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For A Few Dollars More (1965) First Time Watching! Movie Reaction! 2 Filmmakers React! Analysis too! 

MAJOR MOVIE MADNESS
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Hey Guys, we're reacting and breaking down "For A Few Dollars More" starring THE LEGEND himself Clint Eastwood. Sergio Leone was a master of the Western, maybe even better at the American West than many american director contemporaries. I would argue he is. Anyway enjoy this follow up and sequel to 'A Fistful Of Dollars" and part 2 in the great "Man with no name" series.
Please also Check out my Film "Wannabe: All Washed Up" which will be premiering at Los Angeles Comedy Film Festival in the next few months.
Major and Richard are two filmmakers and Cinematographers. Richard also directs
filmswww.imdb.com/name/nm1012821/?... .
Major is also is a sound op
www.imdb.com/name/nm2387593/?...
This series will show films that one or both of us have not seen. They are honest straight reactions. We do not own the rights to these films, we simply critique and react to them. Please take the time to like and subscribe. Also comment below if you feel inspired to do so.
please support us at patreon.com/REALmajormoviemadness
Majorprogress
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14 мар 2022

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Комментарии : 71   
@billking7923
@billking7923 2 года назад
At the end, Eastwood has a rifle and Indio has a pistol. Nice flip between the two movies. "When a man with a .45 meets a man with a rifle the man with a pistol is a dead man. That's an old Mexican proverb." - Ramon Rojas in Fistful.
@corvuslight
@corvuslight 2 года назад
I can smell the sulphur and black powder of my cap guns from when I practiced my quick draw after watching these movies as a kid. The caps came on these red paper rolls and you had to put them in the cap gun just right so they wouldn't misfire... Five years old in 1976, THIS movie was the best thing in the world.
@kallreader7376
@kallreader7376 2 года назад
Manco is Spanish for one handed, which describes the way Eastwood’s character usually fights with his revolver and his fist. Great review and analysis!
@TracySmith-xy9tq
@TracySmith-xy9tq 2 года назад
Lee van Cleef's finest role. The movie was more about his character than Eastwood's, but the two worked well together and it's a shame they never worked together again after GBU. Mortimer didn't take the money because it wasn't about the money for him. It was about avenging his sister. The last scene makes me cry - the sheer emotion on the faces of all three men, especially van Cleef's, combined with the music, makes this scene so powerful. Van Cleef could convey so much with just his eyes and facial expressions, without ever having to open his mouth. He had a charisma and magnetism that drew the viewer in. In this scene he is struggling not to cry and to maintain emotional control in front of his enemy. His lip quivers for just a millisecond and the viewer needs to be paying close attention to catch it, but it conveys so much. Extremely fine actor who left us far too soon.
@Otokichi786
@Otokichi786 2 года назад
I recall a closeup on Lee Van Cleef's life noted that he was about to give up acting when Sergio Leone came calling. Presto, Lee Van Cleef gets to be as much of an international movie star as Clint Eastwood. Even Hollywood took notice. Then there was Eli Wallach, who was told he'd have a great time in these Spaghetti Westerns...
@Grandmastergav86
@Grandmastergav86 Год назад
LVC was in many great Spaghetti Westerns including Day Of Anger, Death Rides A Horse, The Big Gundown, The Grand Duel - all well worth watching and movies I'd recommend to these guys.
@TracySmith-xy9tq
@TracySmith-xy9tq Год назад
@@Grandmastergav86 I've seen all those movies and liked them. I'd also recommend Barquero and Beyond the Law
@romagrafici1118
@romagrafici1118 2 года назад
Greetings from Rome guys! Leone and Morricone's city, I really think they were two geniuses and I'm sure you'll love the good, the bad and the ugly, its plot, the outstanding actors and how Leone and Morricone used the amazing music written by the latter.
@kallreader7376
@kallreader7376 2 года назад
Mortimer uses a Remington derringer in the duel in the cantina. Those were sometimes hidden in a sleeve for a quick draw.
@ripp3rjak934
@ripp3rjak934 2 года назад
When he came back for his homie with the second chime entrance was so brilliant.
