Added: 4 years ago
From: 664FREEDOM
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  • Excellent job on this by 664Freedom. Thanks for doing it. The Good, The Bad & The Ugly is one of my very favorite movies. The Tuco character does steal the show indeed. Reading biographies of Clint, Eli & Lee you get a feeling that this movie had a big impact on their lives. Lee is gone (RIP), Eli was just 96 & Clint just keeps on making great movies.

  • RIP Lee Van Cleef you'll never see a movie like this again... this is dam epic

  • Rock on man. Nothin' like that movie.

    I watch it over and over and over....

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  • magique

    

  • a few seconds in *chews cigar* I already fav'd it

  • The masters left us a classic for generations to enjoy over and over again. They don't make them like this anymore.

  • Great music

  • Still the best tribute vid on utube for this

  • ....spit...."bravo"

  • trop bien!!

  • /watch?v=29kbePYJl78

  • yeahh,, tuco, blondi, and tha bad,,,they dont make movies like this no more,,,,,,,

  • Nobody, other than these 3 great actors could have done justice to this classic masterpiece. RIP Lee Van Cleef

  • Classic Threesome - Van Cleef, Wallach and Eastwood.

  • Brillant!

  • crap they all have curly hair. I was thinking of cutting me like one of them but its impossible!

    

  • que delicia....97coast american in italian brasil....ennio morricone

  • Great video, man. The music is amazing. I love Morricone and Leone.

  • epic vid!

  • The good...The ugly....and the Bad..........Fantastic

  • Thank you!

  • A perfect cocktail. The famous spaghetti westerns of Sergio Leone wouldn`t be the same without actor like Clint Eastwood or without the music of Ennio Morriconne.

  • Indudablemente lo mejor que vi en mi vida son las peliculas de Sergio Leone y la mejor musica que oi en mi vida es la de Ennio Morricone.Gracias y muchas gracias.

  • Who....Who...are you? Brilliant man Sergio..Bravo to you sir.

  • legendary film !! legendary artists !

  • Love Spaggetti westerns, tu

  • Tuco Benedicto Pacífico Juan María Ramírez:)))

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  • The sequence which introduces Lee Van Cleef to this movie is one of my favourite moments not only in this brilliant movie but in cinema history. Ennio's brilliant acoustic guitar score is heard as Van Cleef rides towards his first victim's house during the sundown, which is also the name of the tune. Note the graceful movement of his horse's front legs as it reaches the middle of the screen.  Then, he dismounts, and his face ends up in a huge close up. Simple but so effective!!

  • @MrRoGill Again brillant!

  • this is damn chilling melody playing my spine when I know the movie.. superb!

  • My favorite movie. I kind of wished Van Cleef had more face time in the movie..he was awesome. But it was the character Tuco that stole the movie. The movie was gritty, nasty, and uncomfortable, yet beautiful..the way it's suppose to be. I never get tired of watching this classic.

  • @dalmain77 me neither.. this defines "western" to me

  • Greatest scene ever! i paid homage to it in a modern adaption.

    "The Good The Bad And The Studly"

    check it out on youtube

  • badass

  • 8 people belong to the kind of people who had to dig.

    the tuco character was played exceptionally well

  • Movies will never be the same without Lee Van Cleef, he didn't even had to say a line to make his scenes awesome.

  • Probably the greatest movie scene ever.

  • they all were good

  • Get 7 coffins ready.

  • sto piangendo... troppo bello..

  • awesome soundtrack it captures the scenes beautifully

  • perfect..

  • mi piace italiani occidentale

  • TUCO: when you have to shoot shoot don't talk.

    BLONDIE: are u going to die alone?

    the best 2 lines in the whole movie.

    such an epic movie. the best yet ever made

  • get 7 coffins ready

  • interesting how they had one guitar string slightly off.

  • Get three coffins ready

  • eli wallach 'tuco' is still alive and still acting

  • 'tuco' is still alive and still acting

  • I love Western movies. I grew up on the East coast I came to California to be near old west sites. I've been in Spain as well a s western U.S.. Sergio is a Maestro. the south of Spain looks very much like our American West. He went the distance aspect in making what will be classics. Because they are as realistic. as they could possibly be in scenery, costuming, accoutrements, and so on. Bravo Maestro !!!!!

