Eli was underrated and underappreciated for most of his career. He was one of the best character actors for over 30 years. Met him once and he was completely awesome and humble. Glad to have had the experience of meeting him.
This one and pretty much only scene shows how dangerous and skilled Tuco is. I remember my dad showing me this movie and me underestimating "The Ugly". My dad just said: "wait". This scene was incredible.
Creo que se produce un ballet entre todos los protagonistas, esto lo hace ser una gran película. No me van a decir que Van Cleef también "se roba" cada intervención.
One of the greatest scenes in any Western. Tuco barely makes across the bridge to assemble his pistol. The facial expressions alone sold this scene. I have watched this movie so many times, my wife says, "again"! It's never boring or stale.
As iconic as the Man with No Name is, Tuco Benedicto Pacifico Juan Maria Ramirez (known as The Rat) is one of the greatest characters to grace the silver screen. He is a hilarious comic relief, a sympathetic underdog, a greedy opportunist and a resilient badass all rolled into one. You love him, hate him, root for him, laugh at him, learn from him and connect with him. He is extremely well-written, full of personality and depth and was brought to life to maximum perfection by the Oscar-worthy Eli Wallach. He is the reason The Good, The Bad and The Ugly is the cinematic masterpiece it is, other than Sergio Leone's direction and Ennio Morricone's music.
Eli Wallach can also lay claim to have starred in both Western genres ('Spaghetti westerns' and 'American Westerns''). Having appeared in the Magnificent Seven and How the west was won (ironically with Lee Van Cleef) as well as The good, the bad and the ugly. Spaghetti westerns being the rougher type of western where the characters weren't fully good or fully evil - making them better in my opinion!!
From a gunsmith's point of view, this scene cracks me up, taking guns from different manufacturers and putting them together to make the perfect pistol, what a joke,Guns back then were fitted by hand to each individual frame. And Tuco being some great machinist half drunk on booze!
To anyone knowledgeable about old guns this is utter nonsense. He took apart several cap and ball revolvers and assembled the pieces into one gun, which had somehow transformed into a cartridge revolver!
@@MrTruckerf Different mfgrs pistols would not fit each other, true, but many 1851 Colt Navy pistols had cartridge conversion cylinders. This way Colt could still sell their parts leftover from the 1851 Navy pistols while still selling their 1873 SAA pistols. They could either be loaded with a specially mounted loading gate, or by removing the cylinder to drop in the cartridge.
I had no idea that scene from John Wick 3 originally came from this movie, until now. When I first saw that scene in Wick 3 that was the first time an action hero did something like that. but like i said I had no idea it came from The Good, The Bad, and The Ugly, until now. I have to say though, It is one hell of a scene. :)
I got a western pic of Eli wallach on my wall...I was going to ask for his autograph on the pic but he passed away. Truly an icon and legend in western filming. I loved his Humor.
My favorite all time movie. And Eli Wallach and Tuco, my all time favorite character. He should have won an Oscar for Tuco. But any one that tries to kill Tuco and misses knows nothing about Tuco.
I've always loved the little gesture the gun store keep does at 5:30. He's like, "I understand that you're gonna rob me, but really now? Taking another man's drink? Come on now."
Best of the Best scans💯 😂👌👍🍻🍻🍻🍻🍻🍻🍻 Eil wallach Excellent 👍👍👍 Toko my love❤👍🤣🤣🤣 His gun (revolver) assembly tuko was unique. Only he could handle this role😂👍👏👏👏
Spare parts? Taking parts of different models from different makers as if they would fit? Remington, Colt, Smith and Wesson... Every gun in this period was handfitted from the factory.
The guns were props made to be interchangeable. Eli of course had training with guns from an expert through the studio. He was also in The Magnificent 7. Which movie was made first, I don't know. But studios all through the 50s- 80s gave the stars gun training for westerns. Tombstone, Young Guns, The Quick And The Dead and so on had trainers for the stars. Joe Bowman was one of the best known from 1950 through the 90s. His son has a post on U Tube. Check it out.
