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For a Few Dollars More

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movie runtime: 02:12:08

For a Few Dollars More

Comments

I forgot how great this movie is, the GBU kinda overshadows it which is undeserved.

Jobbe Smit

Sadly, Lee Van Cleef and Yul Brynner never collaborated. 16:05 As was previously mentioned, this is the legendary and oft-entertaining Klaus Kinski.

Happy Hanukkah

5:22 Roughly speaking: "A longer barrel increases bullet velocity because the expanding gas from the propellant accelerates the bullet for a longer period, and it also improves bullet stability by allowing more time for the rifling to spin the projectile." Which is why rifles are better at shooting than handguns. If you're going to be involved in an open-air gunfight, you'd be an idiot not to choose a rifle. You can certainly lengthen a handgun's barrel. That said, the more you lengthen it, the more you sacrifice a handgun's main advantages related to its smaller size. As to that top handgun, I believe that the technical explanation for it is that "it looks kewl!"

Happy Hanukkah

When is Meet Joe Black

nate coleman

Thumbnail is perfect.

REDR58

10000000000000000%

SpankTheMonk

More support here for 'Once Upon a Time in the West'.

Peter Dillard

Despite "The Good, the Bad and the Ugly" receiving the most accolades, I believe this is the best of the Sergio Leone films with Clint. Great plot, great dialog, great acting, humor, pathos, and pacing. I think it exceeds GBU on all counts. It also really showcases Lee Van Cleef as a great actor - it's the best role of his career.

prunyan prunyan

Great watching with you both. Oh if you like this and you do, the two greatest westerns of all time, esp from this era are Once Upon a Time in the West from 1968 with Charles Bronson and the great Henry Fonda and The Good, the Bad and the Ugly from 1966 with Clint Eastwood again with Lee Van Cleef. These two films are the greatest westerns of all time.

Lana Gorgeous

Thumbnail(s) on point 🙌

SpankTheMonk

I always got a kick of how Gian Maria Volonté played both Ramón and Indio 🤣

Arthur 'Two Sheds' Jackson

Sheriff's in the "old west" / "wild west" were and still are today in America, elected officials. And today that's why they have different jurisdictions to police forces, as police forces tend to be city specific where as Sheriff's are county specific. If for example you have a county with two cities, those cities could have their own separate police forces, as well as the county having a sheriff's department. Those police forces could only legally operate within city limits for their specific city, whereas the sheriff's department could operate anywhere in the county. Though with them all being law enforcement, they are willing to work together in a lot of instances.

Anthony

This movie was filmed with NO dialogue- all the speaking was added in post-production so that local languages could be dubbed in for Italian, broader European, and US distribution

Actuarial Lurker

Great answer- see my post above for other comments about frontier towns being more crime ridden due to mining, men and cash

Actuarial Lurker

To answer George's questions: 1) the Old West period only really ran from the end of the US Civil War in 1865 to around 1895-1900- so was ONE to TWO generations if one considers these to be about 15-20 years long. 2) MOST towns DID have a saloon/inn or several to accommodate people traveling overnight from their relatively local farms and ranches to sell goods and get the products on railroads and water transportation. There WOULD be a business district to buy goods, furniture, a butcher, baker, a farrier (horse shoe guy) 3) There was an interest in maintaining law and order since crime is bad for business and almost the whole economy was so tied to the land. 4) Supposedly the higher crime towns were those in mining areas where there were gold or silver "rushes" since these were boom towns, with mostly single men with few skills looking to get rich quick, and hence lots of quick wealth and cash, inflated prices of staple goods, alcohol, gambling and prostitution as the main diversions.....So these Western movies supposedly were more reflective of frontier mining towns and NOT places with settlements of families with women and kids and small business people like butchers, bakers etc. Larger towns had large law enforcement presences and people were FORCED to surrender their weapons while in town and only allowed to brandish them at home or on the road home for protection

Actuarial Lurker

George & Simone write a modern bounty hunter hunter screenplay?

ShoNuff3000

They allowed all the actors to speak there own languages, so there would be scenes people are speaking 4 or 5 different languages and no one could understand each other

Matt88g

Clint Eastwood's character is named "Manco" in this film. That's Spanish for "one handed", and if you notice he does everything except shooting his gun with just his left hand. Lighting his cigar, dealing the cards, etc. His right hand is always free so he can use it to draw and shoot his pistol. To answer some questions you had: Bank robberies were never as common as portrayed in film, but they were still more common in the past than you'd expect. Because of the limited communication/travel between areas, if the robber could escape the immediate pursuit in the surrounding area they pretty much just got away with it. This meant successful robbers could do it again and again. Banks were also more tempting targets than they are now because of the deposit reserve system. it used to be that banks needed to PHYSICALLY have all of the money that was deposited by their customers. So if a bank had $1 million in deposits, there was usually close to $1 million actually on the premises (I think the one bank Mortimer visits says they have a $500,000 reserve). Whereas now, so much is electronic or stored 'on credit' that most 'small town' banks don't have vaults filled with cash. They'll have enough for their expected daily use, but they expect you to write a check for $10,000 instead of asking for a bag full of bills. In most jurisdictions in the USA, "Sheriff" is an elected official on the COUNTY level. In 'the west', most areas were so sparsely populated that the county government was the only government around, hence why sheriffs are the default law enforcement in most westerns. Followed by the US Marshals, which are a FEDERAL service and also had authority over large swathes of 'the west'.

JBK405

When the watch tune goes full pipe organ, CHILLS.

JGoss

The watch chimes is my ringtune for so long, I never changed it.

Awesome80s

You need to eventually watch "The Mercenary" (1968) 😆

Arthur 'Two Sheds' Jackson

it is pretty good, isn't it?

Hans Czajkowski Jørgensen

My favorite part of the Man with No Name trilogy is that it is not really a trilogy, and he has a name in each of them.

Kyle B

This is my personal favorite of the three films.

Matthew Richson

Queen of the damned (Ann Rice Vampire) Repo the Genetic Opera (Gothic Musical) God Bless America (funny thought provoking, better than falling down) 10 Thing I hate about you (Obvious, said you guys where going to) I now pronounce you chuck and larry (death by laughter) Animatrix (Really cool animated sci-fi) A.I. Artificial Intelligence (Cool and sad Sci-fi) IQ (Awesome Romcom) Mighty Ducks (Feel good sports comedy) A score to settle (Good Nicolas Cage Action) Real Steel (Feel good family action comedy)

Morion Williams


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