  • @7levelGI As a kid I was lucky enough to have my folks take me to Mini Hollywood,the location for most of this film :)  I was an 11 year old english lad,but I was walking the streets I already knew so well from this,my alll time fav film,never going to be forgotton,plus I was young enough to get away with walking around outfitted with a pair of those superb spanish made toy six shooters and wearing a poncho :)

  • nice nice nice!!!!!!!!best movie ever!!!!!

  • In 1958 Sergio Leone was an assistant on the epic film Ben Hur, he learned his craft on the set of many films before directing his first movie "The Collosus of Rhodes". Today filmmakers get their training in film school then direct movies without any knowledge of the correct way of making them. That's why you see shaky camera work and lack of continuity in many of today's movies. Shaky camera work IS NOT A TECHNIQUE nor is it an effect. Never used (or rarely & subtly) in the classics.

  • ,,you got that damn right, shaky jittery camera work is suppose to razzle dazzle young inspirational yuppie teenagers who text all day long, I tell you another thing that drives me crazy in the field of movies and video is the bright flashing technique that does not impress me and is getting near 20 years old now.

  • Get 7 coffins ready.

  • Sergio Leone - the greatest director of all time

    Ennio Morricone - the greatest film composer of all time

  • Pure genius, thank you Leone & Morricone, saw this movie when I was a child, still amongst the top 10 films I've ever seen!

  • Wow! What a beautiful midsection! Leone had to do some editing for the duel scene, I suppose. I never heard the full version before...glorious! You know, more than a few people are calling Morricone 'the Mozart of the century' and similar acclaim. To me, that isn't going too far at all. I pray that Ennio lives to be 100, but when he passes away, may one million people attend his funeral and that the government shuts down Italy for at least a day.

  • Lee Van Cleef best villian ever 

  • girati tutti in sicilia stupendo!!!

  • @cimmarock ;

    Sì, questo fatto il film in successo

  • @cimmarock

    informati prima di scrivere minkiate...

  • @xxS1KULOxx la minchiata l'hai detta tu questo film è stato girato tra la sicilia e la sardegna tutti i film della trilogia del dollaro sono stati girati in italia giù la testa invece venne girato in parte in spagna. MIZZICA CHE MINKIONE CHE SEI AH!

  • @cimmarock

    allora wikipedia spara cazzate? o lo vuoi sapere meglio di wikipedia? cazzone.

  • @xxS1KULOxx l'unico cazzone qui sei tu perchè solo gli imbecilli vanno a controllare su wikipedia inquanto la metà delle informazioni sono puttanate poichè chiunque puo aggiungere di tutto, vai da altre parti menteccatto e vedrai che ho ragione io come sempre del resto

  • @cimmarock

    ahah, nn so se mi fai ridere oppure semplicemente compassione. ti saluto, mister "come sempre ho ragione io". ahahha

  • ma de che?...girati in Almeria, Spagna

  • @cimmarock no, girati tutti in spagna

  • @cimmarock mi dispiace rinnegarti ... ma molte scene, compresa quella del cimitero, son girate in spagna.... contralla Wikipedia

  • @cimmarock sicilia??

    le location erano CINECITTA' - SPAGNA - (STATI UNITI per c'era una volta il west)

    VIVA SERGIO LEONE!

  • @cimmarock girati in Spagna , provincia di Almeria...

  • @cimmarock Girati tutti in Spagna stupendo

  • 7 people dig

  • Really, this should be called "Merely a tribute to the legendary Sergio Leone and Ennio Morricone" sadly!

  • Yep- closest thing I ever had to a childhood hero, the man with no name...

  • i swear if they don't play this song when they open the gates of heaven....... i don't wanna go there! this is epic!

  • After Leone's success other Italian directors made westerns.People like Sergio Corbucci,Enzo Castellari and also the great Lucio Fulci made some(violent)stuff. Sometimes were good movies.Tarantino loves them while they're considered obsolete In Italy....Strange world.A question:did someone see Coen's True Grit?It's coming out in Italy nex month.Is it so good as I heard? Bye

  • @tesi1973 , I did.... it is a great movie and bridges somehow capted the lee marvin style, if u know what I mean... the storyline fits well but no big deal... just expected.

  • @ututura Thanks! I know what you mean about Marvin.I like him especially in "Death hunt". I'll go to see "True Grit"

    for sure.I have almost all Coen's movies and I really like them.Western is a new genre for them but I was sure they made a good job.Bye and thanks again.

