie
One day I’d kill to see an Analyzing evil on Aku from Samurai Jack
I can never just watch any one movie from the Dollar trilogy I always gotta watch a 3 in a day. Its just that good.
Cody Jarrett from White Heat would be a great character analysis video
So glad you covered this, one of my favourite films. Terribly underrated
Analyzing Evil: Rico from paid in full.
As a lover of westerns i always found the villains to be a little bit generic: ruthless gunman almost as fast as the hero or rich greedy cattle baron, but el Indio is so different, so vicious so unpredictible, you can never know when he is going to crack a joke or gun down the first guy that comes across him.
Some suggestions for future videos:
Catherine Trammell-Basic Instinct
Archibald Cunningham- Rob Roy
Jean D Carrouges and Jacques Le Gris-The Last Duel
"And Then There Were None" characters Agatha Christie novel with the same title
ANALYSISING EVIL TIGHTEN FROM MEGAMIND
Much respect for covering this !
truly one of the most intriguing and haunting villains I've seen on screen... Great video as always!
Indio was a fascinating character. His obsession, insanity, and sadism made for a likeable antagonist. For one of your future videos, I recommend analyzing Frank Underwood from House of Cards or Thomas Ripley from Ripley (show).
Mr Vile Eye, I was thinking of the possibility you make videos about evil historical figures, I really think it could make the channel get a new and interesting approach (along with the fictional characters of course). Keep up the content! Love kt❤
Some villains you could analyse in a future video:
Black Jack Randall from outlander
Clay Morrow from sons of anarchy
Gemma teller from sons of anarchy
Shane Vendrell from the shield
Fuches from barry
Jax teller from sons of anarchy
Errol Childress/Tuttle family from True detective (season 1)
Whiterose from Mr robot
Lex Luthor from the DCAU
Lelouch vi britannia from Code geass
Lucas Hood from Banshee
Bojack horseman from *Bojack horseman*
Meruem hunterxhunter
Kai proctor from Banshee
Emperor Belos from the owl house
Marco Inaros from The expanse
Megatron from transformers prime
The Witness from 12 monkeys (show)
Darkseid from DCAU
Esther from Orphan
King candy from Wreck it Ralph
Lotso from Toy Story
V. M. Varga From Fargo season 3
Indio and the whole gang were superb castings . Fabulous movie .
I'd love to see you cover Heihachi or Kazuya Mishima from Tekken. Watching their battles is like Succession on the scale of a Fast and The Furious movie.
For a few dollars more is one of my favorite films of all time. Here are some more suggestions:
Brandon and Phillip/Rupert Cadell’s Ideals- Alfred Hitchcock’s “Rope”
Mother Miranda and the four lords Heisenberg, Dmitriscu, Moreau and Beneviento - Resident Evil Village
Conal Cochran - Halloween 3 Season of the Witch
Krug Stillo - The Last House on the Left (1972)
Herbert West - Reanimator
Hyman Roth - The Godfather Part II
David Kleinfeld - Carlitos’s Way
Stuart Richards - Cruising
Sheriff Will Teasle - First Blood
John Kreese and Terry Silver- The Karate Kid/Cobra Kai Franchise
The Tall Man- Phantasm
My most interesting kind of villain, one that truly understands his evil but is now trapped by the life he built - still playing out the same old terrors but now fully aware.
You're right. He became Macbeth.
Analyzing Evil: Capt Rhodes from George A Romero's Day of the Dead
THIS IS PERFECT TIMING
El Indio is one of the most underrated villains of all time
Analyzing Evil: The Drake from Hobo with a Shotgun.
He knew that she found him so disgusting, that rather than killing him, she killed herself.
Villains / Evil Characters you should analyze in a future video (game villain suggestions, feel like we could use more of them)
- Jacket (Hotline Miami 1)
- Martin Walker (Spec Ops : The Line)
- The Master (Fallout 1)
- Darth Kreia (KOTOR)
- Big Smoke (GTA San Andreas)
- Joseph Seed (Far Cry 5)
heavy on the joseph seed i just wrote this in someone else’s comment lmao
We're at Spaghetti Western stories again boys!!