@momsnoteatingbugs1919
@momsnoteatingbugs1919 6 месяцев назад
Fun Facts: The flat brimmed hat that Mortimer wears is actually accurate for the time. Cowboys actually wore that hat up until the late 19th century. The curved hat that we think of today as a cowboy hat didn't come in until toward the end of the 19th century. Sergio Leone was able to obtain genuine antique civil war cannon for the Civil War scenes in the good bad and the ugly from the Spanish War Museum in Spain by special permission of Franco. The soldiers in the battle scene in the good bad the ugly were also supplied permission of Franco from the actual Spanish army. Derringers that were worn in the sleeve rarely worked and are more a contrivance of Hollywood than anything else. Ennio Morriconne recorded his soundtracks for a few dollars more and the good bed the ugly prior to the movies being filmed and those soundtracks were played during the filming. The actors and the action were dictated by the music so that the two would be in sync. Sergio Leone said that Clint Eastwood had two acting emotions: hat on and hat off.
@user-pe9gz8si8k
@user-pe9gz8si8k Год назад
some bounties are worth more alive than dead. I always wanted a pocket watch with this exact music
@louisburke8927
@louisburke8927 5 месяцев назад
Probably my favourite
@ericelander9936
@ericelander9936 2 года назад
As a kid in the sixties I saw quarter page adds for these movies in the newspaper. I was mesmerized. Didn't get to see them until years later. This is the best movie Clint ever did IMHO. Closely followed by High Plains Drifter. Just discovered your channel a couple days ago. You've got a subscriber.
@TracySmith-xy9tq
@TracySmith-xy9tq 2 года назад
This is Lee van Cleef's finest role, with Angel Eyes coming in second.
@Steve_Blackwood
@Steve_Blackwood 2 года назад
GB&U gets most of the acclaim, but this one is my fave of the three. Glad y’all are doing these great old westerns. 👍🏻
@colinglen4505
@colinglen4505 2 года назад
me too, it's a work of art.
@Bill-oe6pw
@Bill-oe6pw 2 года назад
I'm loving this channel's meander into spaghetti westerns. Cheers!
@BigGator5
@BigGator5 2 года назад
I cannot hear that tune without breaking out into tears. 😢 Fun Fact: When Colonel Douglas Mortimer (Lee Van Cleef) disembarks from the train, the La Calahorra castle can be seen in the distance. It is visible just to the left of the locomotive.
@michaelgehrke8272
@michaelgehrke8272 Год назад
For a different twist on westerns I recommend "They Call Me Trinity "with Bud Spencer and Terence Hill.
@zealgope
@zealgope 2 года назад
Believed it or not I saw this one in a doble feature, back in 1983 in Tegucigalpa, Honduras, with my late father, the other one was Live and Let Die.
@TJClark-sw2yz
@TJClark-sw2yz 2 года назад
Thank you gentlemen. That was excellent. I’m looking forward to your next film pick for “Western Movie Madness.”
@MajorProgress
@MajorProgress 2 года назад
You're welcome and thank you for watching. Glad you're enjoying the Wester Movie Madness! We are as well!
@timrobinson2984
@timrobinson2984 Год назад
superb, so glad to see young guys liking these movies i was sixteen when i found this film ,i am now sixty three
@fgrah72
@fgrah72 Год назад
Loved the reaction. The end gunfight gave me chills when I first saw it. As to Mortimer giving all of the bounties to Monco, I think he thought that taking any money would cheapen his sister's life which was priceless to him and that avenging her was the last act of love he would ever be able to show/give to her. With El Indio walking around, the love of the siblings and her memory was tainted. Killing El Indio allowed Mortimer to live with only the love and good memories he had of his sister by wiping out the stain that was El Indio.
@innercircle341
@innercircle341 2 года назад
Really glad you like those film. I saw it first in about 1973 in the Odeon Leicester Square with my then g/f. Spellbound especially with the score and sound design. Really recommend the 1957 Gunfight At The OK Corral. Kirk Douglas, Burt Lancaster. Really needs to be scene as intended. On a big screen, surround sound.
@SRG1966
@SRG1966 2 года назад
Gian Maria Volonte did great roles in many westerns, but he didnt think much of the genre. He had a distinguished career in films.
@bobschenkel7921
@bobschenkel7921 2 года назад
Did you notice the name of the little town they went to? Agua Caliente. Spanish for Hot Water. Sounds about right.
@po5283
@po5283 2 года назад
Love this film, the impression I always got was that Mortimer isn't smarter than Manco or playing a higher level chess game with him. It's simply he has the years of experience and can tell that Manco is him just 20 years younger, so he anticipates his moves cause they're the same ones he would have made. Something else you might be interested in, is checking out the Danish National Symphony Orchestra's, spaghetti western night performing the themes from The Good the Bad and the Ugly, For a Few Dollars More and Fistful of Dollars. They have other performances covering pop culture like Star Wars etc, highly recommend checking it out, amazing performances. Also, if you're a fan of the original Yub Nub, Ewok song from Return of the Jedi, you'll be happy to hear they cover it during the concert.