Remember, the little old train station attendant at the beginning of the Once upon time in a West. He was many of other Leone westerns keeping an eye on Universal actor over the people who acted in his movies on a regular basis.
I recently was given a DVD of "Tough Guys" (1986), my mum watched it with me (shes 70) couldn't believe that Leon B Little (the assassin) was this same guy, Eli Wallach in this film. Both memorable performances. If you haven't seen that film do so, its quite a good chuckle.
The gun store owner's flabbergasted and bemused reactions throughout the scene are genuine. Everything Tuco ( Eli Wallach ) does with the guns was unscripted. Wallach knew little about guns, so he was instructed to do whatever he wanted. He did receive instruction, however, on how to disassemble and assemble them.
Eli had training for the gun scene and for his work on the Magnificent 7..The guns used were studio props made to be interchangeable. In real life the parts wouldn't have fit.. See Eli on the Magnificent 7. He handles guns pretty well.
@@wesleycook7687 actually Eli knew little guns although he did serve in World War 2 in Army’s Administrative Medical Corps. The scene in gun store was unscripted and he was instructed to do what he wanted and was given little instruction. he received his B.A. from University of Texas and training in Dramatic Arts with the Actors Studio beginning his acting career on Broadway in 1945. He was in several westerns including The Magnificent Seven in 1960 and How The West Was Won.
@@wesleycook7687 That sounds much more likely. I never really believed that a person with no gun knowledge whatsoever could do what he did, no matter how great an actor he was.
@@scottknode898 Eli was trained by Joe Bowman on guns. Joe was go to guy if an actor needed training. His son has post on U Tube about his father. And the revolvers were props so they were made to have parts that were interchangeable.
Italians had a lot of influence in this greatest ever western movie, the director even boosted that he was the greatest film maker and he was a dam right... the scripts ,the music , the violence, the pictures, the actors.. and so on
Funny, it came up in my recommended videos and I just happen to be able to speak Czech. No kidding. Lived in Prague for a while. Lol. "Tady mam nelepsi" - "Here I have the best" :-)
"CARTRIDGES" "WHEN YOU HAVE TO.... SHOOT SHOOT DON'T TALK" And then the rope..... "IT MUST BE STRONG ENOUGH TO HOLD THE WEIGHT OF A PIG!" Outside the sheriff's office.... "OH LOOK ONE BASTARD GOES IN ANOTHER COMES OUT!" Eli Wallach as TUCO in a memorable performance that will forever be etched into western movie history.
For all the experts who are saying that parts from different guns couldn't be assembled to make a single gun..... Well we talk about poetic licence, what about cinematic licence????
Eli Wallach wasn't underrated. He was a famous highbrow actor, a major Broadway star. Tennessee Williams wrote one of his best plays, The Rose Tattoo around the young Wallach. That's top of the line, like having the 20th century Shakespeare write Othello for you. The film Baby Doll was a cultural event, a scandal. Otherwise, he made films as a kind of well-paying day job. What's cool is that even us kids in the Saturday movie matinee immediately recognized we were watching genius. We had good taste.
I don't know what the budget for this classic, but it had to be substancial. All those bridges and Army posts and period uniforms. I met Eli Wallach at the University of Texas (his alma mater) in the late 80's when they were giving him an award. Super nice man. I love the scene with Clint in this movie where is reading a piece of paper and Clint called him an idiot.
At the time, Spain was ruled by General Franco, and he was desperate to lure in foreign investment. and one thing he did was encourage foreign film makers to come to Spain to make movies in Spain. All those weapons were brought out from military museums in Spain, and all those extras were Spainish soldiers. Bridges were built by Army engineers.
the original script was "idiots, it's for us", but they changed it to "idiot, it's for you" for USA dubbing. you can read the Clint's lip, and he says "idiots, it's for us" clearly.
They had cartridge conversion cylinders. A real thing. Colt had such a huge supply of 1851 Navy pistols they converted many to sell off their supply, rather than sit on them.