Only matter of time until we come to *Loco of the Great Silence 1968, played by Klaus Kinski*
The same snowy western that inspired Tarantino's the Hateful Eight
Some suggestions
Analyzing Evil: Rebecca "Revy" Lee from Black Lagoon
Analyzing Evil: Red Ribbon Army from DBZ
Analyzing Evil: Dr. Gero from DBZ
Analyzing Evil: The Homunculis from Full Metal Alchemist
Analyzing Evil: Naraku from Inuyasha
Analyzing Evil: Jafar from Aladdin
Analyzing Evil: Makoto Shishio from Ruroni Kenshin
Analyzing Evil: Liquid Snake from Metal Gear Solid
Analyzing Evil: Nino Brown from New Jack City
Analyzing Evil: Charles Lee Ray from Child's Play franchise
Great upload, i love the "man with no name" trilogy
There's not enough material on JP or shadowlao for a full video
@@jamesjoe1690
Okay scratch those off the list then
5th request to do Mistborn with The Lord Ruler and Kelsier (Tryannical Utilitarian vs. A Charming Rebellious Sociopath)
Also, this was a great video!
Suggestions:
Analyzing Evil: Zaheer from The Legend of Korra
Analyzing Evil: The US Government as a whole and the New Asia Resistance from The Creator
Analyzing Evil: Paul Atreides from Dune
Analyzing Evil: Solomon Lane from Mission Impossible
Analyzing Evil: Vecna and the Mind Flayer from Stranger Things
Analyzing Evil: Baylan Skoll from Ahsoka
Analyzing Evil: Jadis, the White Witch from The Chronicles of Narnia
Analyzing Evil: Cersei Lannister from Game of Thrones
Analyzing Evil: Omni-Man and the Viltrumite Empire from Invincible
Analyzing Evil: Grand Admiral Thrawn from Star Wars
Analyzing Evil: Admiral Lewis Strauss from Oppenheimer
Analyzing Evil: Nate Jacobs from Euphoria
Analyzing Evil: Philip Wittebane/Emperor Belos from The Owl House
Heck yeah! One of my personal favorite westerns ever and my favorite character from that movie. Could a potential one be on Professor James Moriarty from Sherlock Holmes?
You have to be crazy to be a hard criminal like this character.
Given the year the film was made and the genre Indio was a very complex villian. His background was indepth and not normally shown in a film of the day.
Analysing Evil : Warhammer 40k
Analysing Evil : Godzilla
Analysing Evil : The Cigarette Smokin Man from the X-Files
Analysing Evil : BOB from Twin Peaks
Analysing Evil : Mr C from Twin Peaks
Analysing Evil : Judy from Twin Peaks
Analysing Evil : Chuck from Supernatural
And why not Analysing Evil : Roman Reigns the Wrestler
Joe goldberg
Booman lames more like
Hello, have you ever thought of analizing the hateful eight? I thought it could be a great video idea
Analyzing Evil suggestions
Horde Prime from She-Ra and The Princesses of Power.
The World of Stray
Emperor Belos from The Owl House
Bowser from Mario
Ridley from Metroid
Analyzing Evil: Savathûn from Destiny
Excellent video. It's honestly the one I have only seen bits and pieces of the film. I really need to watch this one.
If I may leave a suggestion:
Arthur Jarrett (White Heat)
The Lord Commander (Final Space)
A great character and definitely a better performance than the previous movies antagonist Ramon (played by the same actor).
I’m curious on why did you start on the 2nd film? Guess I’ll find out in the video
Edit: nevermind I found out lol.
Gian Maria Volonté was one of the greatest Italian actor, perhaps one of the best in the whole world back then ❤
It would be interesting to see an episode for Lancaster Dodd from The Master.
