For a Few Dollars More
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| For a Few Dollars More | |
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For a Few Dollars More American promotional poster |
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| Directed by | Sergio Leone |
| Produced by | Arturo González |
| Written by | Fulvio Montella Sergio Leone Luciano Vincenzoni |
| Starring | Clint Eastwood Lee van Cleef Gian Maria Volontè Klaus Kinski |
| Music by | Ennio Morricone |
| Distributed by | |
| Release date(s) | |
| Running time | 131 min. |
| Language | English |
| Preceded by | A Fistful of Dollars |
| Followed by | The Good, the Bad and the Ugly |
| All Movie Guide profile | |
| IMDb profile | |
For a Few Dollars More (Italian: Per qualche dollaro in più) is a 1965 spaghetti western film directed by Sergio Leone and starring Clint Eastwood, Lee Van Cleef and Gian Maria Volontè. German actor Klaus Kinski also plays a supporting role as a secondary villain. The film was released in the United States in 1967 and is the second part of what is commonly known as the Leone / Eastwood "Dollars" trilogy.
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Eastwood (marketed as the "Man with No Name") and Van Cleef (as Colonel Douglas Mortimer and marketed as "The Man in Black") portray two bounty hunters in pursuit of "El Indio" (Volontè), one of the most wanted fugitives in the western territories, and his gang (one of whom is played by Kinski). Indio is a ruthless, intelligent man addicted to smoking some drug. His drug-induced craziness is emphasized via closeups and flashbacks of the past. Indio has a penchant for duels set to the climactic end of the chiming of his timepiece. After victories in the duels Indio has his henchman hand him the drug in order to relax from the high intensity of these battles.
The film begins with Van Cleef illegally stopping a train in Tucumcari in order to collect a bounty of $1000 on Guy Callaway. Van Cleef's gunslinging is displayed as he easily kills Guy Callaway from long distance. After collecting the bounty he inquires about Red "Baby" Cavanaugh who has a $2000 bounty dead or alive and was last seen in White Rocks. However he is a step behind Eastwood who finds Cavanaugh at a saloon playing 5 card draw poker.
In a memorable scene Eastwood deals himself and Cavanaugh 5 cards each without saying a word, the nervous look on Cavanaugh's face shows his fear of Eastwood's intentions. Cavanaugh draws 3 kings and lays them down assured he had won the hand, when Eastwood simply smiles and shows 3 aces, winning the hand by the slimmest of margins. When Cavanaugh asks Eastwood "I didn't hear what the bet was", Eastwood smiles and calmly says "Your life". Eastwood proceeds to capture Cavanaugh and gun down his 3 henchmen. Eastwood then shoots Cavanaugh who reaches for his pistol.
Indio's primary goal is to rob the Bank of El Paso and its special safe containing one million dollars. After a tremendous display of sharpshooting Van Cleef and Eastwood realize that one of them (Eastwood) must join Indio's gang during the robbery. Van Cleef's character has a personal motive for his actions: his sister, as revealed at the film's end, killed herself while being raped by Indio, after he killed her husband moments before. Eastwood's character is, as in the other "Man with No Name" films, motivated mainly by money, but also by a sense of justice toward those he likes. The film ends in a long duel between Indio and Van Cleef in which Indio's musical chimes work against him as Van Cleef also knows the music from his sister's same pocketwatch and kills him avenging his sister's death and leaving all the money for Eastwood.
After the box-office success of A Fistful of Dollars in Italy, director Sergio Leone and his new producer, Alberto Grimaldi, wanted to begin production of a sequel, but they needed to get Clint Eastwood to agree to star in it. However, Eastwood had not even seen the first movie at this time, and was not ready to do another until he had. So Leone gave him an Italian print (an English version had not yet been made) and Eastwood brought some friends to screen the film with him at the CBS Production Center. The reaction was positive, and Eastwood agreed to do a sequel.
The film was shot in Almería, Spain, with interiors done at Rome's Cinecittà Studios.
The production designer, Carlo Simi built the town of "El Paso" in the Almería desert: it still exists, as a tourist attraction. The town of Agua Caliente, where Indio and his gang flee after the bank robbery, is Albaricoces, a small "pueblo blanco" on the Nijar plain.
| Actor | Role |
|---|---|
| Clint Eastwood | The Man With No Name |
| Lee Van Cleef | Col. Douglas Mortimer (mentioned in the tagline as "The Man in Black") |
| Gian Maria Volontè | El Indio |
| Mara Krupp | Mary |
| Luigi Pistilli | Groggy |
| Klaus Kinski | Wild |
| Joseph Egger | Old Prophet |
| Panos Papadopulos | Sancho Perez |
| Benito Stefanelli | Luke |
| Roberto Camardiel | Station clerk |
| Aldo Sambrell | Cuccillo |
| Luis Rodríguez | Gangmember |
| Tomás Blanco | Santa Cruz Telegrapher |
| Lorenzo Robledo | Tomaso |
| Sergio Mendizábal | Tucumcari bank manager |
Eastwood's character is said to "go by the name of 'Monco'".[1] "Monco" is a slang term meaning "maimed" or "disfigured". While Eastwood's character is not maimed, he performs nearly all actions using only his left hand, to leave free his right hand, with which he draws. His behaviour thus bears a joking resemblance to that of a one-armed man.