@MajorProgress
@MajorProgress 2 года назад
Very good point. I totally agree and love this insight.
@TracySmith-xy9tq
@TracySmith-xy9tq 2 года назад
Lee van Cleef was only five years older than Clint Eastwood.
@ste.6026
@ste.6026 8 месяцев назад
Over the last several days I have watched a fair few your reviews, top notch stuff, if I have seen the movie you will be my first port of call.... Caught most of the westerns, Hitchcock, Guy Ritchie, First Blood & Fargo and one or two others... Some great insights and the wondrous looks on your faces when something impresses you... Some great westerns over the last 30 years or so ( I call that modern)... 'Open Range', 'The Quick & The Dead' & 'Bone Tomahawk' just to name a few... As for a few others (obviously movies that I adore) that maybe should be considered in the future, be they western, thriller, film noir etc! include 'Southern Comfort' (1981), 'Cool Hand Luke' (1967), 'A Bronx Tale' (1993), L.A Confidential (1997) & Sin City (2005)... Just keep doing what you are doing, don't change a thing....
@majormoviemadness9927
@majormoviemadness9927 8 месяцев назад
Thanks for the compliments, and the reccs
@marioarguello6989
@marioarguello6989 2 года назад
Watch Randolph Scott westerns, specially the ones from the 50''s. Lee Van Cleef plays the bad guy in one of the best ones, "Ride Lonesome". The Tall T and Seven Men From Now are very good too. James Stewart westerns made with Anthony Mann directing are all good, 5 of them. Many John Wayne ones, starting with The Searchers, Stagecoach (made him a star), Rio Bravo, The Comancheros.
@angeleyes963
@angeleyes963 2 года назад
great reaction. please do Once Upon A Time In The West.
@majormoviemadness9927
@majormoviemadness9927 2 года назад
We’ve both seen, we may down the road tho
@slowerthinker
@slowerthinker 2 года назад
This my favourite of the Leone Westerns. IMHO the three films after this become a little too long and meandering and consequently loose some of their punch (although of course they remain great films with some absolutely iconic moments). I always thought that if it had the snappy title and the earworm theme of his next film that there would be a general agreement that _For A Few Dollars More_ was his best.
@TracySmith-xy9tq
@TracySmith-xy9tq 2 года назад
I agree. This movie made the best use of Lee van Cleef's extensive talent.
@dangi79
@dangi79 2 года назад
Ennio Morricone wrote the best soundtracks of all time.
@Agent77X
@Agent77X Год назад
Guy with no name is called: Manco!😊
@larsickenroth7169
@larsickenroth7169 3 месяца назад
He's supposed to be the bad guy in a lot of these, but I generally find Lee van Cleef so much more interesting and charismatic to watch. The man is just movie-gold.
@kurtb8474
@kurtb8474 2 года назад
Clint said those cigars were awful. They made him nearly vomit more than once.
@EatchitYouTube-fj7kr
@EatchitYouTube-fj7kr Месяц назад
It is the best
@Otokichi786
@Otokichi786 2 года назад
Did/Does anyone notice that characters in Sergio Leone Spaghetti Westerns look like Real People seen in Old West photographs? They come in all shapes, sizes, conditions, from ugly to (sorta) beautiful. Classic Hollywood Western characters look like clean-just-back-from-wardrobe Movie Stars. Speaking of wardrobe, some are ragged, wear patched clothes, etc., just like in those old Daguerreotypes and Tintypes.
@williambeckett6336
@williambeckett6336 2 года назад
"Our roots are in alcoholism"--Video gets a thumbs up.
@AliasMark69
@AliasMark69 Год назад
Lee Van Cleef dressed exactly like one of his childhood heroes in two movies “Spaghetti Westerns’ Wyatt Earp. Lee’s costume is a perfect copy of the famous outfit worn by Wyatt Earp in 1881 in Tombstone Arizona. Lee provided his own clothes as did Clint Eastwood. Lee even used a 12 inch barrel Colt like the one used by Marshall Earp. The Hat, Coat, Shirt, Vest, Tie with Tie pin, Boots, Guns every detail is a Tribute to the most famous Lawman-Marshall in American history. John Wayne often said he made all his characters after Wyatt Earp saying every time he walked onto a movie set he pretended to be Wyatt Earp in the way he walked and talked. Clint Eastwood was also influenced by Wyatt and said he fashioned Inspector Harry Callahan “Dirty Harry” after the most famous Lawman Marshall in history… Wyatt Earp.
