
The Good, the Bad and the Ugly is a 1966 Italian epic spaghetti Western directed by Sergio Leone, starring Clint Eastwood, Lee Van Cleef and Eli Wallach in the title roles. The screenplay was written by Age & Scarpelli, Luciano Vincenzoni and Leone, based on a story by Vincenzoni and Leone. Director of photography Tonino Delli Colli was responsible for the film’s sweeping widescreen cinematography and Ennio Morricone composed the famous film score. It is the third film in the Dollars trilogy following A Fistful of Dollars (1964) and For a Few Dollars More (1965). The plot centers around three gunslingers competing to find a fortune in buried Confederate gold amid the violent chaos of gunfights, hangings, Civil War battles, and prison camps.
Opening on December 23, 1966 in Italy and in the USA on December 29, 1967, the film grossed $6.1 million, but was criticized for its depiction of violence. Leone explains that “the killings in my films are exaggerated because I wanted to make a tongue-in-cheek satire on run-of-the-mill westerns… The west was made by violent, uncomplicated men, and it is this strength and simplicity that I try to recapture in my pictures.” To this day, Leone’s effort to reinvigorate the timeworn Western is widely acknowledged: The Good, the Bad and the Ugly has been described as European cinema’s best representative of the Western genre film, and Quentin Tarantino has called it “the best-directed film of all time.”
The film tells the story of three men who pursue, often at the expense of others, information about the location of a buried treasure of coins. The first character introduced in the movie is Tuco Benedicto Pacifico Juan Maria Ramirez (the Ugly) — called Tuco — (Eli Wallach), who has a bounty on his head for numerous crimes. Tuco has a partnership with Blondie (The Good, played by Clint Eastwood) in which the latter turns him in for the reward money which the two then split after Blondie saves Tuco from hanging at the last moment, by shooting the rope then riding off together.
(Note that the name “Blondie” is merely a reference to Clint Eastwood’s character’s hair color; the actual character has no name, and is only referred to as “Blondie” by Tuco.)
Meanwhile, a third character called “Angel Eyes” (Lee Van Cleef, playing the Bad) is shown to be a cold-blooded killer, has learned of a hidden trunk of gold owned by a Confederate soldier named Bill Carson. He sets off to find the gold.
Soon, Blondie grows tired of his relationship with Tuco with the latter’s continual complaining, and leaves Tuco in the desert with no water. Tuco survives the 70-mile trip back to civilization, and is intent on exacting revenge on his former partner. He finds Blondie, and turns the tables by planning to abandon him in the desert. However, before Tuco can complete his torture in the New Mexico desert, a runaway stagecoach full of dead and dying Confederate soldiers appears. Bill Carson, the man with knowledge of the whereabouts of the gold, dying from thirst, persuades Tuco to get him a drink by disclosing the name of the graveyard where the loot is located. As Tuco goes for the water, Carson dies, but not before revealing the name on the grave to Blondie.
Dressed in the uniforms of the dead soldiers, Tuco takes Blondie, near death, to a local Catholic mission run by his brother, Franciscan friar. While Blondie recovers, Tuco and his brother (Luigi Pistilli) confront each other about the mistakes each has made in life. After leaving the mission, the two, still impersonating Confederate soldiers, see a group of soldiers riding in the distance. To Blondie’s distress, Tuco calls out, thinking that the grey uniforms belong to Confederate soldiers. But when they approach, the leader brushes off the dust from his uniform revealing the Union’s blue uniforms. They capture the pair and take them to a Union prison camp.
Angel Eyes has followed the trail of Bill Carson to the prison camp and is posing as a Union Sergeant. Angel Eyes and his colleague Corporal Wallace beat and torture Tuco until he reveals the location of the cemetery. When Angel Eyes learns that only Blondie knows the name, he changes tactics. He proposes a partnership, and accompanied by six other killers, they leave to find the coins. Tuco escapes while being transported from the camp by train, in the process killing Wallace. At the nearest town, Tuco encounters a bounty hunter (Al Mulock) he had wounded at the beginning of the film, who seeks his revenge. Since Tuco does not recognize the bounty hunter he loses time reminding him of their encounter and how he had to practice firing with his off-hand due to the injury he suffered in their previous brash. His vanity proves to be his undoing when Tuco manages to retrieve his gun shooting him and uttering a famous line. Blondie, who is in the same town with Angel Eyes, recognizes the sound of Tuco’s gun, seeks him out, and he and Tuco resume their old partnership. Together they kill Angel Eyes’ gunmen along the main street, but Angel Eyes himself escapes.
Tuco and Blondie stumble on a battle between the Union and the Confederates, fighting for a bridge of questionable strategic value. Since the cemetery is on the other side of the bridge, they decide to destroy it and force the soldiers go somewhere else to fight. While they are setting up the dynamite, Tuco reveals that the cemetery is called SAD HILL and Blondie reveals that the coins are buried in a grave marked by the name of Arch Stanton.
On the other side of the river Tuco deserts Blondie by horseback and finally enters the nearby graveyard.
The Mexican stand off climax at the Sad Hill Cemetery remains one of the most popular scenes in film history.
Tuco frantically searches around the graveyard for the grave of Arch Stanton to the sound of one of Ennio Morricone’s most famous orchestral pieces (”The Ecstasy of Gold“), with brasses and cymbals employed to maxumum effects to render the metallic ring of the treasure he craves for. Eventually Tuco finds it, but before he can begin digging he’s held at gunpoint by Blondie, who in turn is held at gunpoint by Angel Eyes, who has finally caught up to both of them. However, Blondie reveals that Arch Stanton’s grave contains only a decomposing corpse.
Blondie then leads the three of them into an empty patch of land in the middle of the cemetery. He writes the name of the real grave under a stone which he places in the center.
At the conclusion of a three-way shootout, Blondie shoots Angel Eyes and Tuco finds his gun empty, having been unloaded the previous night by Blondie. Blondie then reveals that the real location of the coins is a grave marked “Unknown” right next to Arch Stanton. Blondie forces Tuco to dig up the loot from the grave, then when Tuco finished, he finds himself once again staring down the barrel of Blondie’s gun. Blondie had also tied a noose to a tree branch, and forces Tuco to put his neck in it, while standing on a rickety grave cross. Blondie takes half the coins and rides away while Tuco cries for help and abuses Blondie. In a dramatic twist, Blondie turns around to shoot the rope above Tuco’s head, as he used to do in their times of partnership, freeing him one last time before riding off as Tuco screams in rage.














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