What did Eli Wallach do to celebrate was on game shows lol. Eli Wallach told Henry Fonda to accept to act in Sergio Leone movies. He said, the director was a genius. Charles Bronson was offered the Man with no name trilogy until it was offered to Rowdy Gates of Rawhide.
So many inaccuracies with time frame regarding the weapons (only some long guns used cartridges near the end of the civil war when this takes place and handguns were all black powder), but this film is the one film you completely disregard the details. It is just so darn good.
False. The first mass produced fixed cartridge revolver was the Lefaucheux Model 1854, 12,000 were shipped to the US in 1862 and used by both sides, others soon followed and many conversions of cap-and-ball revolvers existed as well.
The funniest thing about this scene and the whole movie is the guns they used were not available during this time period. Colts, Remingtons still used percussion caps and Smith & Wessons were rimfires at best. Centerfire cartridges in handguns didn't become prevalent until well after the war ended. They were also still using black powder. That whole target court yard would have been filled with smoke. Modern "smokeless" powder hadn't been invented yet.
Se rodo en España durante la dictadura franquista, un régimen que incluso ofreció soldados para que actuaran como extras y construyeran el camposanto de 5.000 tumbas en el que tendría lugar el enfrentamiento. Hoy, más de medio siglo después, un grupo de vecinos ha logrado desenterrar la icónica localización tras tres años de arduo trabajo, se encuentra en la localidad de Santo Domingo de Silos (Burgos). No os lo perdáis!!!!.
Cartridge revolvers did not exit during the civil war. Only cap & ball. Only the 1860 Henry used copper rim fire cartridges.44 caliber. That was a blooper using cartridges for revolvers.
Eli was really the 3rd listed star in this movie but for me he is the best character in the movie with Lee Van Cleef’s Angel Eyes second. I really feel that Clint Eastwood phoned this one in.
I have got the uncut version of Clint Eastwood Lee Van Cleef and Eli Wallach in The Good The Bad And The Ugly I am dedicating this movie DVD to my old school friends who are both sisters as I hope to see them both again very soon to Chris and Hester from Billyxxx
Eli was underrated and underappreciated for most of his career. He was one of the best character actors for over 30 years. Met him once and he was completely awesome and humble. Glad to have had the experience of meeting him.
My mother was a big fan so I always get to explain to people that I'm not Jewish I was just named after the Ugly
congratulations to brazil
Thatz nice congratz. 😊
Revolvers! revolvers....
@@TrueFork lol
Eli Wallach is an amazingly underrated actor. He owned this entire film.
RaisedontheRadio The greatest character actor ever imo.
Is all about Tuco. The ugly duckling
He stole the show
RaisedontheRadio I have to agree with you about Eli/Tuco👍🏼
It would not have become a cult classic with him
This one and pretty much only scene shows how dangerous and skilled Tuco is. I remember my dad showing me this movie and me underestimating "The Ugly". My dad just said: "wait". This scene was incredible.
And: 'If you wanna shoot, shoot. Don't talk.'
He didn't survive being a wanted man for nothing.
Creo que se produce un ballet entre todos los protagonistas, esto lo hace ser una gran película. No me van a decir que Van Cleef también "se roba" cada intervención.
This scene shows how ferrociously stupid tuco really is!!!!hahaha😂😂😂😂
This was a Clint Eastwood film, but Eli Wallach stole every scene he was in. Talent!
Exactly, Clint Eastwood was all style, Lee Van Cleef was attitude, but Eli Wallach was all performance.
One of the greatest scenes in any Western. Tuco barely makes across the bridge to assemble his pistol. The facial expressions alone sold this scene.
I have watched this movie so many times, my wife says, "again"! It's never boring or stale.
My favorite movie of all time. I especially like the scenes that have been added back in that improve continuity.
You are lucky yours wife say not again.
@@jaroslavpenkava In this world there are 2 kinds of people: Those with a wife who says " not again", and those with a wife who keeps schtum !
@@SunofYork
😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
Eli should have received an Oscar for this performance. Tuco, you got screwed!