  • @tesi1973 i saw the original true grit movie and it was awesome. Now i can say that i saw at least two John Wayne movies before i die, sad but eh, i'm more of a clint eastwood fan. then again the duke's the duke. There should be more westerns. i sure love to see a couple of serious men with vendettas and vengence settle it out the old fashioned way. with a six shooter.

  • @codename617 As movies lover a saw almost all Wayne westerns.Well:if you study western movies evolution you'll see that Leone made a big breaking point in it.His Spaghettis made Ford's westerns obsolete in few years.Leone took the Japanese's classic Samurai duel style set it in a more real western scenery with very different characters(and don't forget the power of Morricone's music).He was like a hurricane.The point isn't if are better or not,they're just different.The fact is that after Leone

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  • @tesi1973 i love tarantino and leone. two of my top favorite filmmakers!

  • @codename617 American western changed.Movie like all arts is a mirror of our society and Hollywood is very able to feel this change everytime it happens.About western today I think is a always good genre for movies but it's difficult to make new stories.About Tarantino:He's,like many directors today,a Leone's son... I like his movies but for me he takes too much old ideas from Fulci,Castellari,Argento and many Hong Kong 70's productions..Just my opinion.Ciao

  • I Magnifici 3...la prima foto è STORIA

  • a well done tribute!

  • The greatest movies of all time ! Epic atmosphere, hilarious music, perfect work with camera.... Masterpieces !!!

  • Lee van Cleef, is one of my favorite western actors. I'm thankful for my dad, for influencing me to such fine first class actors

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  • @Commanderlewis same with me, but the reason i started loving everything about western cultures, movies, songs, actors etc is because of the trip to a little western ranch in Nevada at the Grand Canyon called Hualapai. From then, i just loved cowboys and everything to do with them.

  • One of the greatest movies known to man, and one of the greatest composer known to man.

  • @Commanderlewis Great comment

  • The Best

  • THANKS A LOT FOR POSTING THIS TRIBUTE.

    I'M ITALIAN AND I'LL KEEP FOREVER IN MY MIND AND IN MY HEART THIS OPERAS BY LEONE & MORRICONE

  • possibly the greatest fil of all time

  • When I was small, I would see my dad watching Sergio Leone's movies. I saw them in bits but never really paid much attention. And when we got the internet, and my dad realised we had access to music from the world over, the first thing my dad told me was to find Morricone's music. I am film student and have to read a lot of film lit and watch movies almost everyday. It's only now that I realise what my dad truly meant and how cool his choice is! lol. SL's direction and EM's composing are EPIC!!

  • i have a cousin studing to be a movie creator if he comes to be one i will want him to get new western movies. i fucking love them.

  • THE BEST!

  • Tout simplement géant......la legend .wow music wa3ra bzaffffffffffffffffffff

  • Tout simplement géant

  • surely whether this tribute is legendary is a matter for posterity :)

  • GREATGREATGREAT!!!! thank you !!

  • Tuco: There are two kinds of people in the world, my friend. Those with a rope around their neck, and the people who have the job of cutting.

    Tuco: There are two kinds of spurs, my friend. Those that come in by the door, those that come in by the window.

    Blondie: You see, in this world there's two kinds of people, my friend. Those with loaded guns, and those who dig. You dig.

  • @OneWorldHistory Tuco got all good lines,agree or not?

  • ignore the adverts!

  • nice!!

  • Feeling an electric storm in your back, your pulse gets faster, your hearth begins to run like a horse. Don't call doctor, you're just watching and listening Sergio Leone and Ennio Morricone dual work. Best cinematic pair ever and forever.

  • I will always remember all 3 of these men for this movie. One of my favorite!!. But most of all probably, Eli Wallach for Tuko. Tuko Benedicto Pacifico Juan Maria Ramirez! He was a mean little bastard!!!

  • @Denise9482 cllnt eastwood was the hero in the movie..i did love tukos and lee van cleffs rolll also..im glad you liked this movie..it is and will always be a classic

  • @Denise9482 have you checked out of clints movies?

  • hope they live forever in people minds

  • Another great Final Shootout that deserves mentioning has to be Bronson and Fonda in Once Upon A Time In The West, with Morricone's powerful score and that brilliant camerawork, especially the huge close up of Bronson's face! I've always loved Bronson's gunshot. If you listen close, in a split second, you can hear his gun clearing leather, the cocking of the hammer, the firing and the echoes in the mountains. What a great sound!! Ennio and Sergio equals a great western movie!! Nuff said!!