@panzerdeal8727
@panzerdeal8727 2 месяца назад
Now..Two Mules for Sister Sarah...TEASER: "You think Nuns don't laugh ?" "I dunno..I never spent the night with one before."
@Grandmastergav86
@Grandmastergav86 Год назад
Lee Van Cleef & Franco Nero are my favourite Spaghetti Western stars. Of Nero's works you guys should check out Django & Keoma at the very least. LVC is the star of the show in this movie and his intro is perfect. Also, you guys need to check out Leone's A Fistful Of Dynamite, it's a divisive film but personally I think it's damn near perfect (barring the obligatory anachronisms). You should also note the presence of Klaus Kinski in this film, a Spaghetti Western legend (the blonde haired, blue eyed antagonist), in a small role. I have to say that Sergio Leone is my favourite director. In terms of Spaghetti Westerns, the man who "ran Leone closest" was Sergio Corbucci, he made some incredible films including Django, The Great Silence & Companeros. I remain hopeful that one day we'll see the uncut version of Leone's epic Once Upon A Time In America released. Much like A Fistful Of Dynamite, it's a divisive film but it's still great IMO. The cut version is good but A Fistful Of Dynamite is easily my favourite Leone movie. I wish Leone had worked with Coburn and Steiger (the stars of A Fistful Of Dynamite) on further productions.
@newjojosupercutsandmore2489
I think mortimer was rich from the start, it’s just that indio was purely personal
@iflarnted
@iflarnted 10 месяцев назад
More money for the production, more genius Leone and Morricone.
@brendanking7328
@brendanking7328 2 года назад
The Italians mixed our westerns with their opera and re defined the genre. Oh, and the hunchback? None other than Klaus Kinsky in all his Germanic manic lunacy.
@innercircle341
@innercircle341 2 года назад
I hope you're gonna light the new studio coz I fricking hate watching you sitting in the dark. This is my favourite of the three films
@majormoviemadness9927
@majormoviemadness9927 2 года назад
Soon blame @majorprogress
@shruggknucklesfistbump4381
@shruggknucklesfistbump4381 2 года назад
angel eyes shine brighter this movie
@Replicant_
@Replicant_ 2 года назад
If you guys liked Lee Van Cleef, you'll love him in a spaghetti western called "Day of Anger" (1967), directed by Tonino Valerii (Sergio Leone's assistant director!), which follows this teacher - student trope. Also, has an awesome and recogizable music by Riz Ortolani (Cannibal Holocaust). Definitely a must watch!
@michaelhughes838
@michaelhughes838 Год назад
No modern ponchos have hoods but not orginialy. A scraps wraps like a shawl or a blanket
@highstimulation2497
@highstimulation2497 2 года назад
blending of diagetic and non-diagetic music. genius.
@jacklemonfizz6898
@jacklemonfizz6898 Год назад
Indio was impressed all his life by this woman, because she committed suicide when she could kill Indio while he was distracted, Indio had killed her happiness and therefore the woman already felt dead, so she chose to commit suicide instead of killing the Indio. Douglas change idea at the end, he didn't want the money on the Indio death, because he had done justice to his sister and that money would have soiled that special moment, a price that cannot be quantified.
@majormoviemadness9927
@majormoviemadness9927 Год назад
Well thought out
@TheMikeman1971
@TheMikeman1971 2 года назад
Dam i forgot u guys was on maybe next time.
@myfootballjesus
@myfootballjesus 2 года назад
Did you guys watch L.A confidential?? Seems like your cinematic style and story
@majormoviemadness9927
@majormoviemadness9927 2 года назад
I have seen it yes
@MajorProgress
@MajorProgress 2 года назад
I have not seen it. I'll add it to the list! Thanks for the suggestions.
@manco828
@manco828 11 месяцев назад
Somebody called?
@cliffniiranen1044
@cliffniiranen1044 2 года назад
Fantastic. Sub
@panzerdeal8727
@panzerdeal8727 2 месяца назад
Watch for the bank scam in El Paso.
@chrisspertos9784
@chrisspertos9784 4 месяца назад
Why do you skip the scenes?!!
@OroborusFMA
@OroborusFMA 2 года назад
I found the final act underwhelming. But it was still a lean flick, like the first. After this the bloat set in. The movies get longer and longer, slower and slower, and self-conscious to a fault.
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