I love Clint Eastwood, but must admit, Eli Wallach lifted this Western out of the realm
I never knew Eli could speak Czech. Such talent.
As iconic as the Man with No Name is, Tuco Benedicto Pacifico Juan Maria Ramirez (known as The Rat) is one of the greatest characters to grace the silver screen.
He is a hilarious comic relief, a sympathetic underdog, a greedy opportunist and a resilient badass all rolled into one. You love him, hate him, root for him, laugh at him, learn from him and connect with him. He is extremely well-written, full of personality and depth and was brought to life to maximum perfection by the Oscar-worthy Eli Wallach.
He is the reason The Good, The Bad and The Ugly is the cinematic masterpiece it is, other than Sergio Leone's direction and Ennio Morricone's music.
THIS! ^
Eli Wallach can also lay claim to have starred in both Western genres ('Spaghetti westerns' and 'American Westerns''). Having appeared in the Magnificent Seven and How the west was won (ironically with Lee Van Cleef) as well as The good, the bad and the ugly. Spaghetti westerns being the rougher type of western where the characters weren't fully good or fully evil - making them better in my opinion!!
That is an brilliant explanation.
From a gunsmith's point of view, this scene cracks me up, taking guns from different manufacturers and putting them together to make the perfect pistol, what a joke,Guns back then were fitted by hand to each individual frame. And Tuco being some great machinist half drunk on booze!
To anyone knowledgeable about old guns this is utter nonsense. He took apart several cap and ball revolvers and assembled the pieces into one gun, which had somehow transformed into a cartridge revolver!
@@MrTruckerf Different mfgrs pistols would not fit each other, true, but many 1851 Colt Navy pistols had cartridge conversion cylinders. This way Colt could still sell their parts leftover from the 1851 Navy pistols while still selling their 1873 SAA pistols. They could either be loaded with a specially mounted loading gate, or by removing the cylinder to drop in the cartridge.
No one ever accused this movie of being realistic.
Just came back from Wick 3 to confirm that there is indeed a scene that pays homage to this incredible improvisation.
, .
. ,,
. ...
I had no idea that scene from John Wick 3 originally came from this movie, until now. When I first saw that scene in Wick 3 that was the first time an action hero did something like that. but like i said I had no idea it came from The Good, The Bad, and The Ugly, until now. I have to say though, It is one hell of a scene. :)
I went with my brother to watch Wick, we both burst out laughing and screaming “Tuco!” we saw it! It was a masterful homage!
He deserved an Oscar for this film but America Hollywood would NEVER have an Italian film win.
I got a western pic of Eli wallach on my wall...I was going to ask for his autograph on the pic but he passed away. Truly an icon and legend in western filming. I loved his Humor.
This shows how political the Academy Awards are it is a crime at the highest level why Eli Wallach did not win the Oscar for his portrayal of TUCO 😢😢😢
You know it’s criminal that he didn’t even get nominated!
This is probably my favorite scene of any movie.
This movie has more riveting individual scenes than any other Western.
My favorite all time movie. And Eli Wallach and Tuco, my all time favorite character. He should have won an Oscar for Tuco. But any one that tries to kill Tuco and misses knows nothing about Tuco.
I've always loved the little gesture the gun store keep does at 5:30. He's like, "I understand that you're gonna rob me, but really now? Taking another man's drink? Come on now."
Love how he switched cylinders on that Navy
Best of the Best scans💯 😂👌👍🍻🍻🍻🍻🍻🍻🍻
Eil wallach Excellent 👍👍👍
Toko my love❤👍🤣🤣🤣
His gun (revolver) assembly tuko was unique. Only he could handle this role😂👍👏👏👏
Eli basically improvised this whole scene of putting the gun together from all the spare parts...
Correct...
Spare parts? Taking parts of different models from different makers as if they would fit? Remington, Colt, Smith and Wesson... Every gun in this period was handfitted from the factory.
@@AakeTraak You are correct , SIR ! Probably couldn't interchange parts with an exact model made on the same day !