I'm so glad he did For A Few Dollars More. That's my favorite Clint Eastwood movie of all time and was the first Clint Eastwood movie I ever saw as a kid, as well as the first western I ever saw too. Hope he also does A Fistful of Dollars too.
One of my favorite villains. Thank you.
El Indio is my favorite villain of the trilogy
His prison break is one of the greatest depictions of stealth I’ve seen in any movie:3
For a Few Dollars More is the under the radar offering of the Dollars trilogy. I liked it more upon viewing it later than I did the first time watching it. And I agree El Indio is the most interesting villain of the trilogy.
A villain I suggest you cover is Khan Noonien Singh from Star Trek. Ricardo Moltaban’s portrayal was iconic.
Been a huge fan for a while and these videos are fantastic. Some of your subjects are familiar to me and even for the ones that aren't, they are still fascinating. So well explained with nice editing that really drives home your analysis.
"This train'll stop at tumcumcari"
Can’t wait for more classical movies’ villains analysis from this channel!
Analyzing evil: RattleSnake Jake from Rango
Mark from 1960's Peeping Tom.
Gotta say it's about time somebody made an analysis video on El Indio (or at the very least I haven't come across any). Always thought he was super underrated villain
Feels weird to hear her referred to as "his love" this many times. He was feeling lust not love IMHO
James Keziah Delaney from the BBC series called Taboo
My Favorite Western Villain!
I Know. I'm Sure You Hate Me Just Enough. - El Indio
I quite like how Italiano westerns often make their lead characters simultaneously protagonists and antagonists. Bullet For the General is another good example of these types of characters, which Gian Maria Volonte headlines, no less. It's one of my favorite Volonte roles, funny yet tragic, uneducated yet clever, compassionate yet passionately violent.
Future Villian idea: Frieza the Galactic Emperor from Dragon Ball Z
We’d love an episode on Franklin Saint!
Do Frank from “Once Upon a Time in the West” next!
If you're doing Westerns, Sam Peckinpah's The Wild Bunch has an amazing cast of brilliantly complex villains very much worthy of analysis.
Definitely For A Few Dollars More is my favorite out of the trilogy yhe story, acting, and whole setup is top notch and I don't consider myself a fan of westerns by any means.
Indio is my favorite villain for sure as he is not only a conning mastermind but you really do see the intensity in his eyes, the madness in his laughter and fake crying, but the charisma in even how he sets his apart from everyone else. Go back and watch those scenes when his band wears their hats he doesn't have one, when they are chilled and relaxed he has his coat on, when they are just in shirts he has a wool vest, during the movies final he is in all black with a very nice black shirt with red trim, and finally as everyone is a mix both armed and unarmed getting ready for his plan he is wearing nothing but white and gives his speech in a preachers pulpit. No matter the moment you can always pick El Indio out a crowd the mark of a true villain.
an analyzing evil of raymond from spoorloos would be incredible. one of the most alien yet almost understandable motivations for a serial killer ive ever heard of
I'm old enough to have watched this first on vhs- so, on the vhs edition, when he has his gang beat up Eastwood and Van Cleef, the DVD edition cuts early, but on the vhs copy, the scene is extended and suddenly Volonte becomes outraged at what his gang is doing and makes them stop abruptly. I'm sure it's on RUclips, and makes him even more crazier, showing his madness
A few dollars more is one of those classics of spaghetti western that really does a great job of going a "good and evil" clash with an A-star cast. I just love how when he firsts challenges the colonel to a gun-draw when the music ends, it assume that he has the upper hand. No one to stop him...until the man with no name keeps it going, and his front falls off, now utterly terrified.
If i may make a suggestion for another villain from these westerns, i go with "Frank" from Once Upon A Time in the West. Seriously, one of Fondas best performances.
Aaand Also either Aizen or Yhwach from Bleach.
Before you do Fistful of Dollars, Seibei and Ushitora from Yojimbo could be interesting to do a video on
Also, Blofeld
Hey VileEye! Definitely recommend V.M. Varga, arguably the best part of Fargo season 3