  • best westerns ever

  • chill to the bones !! Great Music!!

  • RIP

  • 3 dislike,must be a mistake

  • im such a huge sergio leone, and even more of a ennio morricone fan. My icon picture is of INDIO from " For a Few Dollars More" was difficult to find. BEcause i wanted that perfect shot of INDIO's Wanted poster.

  • Sergio Leone and Ennio Morricone FTW!

  • Não há como tanto agradecer por todo o talento envolvido nesse filme; pois nele inspirou-se um garoto para fazer a mais extraordinária concepção de movimentos reflexivos:: A Cenografia-Show do Jogo do Século XXI -- O modelo vivo de Lógica Nuclear em representação da paradoxal maneira de a Natureza evolucionar-se.

  • @Haddammann  Obrigado pela sua bela descrição

  • I know that there is always imperfection, but the final standoff scene in the good the bad and the ugly was pretty much emaculate and I think it would be nearly impossible to be out-done, especially in a western.

    If there is such a God, he was there when this scene was filmed and written.

  • Muito bom! Isto eram filmes....!

  • 0:55 *splooges his pants*

  • When it's time shoot...shoot...don't talk.

  • 60,s!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

  • Sergio Leone and Ennio Morricono: Two men who restored the western genre in the 60's.

  • einwandfrei

  • I remember the first time I saw this movie. The showdown at the end was absolutely incredible. No scene has ever given me that feeling before: starting with the ecstacy of gold scene where tuco runs around and then the final trio-duel. That trumpet was blasting so fucking loud, my heart was beating out of my chest, my blood was rushing...AAAAAAAAHHHHHHH !!!! what else can I say...just amazing! a true work of art like none other.

  • ahh, been to where this was filmed in Almeria, the Bank and the Saloon (original buildings) are still there.......fantastic.

  • lee van cleef a wonderful actor he has dutch background

  • It is ironic that it took an Italian director and an Italian composer to finally make westerns that authenticated the image of the old west. For the first time the characters truly looked dirty, as in reality they would have been, and there was no clear division between the good, the bad or the ugly. These films weren't perfect but they were more historically accurate than anything that came before them. And the musical score by Morricone was amazing.

  • my fave drive in movie many years ago 3 spaghetti westerns

  • Great !

    One of my favorites actors is : Lee Van Cleef !

    Thank you for him !

  • If Mozart and Michelangelo were going to make a movie together....or 5..lol.

  • Grande Sergio Leone! Nice video

  • exceptional

  • This one along with the Once Upon A Time In The West are the best Westerns ever made, Leone was a mythical director who taught the Americans what a Western looks and feels like. And all that under the amazing compositions of Ennio Morricone who taught them what a Western sounds like.

  • @raydunkle I absolutely agree with your comment. These were two of the best Westerns ever made. I can watch them over and over. Brilliant music score and directing.

  • @raydunkle

    lets not forget also Akira Kurosawa

  • @vanmarko Kurosawa was one of my all-time fave directors and not only for the renewal of the Western genre.

  • @raydunkle Wtf does this video have to do with Americans? God dammit on every fucking video I see something about how stupid or horrible Americans are, something stupid about Justin beiber, and a stupid joke about the numbers of thumbs down. Can't anyone on youtube think for themselves?! The internet is just this retarded wave after wave of mindless trends that everyone follows but nobody has a mind to realize how much they really don't know and how stupid they really are.Other than that I agree

  • @nothing980454 probably because of the overwhelming amount of ignorant americans who think they created or refined essentially everything? maybe because they get angry when you tell them that they couldnt even get westerns right, an Italian had to do it?

  • @utubeaccount00 Who said anything about Americans thinking they created and refined everything? I don't see any of that here? Can you point me to said comment? And btw, I'm not getting angry at all at that. I agree that American westerns sucked until the Italians got in the game. Where are you going here? What's your point?

  • @nothing980454 uh where so you live? to you watch america TV? american politics? they certainly believe they created and refined everything since sliced bread.

    Most americans think they created DEMOCRACY, just ask one off the street

  • @utubeaccount00 I live in California and I watch TV every so often and definitely know a lot about American politics. I know that most Americans don't think that they created democracy. We all studied Ancient Greece in grade school. I'm sure there are many that do but they are not the average American. I don't think anybody that I've ever known would say that America invented democracy. I think it's just the morons that are really vocal and are the ones that anyone ever notices. 