The guns were props made to be interchangeable. Eli of course had training with guns from an expert through the studio. He was also in The Magnificent 7. Which movie was made first, I don't know. But studios all through the 50s- 80s gave the stars gun training for westerns. Tombstone, Young Guns, The Quick And The Dead and so on had trainers for the stars. Joe Bowman was one of the best known from 1950 through the 90s. His son has a post on U Tube. Check it out.
Remember, the little old train station attendant at the beginning of the Once upon time in a West. He was many of other Leone westerns keeping an eye on Universal actor over the people who acted in his movies on a regular basis.
I recently was given a DVD of "Tough Guys" (1986), my mum watched it with me (shes 70) couldn't believe that Leon B Little (the assassin) was this same guy, Eli Wallach in this film. Both memorable performances. If you haven't seen that film do so, its quite a good chuckle.
Eli Wallach
Is an incredible supportive actor
" I once had 3 brothers if I see them again I would share my earnings"
As a honest man.
Thanks, forwatchiii
The gun store owner's flabbergasted and bemused reactions throughout the scene are genuine. Everything Tuco ( Eli Wallach ) does with the guns was unscripted. Wallach knew little about guns, so he was instructed to do whatever he wanted. He did receive instruction, however, on how to disassemble and assemble them.
Eli had training for the gun scene and for his work on the Magnificent 7..The guns used were studio props made to be interchangeable. In real life the parts wouldn't have fit.. See Eli on the Magnificent 7. He handles guns pretty well.
Right after Tuco left, Wile E. Coyote came by to pick up some gunpowder in his never-ending quest to finally capture the Road Runner. Meep-meep!
Eli knew nothing about guns. The director told Eli to just play about with the guns. What resulted is a classic😃
Merci pour l'information 👍c'est assez cocasse pour le coup 😀
@@wesleycook7687 actually Eli knew little guns although he did serve in World War 2 in Army’s Administrative Medical Corps. The scene in gun store was unscripted and he was instructed to do what he wanted and was given little instruction. he received his B.A. from University of Texas and training in Dramatic Arts with the Actors Studio beginning his acting career on Broadway in 1945. He was in several westerns including The Magnificent Seven in 1960 and How The West Was Won.
@@wesleycook7687 That sounds much more likely. I never really believed that a person with no gun knowledge whatsoever could do what he did, no matter how great an actor he was.
@@scottknode898 Eli was trained by Joe Bowman on guns. Joe was go to guy if an actor needed training. His son has post on U Tube about his father. And the revolvers were props so they were made to have parts that were interchangeable.
أقسم بالله العظيم هاذي أنت أكبر مضحكة نفس الشخصية جرتي
Italians had a lot of influence in this greatest ever western movie, the director even boosted that he was the greatest film maker and he was a dam right... the scripts ,the music , the violence, the pictures, the actors.. and so on
this whole movie is a gem
This has got to be the funniest scene from this movie
Epic scene Eli was the badass outlaw
Eli is a genious in his acting career
Funny, it came up in my recommended videos and I just happen to be able to speak Czech. No kidding. Lived in Prague for a while. Lol. "Tady mam nelepsi" - "Here I have the best" :-)
Eli Wallach should have won an Oscar for his performance!!!!!
ترجمه عربي
Unbelievable acting
Der beste Film 🎥 aller Zeiten die Musik die Schauspieler sowas von klasse das gibt's heutzutage nicht mehr.
Völlig richtig
"CARTRIDGES"
"WHEN YOU HAVE TO....
SHOOT SHOOT DON'T TALK"
And then the rope.....
"IT MUST BE STRONG ENOUGH TO
HOLD THE WEIGHT OF A PIG!"
Outside the sheriff's office....
"OH LOOK ONE BASTARD GOES IN
ANOTHER COMES OUT!"
Eli Wallach as TUCO in a memorable performance that will forever be etched into western movie history.
2:35 this will be me building my gun in Red Dead Redemption II
Actually you can't build your own gun, just customize it a bunch
Rubin lol good one bro
@@stefan9698 Dafuq went up your ass today?