El Indio (Spanish for "The Indian") played by Gian Maria Volontè is a ruthless character, considered by the authorities in the film to be one of the worst criminals of the times; according to a bank official "Not even Indio would dare to rob that one." In a flashback sequence it is revealed that he shot his friend and then raped his friend's lover. The girl shot herself in the process. The girl was the sister of Van Cleef's character. El Indio smokes what appears to be cannabis to ease the intensity of the memory. In the film El Indio has a gang of 14 men who rob the bank in El Paso.
| This article or section may contain original research or unverified claims. Please improve the article by adding references. See the talk page for details. (September 2007) |
Colonel Douglas Mortimer is a rival bounty hunter, though he is much older than Eastwood's character. Clint Eastwood's character travels to visit a man known as "The Prophet" early in the movie to find out all he can about this rival bounty killer. "The Prophet" explains Colonel Douglas Mortimer to have "once been a great soldier. Now he's reduced to being a bounty killer like you." At the bank in Tucumcari, Mortimer explains to a bank manager he was from the Carolinas. The bank manager is encouraged by Mortimer's presence, giving the indication Mortimer has a large amount of money elsewhere which the bank of Tucumcari would be glad to accept. Unlike Monco, Clint Eastwood's character, Mortimer's motivation throughout the movie is not the bounty over El Indio and his gang, but vengeance for Indio's rape of Mortimer's sister many years before, who killed herself while being raped by Indio. During an encounter with El Indio in the movie, Mortimer exclaims, "This is Colonel Mortimer, Douglas Mortimer...does the name mean anything to you?" Having seen the death of Indio, Mortimer leaves all of the bounty to be collected by Monco, Eastwood's character, at the end of the movie. Mortimer says to Monco, after being questioned by Monco about the bounty, "It's all for you, I think you deserve it." Mortimer rides off alone at the end, as his purposes were then completed.
- In the video-game Metal Gear Solid 3: Snake Eater, Revolver Ocelot, a character based on Lee Van Cleef, fixes a stock to his Single Action Army revolver during the game's climactic chase scene. Cleef's character used a stock-affixed Single Action Army in this film as well.
- In the Terry Pratchett novel Men at Arms, the character of Captain Samuel Vimes is to be presented with a pocket watch as a retirement gift. In the climactic scene where Vimes confronts the main villain of the story, Corporal Carrot uses the musical chime of the watch to prevent Vimes from killing the villain. Pratchett has confirmed that it is supposed to be the same chime as the pocket watch in For a Few Dollars More.
- In the Japanese animated series Noir, a musical pocket watch features prominently throughout the story, as it links the main characters to each other and to the Illuminati-like group "Les Soldats." Later episodes reveal that the pocket watch belonged to the father of one of the assassins, who was a Soldat himself before he and his family were murdered on the orders of a Soldat renegade. In the second to last episode, the watch's tune begins playing for just long enough to prevent one of the Noir candidates from killing another, setting up a three-way standoff highly reminiscent of the final fight between Monco, Cleef and Indio.
- In the Disney film Pirates of the Caribbean: At World's End, the villain Davy Jones (played by Bill Nighy) and his former lover Tia Dalma (Naomie Harris) have matching pocket watches. One scene, where Tia Dalma's pocket watch stops playing and Jones' continues, is taken directly from the final duel of the movie. Director Gore Verbinski is an acknowledged fan of Leone, so this is likely a deliberate homage.
- In the 1990 Film, Lock Stock and Two Smoking Barrels, a chime plays as "Harry the Hatchet" and one of the Northern Monkeys have a shoot out ending up in both of them dying.
- ^ After killing the man at the start of the film, Mortimer inquires about another outlaw and the sheriff tells him that another bounty hunter has made the same inquiry. This bounty hunter is called Monco (presumably Eastwood).
- For a Few Dollars More at the Internet Movie Database
- For a Few Dollars More at the Spaghetti Western Database
- For a Few Dollars More at Rotten Tomatoes
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| Il Colosso di Rodi • A Fistful of Dollars • For a Few Dollars More • The Good, the Bad and the Ugly • Once Upon a Time in the West • A Fistful of Dynamite • Once Upon a Time in America |
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