  • @nothing980454 well when the USA came to life most of the world had king and such rulers. the USA started a 3 government system which had never really been done before.

  • @Dogmeat1950 Oh I agree with you. There's no doubting that America invented a different kind of democracy never before seen, but you would seriously have to be a moron to think that America invented democracy. hehe. I mean... look at Washington DC. A ton of the federal buildings are based to look like Ancient Greece. That was done because the early Americans found democratic inspiration from that period. The USA coming to life eventually destroyed those old systems of gov't - rulers, kings, etc.

  • @nothing980454 ya... lots of the buildings are also Base on Roman things too. in Congress you can see the Axe around the bundle of sticks.

  • @nothing980454 the american western didnt suck, for fucks sake. A german.

    JOHN WAYNE!!!!

  • @RD19902010 Yeah, I apologize for such a blanket statement. John Wayne was pretty awesome.

  • @nothing980454 The Westerns are thought as the par excellence theme of the American filmography. They created the very myth of the wild West and as such they were the mythical foundations of the western states. They justified the slaughter of the Indians, and they had shown the triumph of the White Protestant morals over the others in the form of "justice". Leone, hugely influenced by Kurosawa (and his by far more complex vision of the world) altered the gene, the codes and the morals.

  • @raydunkle Yeah, I know. I agree. Leone and Kurosawa are both great and hugely influential directors. I don't know where you heard that Americans think that our early Westerns are so highly regarded because that's news to me. Everyone I've ever met just seems to make fun of the corniness of them and how black and white the characters are. They all talk about how Leone changed everything for the genre and how cool Clint Eastwood is and Morricone's musical scores. Where did you hear this anyway?

  • @nothing980454 Even the usual characterisation of these movies as "Spaghetti Western" is derogatory, derived from the studios status quo in their attempt to minimize their impact. Not only Westerns started with stereotyped and stock characters from the popular imagination (back in the beginning of the 20th century) but for political reasons and under the Hayes Office directives, they continued to be like that, regardless the effort and the talent of directors such as J. Ford.

  • @raydunkle I don't know if the term Spaghetti Western was originally derogatory or not (haha, I guess it seems so) but it certainly isn't now. Back then more people were suspect of Italians than now and I don't know of anyone that uses that term as an insult in today's world. Spaghetti Westerns have now become the quintessential American Western movie. If anyone here dislikes something like The Good, The Bad, and the Ugly then that person is rightly shunned and exiled from society.

  • @nothing980454 I think that the term "Spaghetti Western" was made to make a distinction between America and Europe.I think that American didn't like an intrusion by Europe in a genre they considered private.

    For me this term meant "joke".They were sure Leone was joking with western and its American meaning.But he wasn't.He just showed a more real(without symbols)portrait of that time putting some new characters(not heroes) unknown to Americans.They liked those egoist bastards.

  • @nothing980454 He also introduced some funny situations unusually for American westerns.He reinvented this genre and after that American 70's westerns were very different(starting from The Wild Bunch).I love 70's American westerns much more than 50's or 60's.Time was changing for American society in 70's and late 60's and Hollywood followed that change.I think that odiens wanted to see real stories.I love American 70's movies.Very similar to Italian Neorealismo.Just my opinion. Ciao

  • @nothing980454 You should try to find books and essays written before the 60's to see how much things were stabilised.

  • @raydunkle You hit the nail on the head there. Without Ennio they would have been run of the mill but with his soundtrack he turned them into classics.

  • nice tribute.

  • tuco ,eli walach and angel eye's ,le van cleef

    the legends of western movies

  • Clint Eastwood was the man best western of all time

  • Excellant, my favorite western of all time.

  • i couldnt agree more

  • Best western ever filmed.  Great casting, great plot, and the soundtrack is fucking awesome.

  • Van Cleef had the most amazing badass face.

  • Maravillosa época y grtancdes actores, junto con el inolvidable Sergio Leone.

  • the good the bad and the ugly best movie ever...lee van cleef clint...josé maria....best actors ever...R.I.P lee

  • @julmorisson65 yes, He was the the best ever actor. RIP.

  • Blain1971...QFT, man. Epic, baby. Epic.

  • The Final Shootout in this film is the best in the history of westerns, nothing made today comes close.

  • ahhh...cinema belissimo....manifique!!

  • Outstanding cast in a great, great movie. I also own the soundtrack and played it while painting the kitchen last week. (Feb. 2010)