@Rubin Ok wiseass, you go play the game and see for yourself
This movie is perfect
I've seen it said that this scene was one of those cut from the original UK release of the movie, but it was present when I saw it back in the day.
Tuco bennedito best actor of all times rest in peace Tuco
"Known as "the Rat", or any other alias"...
Mr Eli is such a great actor..
Truly brilliant performance
Wallach was a legend
Quentin Tarantino said it was the best film ever directed.
It was later that I realized that Wallach was the outlaw leader in The Magnificent Seven. He was great in that part too.
An era has ended with Eli Wallach bidding adieu. Wish he could complete 100. He was brilliant in The Good The Bad and The Ugly! Goodbye Tuco
And the Magnificent Seven.
The quickest recovery from a seventy mile walk walk across a desert you are ever going to see
If you've seen John Wick three there seems to be a call back to this scene....
Yep, I'm checking now to be sure, this scene was my first thought when I saw keanu spinning the revolver
It's Oscar worthy any day of the week by todays standards
R.I.P. Eli
Eli is amazing 👏 🎰🎭 you call 📞 him ...when you have an excellent screenplay
Was amazing eli been dead quite a few yrs now
Long live Tuco.
RIP TUCO GOD BLESS AMEN.
At least he didn't mak the shop owner part with his drink ... it's the least Tuco could do.
Masterpiece of cinema
Tuco rules. Masterpiece ever. Greatness
I watched this scene more than once without getting bored
Gotta love how Tuco is such a crooked bastard, that the first thing he does after walking out of the desert barely alive is rob a guy lmao
Yeah lol. He is like a honeybadger
Lmao
@@richardhowe5583 well well well stud. fancy meeting you here. 👨❤👨
@@trump-totalwar6509 how would you know me?
Robs a guy, builds a custom gun, and grabs a bottle of elixir, all at once. That's more than some people accomplish in a day.
For all the experts who are saying that parts from different guns couldn't be assembled to make a single gun..... Well we talk about poetic licence, what about cinematic licence????
Eli Wallach wasn't underrated. He was a famous highbrow actor, a major Broadway star. Tennessee Williams wrote one of his best plays, The Rose Tattoo around the young Wallach. That's top of the line, like having the 20th century Shakespeare write Othello for you. The film Baby Doll was a cultural event, a scandal. Otherwise, he made films as a kind of well-paying day job. What's cool is that even us kids in the Saturday movie matinee immediately recognized we were watching genius. We had good taste.
i felt sorry for the old guy lol
I don't know what the budget for this classic, but it had to be substancial. All those bridges and Army posts and period uniforms. I met Eli Wallach at the University of Texas (his alma mater) in the late 80's when they were giving him an award. Super nice man. I love the scene with Clint in this movie where is reading a piece of paper and Clint called him an idiot.
At the time, Spain was ruled by General Franco, and he was desperate to lure in foreign investment.
and one thing he did was encourage foreign film makers to come to Spain to make movies in Spain.
All those weapons were brought out from military museums in Spain, and all those extras were Spainish soldiers.
Bridges were built by Army engineers.
@@davidjacobs8558 amazing
the original script was "idiots, it's for us", but they changed it to "idiot, it's for you" for USA dubbing.
you can read the Clint's lip, and he says "idiots, it's for us" clearly.
Best Movie of all times.
Tuco's "gain of function" engineering job on the gunz...
This is my all time favourite film. First watched it in 1980 when I was 10 years old I've known idea how many times I've watched since.
ELI WALLACH MADE THIS MOVIE TO BE ONE OF THE BEST.
The man closing early to go for a drink 🍾😂😂😂
And a head job.. Hehe
The way they did "a tasting" before John Wick when it was whiskeys not wines.
Tis actor is a miracle indeed.
His character is so carismatic and persuasive.
He was far better than clint eastwood.
This movie shows them firing brass cartridges out of cap and ball revolvers, where you had to load a ball, powder and precussion cap all separately.
They had cartridge conversion cylinders. A real thing. Colt had such a huge supply of 1851 Navy pistols they converted many to sell off their supply, rather than sit on them.
This movie may portray it as more common than perhaps it would’ve been, but there were plenty of cartridge revolvers at the height of the civil war.
@@abehambino
You can tell the cap and ball revolvers because of the ramming lever for pushing the lead ball in the cylinder.
What did Eli Wallach do to celebrate was on game shows lol. Eli Wallach told Henry Fonda to accept to act in Sergio Leone movies. He said, the director was a genius. Charles Bronson was offered the Man with no name trilogy until it was offered to Rowdy Gates of Rawhide.
Eli Wallach was superb in this movie.
So many inaccuracies with time frame regarding the weapons (only some long guns used cartridges near the end of the civil war when this takes place and handguns were all black powder), but this film is the one film you completely disregard the details. It is just so darn good.
False. The first mass produced fixed cartridge revolver was the Lefaucheux Model 1854, 12,000 were shipped to the US in 1862 and used by both sides, others soon followed and many conversions of cap-and-ball revolvers existed as well.
@@tanksoldier thank you Sir.. I couldn't have said it any better..
The funniest thing about this scene and the whole movie is the guns they used were not available during this time period. Colts, Remingtons still used percussion caps and Smith & Wessons were rimfires at best. Centerfire cartridges in handguns didn't become prevalent until well after the war ended. They were also still using black powder. That whole target court yard would have been filled with smoke. Modern "smokeless" powder hadn't been invented yet.
Be a bit a of shit film then lol x but it’s timeless punk
one of my fav parts
Tuco stole the show from Blondie and Angel Eyes. Legendary western and my personal favorite.
He's loading a percussion revolver with metallic cartridges.
No, he's loading conversion of percussion revolver with metallic cartridges, which didn't exist in civil war era :)
a kedvenc filmem legjobb része...thanks
Se rodo en España durante la dictadura franquista, un régimen que incluso ofreció soldados para que actuaran como extras y construyeran el camposanto de 5.000 tumbas en el que tendría lugar el enfrentamiento. Hoy, más de medio siglo después, un grupo de vecinos ha logrado desenterrar la icónica localización tras tres años de arduo trabajo, se encuentra en la localidad de Santo Domingo de Silos (Burgos). No os lo perdáis!!!!.
O melhor filme de faroeste de todos os tempos sem duvidas
Cartridge revolvers did not exit during the civil war. Only cap & ball. Only the 1860 Henry used copper rim fire cartridges.44 caliber. That was a blooper using cartridges for revolvers.
Eli was really the 3rd listed star in this movie but for me he is the best character in the movie with Lee Van Cleef’s Angel Eyes second. I really feel that Clint Eastwood phoned this one in.
Iconic scene ,
THE GREATEST WESTERN EVER MADE.
One bastard walks in, and another walks out 😂
Cartridge revolvers did not exits during the civil war. Only cap & ball were used . The only cartridge, were the Henry rifle & the Sharps rifles.
I have got the uncut version of
Clint Eastwood Lee Van Cleef
and Eli Wallach in
The Good The Bad And The Ugly
I am dedicating this movie DVD to my old school friends who are both sisters as I hope to see them both again very soon to Chris and Hester from Billyxxx
ThanKs!
Really one o the best film made ever.
Was there ever a more lovable bad guy than Tuco? We named our poodle Tuco-it just seemed a natural name for him.
Tuco from breaking bad?
That bridge was a little sketchy but once he got water he was ready for some shopping.
Revolvers yes revolvers I love revolver hand guns ..
I felt sorry for Tuco at the end of this movie being hung up standing on a cross with all those gold coins on the floor ...
That was a long hot walk my friend .😮1
''Revolvers!''
Taking parts from one gun to make a new type of gun, got to try the one, using parts from a 38 and the parts of a 45 !
Gun shop dude looked like Wilford Brimley.
Super cool
Eli wallach meritait une tres grande carrière