![The Man with No Name Trilogy [DVD] [1964]](/_next/image?url=https%3A%2F%2Fm.media-amazon.com%2Fimages%2FI%2F71VA-ZIjXOL.jpg&w=3840&q=75)


Triple bill of Sergio Leone Westerns starring Clint Eastwood as the Man With No Name. In 'A Fistful of Dollars' (1964), the laconic gunslinger (Eastwood) makes a financial killing by playing two feuding families off each other in a small southwestern town. 'For a Few Dollars More' (1965) sees him reluctantly joining forces with bounty hunter Colonel Mortimer (Lee Van Cleef) to battle psychotic bandit El Indio (Gian Maria Volonte) and his gang of outlaws. In 'The Good, the Bad and the Ugly' (1966), set during the American Civil War, the paths of three loners - Joe (Eastwood), Tuco (Eli Wallach) and Setenza (Van Cleef) - cross as they search for the grave of Bill Carson, home to a hidden fortune. As the war intensifies, the treasure seekers become drawn into a battle that dwarfs their own mercenary pursuits. Review: One of the best westren trilogy ever - The Dollars Trilogy also known as the Man with No Name Trilogy is an Italian series consisting of three Spaghetti Western films directed by Sergio Leone. The films are titled A Fistful of Dollars (1964), For a Few Dollars More (1965) and The Good, the Bad and the Ugly (1966). United Artists distributed their English versions, while Unidis and PEA distributed the Italian ones. The series has become known for establishing the Spaghetti Western genre and inspiring the creation of many more Spaghetti Western films. The three films are consistently listed among the best-rated Western films in history. Although not Leone's intention, the three films came to be considered a trilogy following the exploits of the same so-called "Man with No Name" (portrayed by Clint Eastwood, wearing the same clothes and acting with the same mannerisms). The "Man with No Name" concept was invented by the American distributor United Artists, looking for a strong angle to sell the films as a trilogy. Eastwood's character does indeed have a name (albeit a nickname) and a different one in each film: "Joe", "Manco" and "Blondie", respectively. A Fistful of Dollars The first film has the Man with No Name arriving, for unexplained reasons, in the Mexico–United States border town of San Miguel, the base of two rival smuggling families, the Rojos and the Baxters. The Man with No Name (referred to by the old undertaker Piripero as "Joe") decides to play them against each other by collecting prizes for giving information, capturing prisoners and killing men, while also helping a woman, her husband and their son, held captive by the ruthless Ramón Rojo, to escape. He is discovered by the Rojos and tortured but escapes. The Rojos massacre the unarmed Baxters while searching for him, but helped by Piripero he is hiding away from the town. The Man with No Name returns as the Rojos prepare to hang the local innkeeper Silvanito, who had befriended him. He cold-bloodedly kills Don Miguel Rojo, uses his last bullet to free Silvanito, and engages and kills Ramón in a gunslinging duel. After the last remaining Rojo brother, Esteban, is killed by Silvanito while trying to shoot from a window, the Man with No Name – knowing that the US and Mexican governments will investigate – departs from the now-peaceful town A Fistful of Dollars is an unofficial remake of Akira Kurosawa's 1961 film Yojimbo starring Toshiro Mifune, which resulted in a successful lawsuit by Toho. For a Few Dollars More The second film introduces the Man with No Name (here nicknamed "Manco") as a bounty hunter killing bandits for money, as well as Colonel Douglas Mortimer, a middle-aged bounty hunter hunting for the same criminals. Both searching for the psychopathic Mexican bandit known as "El Indio", who just escaped from jail, they initially rival each other, but then understand that, to kill him, they must work together. Manco infiltrates El Indio's gang, while Mortimer acts from the outside. Manco discovers El Indio's elaborate plot to rob the Bank of El Paso and is forced to take part in it, though he manages not to wound any innocents. Later, El Indio transfers his gang to Agua Caliente, Mexico, where Manco and Mortimer attempt to steal the money to take it back to the Bank. El Indio discovers their plot but lets them escape as part of an operation to murder all but one of his associates to split the money in two instead of with the entire gang. A battle ensues between the bounty hunters and the bandits, according to El Indio's plan, as the two successfully kill all of them, and the one El Indio meant to spare is also killed. In the end, Manco discovers that Mortimer's hunt for El Indio is far more personal than his own, and lets him kill the bandit personally in a duel. Mortimer lets Manco keep all the money, and, now in peace with his past, rides away. Manco piles the bandit corpses in a horse-drawn cart and rides away with the stolen bank money to collect his bounty earnings. The Good, the Bad and the Ugly In the third film, set during the American Civil War, Mexican bandit Tuco Ramírez and the Man with No Name (whom Tuco calls "Blondie") work together to scam small towns: Blondie will collect the bounties on Tuco and then free him as he is about to be hanged. Meanwhile, a mercenary named "Angel Eyes" is shown to be searching for a man named "Jackson", who has stolen 200,000 dollars from the Confederate Army. Angel Eyes threatens the family of one of Jackson's former accomplices and learns that Jackson now goes under the alias of "Bill Carson" (who has already murdered both of his original accomplices). The partnership between Blondie and Tuco sours when Tuco complains that being repeatedly placed in a noose with only a single bullet standing between himself and death demands a larger cut than 50/50; Blondie immediately betrays Tuco, saying "The way back to town is only 70 miles... if a man like you holds your breath, I think you can manage it". Blondie is later caught out and tortured by a vengeful Tuco who first tries to put Blondie in a noose, but the raging war encroaches and drives them apart. Tuco then catches Blondie and drags him through "this hell [...] a hundred miles, that's a nice walk": the high desert. Tuco's erstwhile revenge is interrupted when they stumble upon a Confederate carriage carrying the bullet-riddled and barely alive Bill Carson. Carson, bleeding and desperate for water, tells Tuco the name of the cemetery in which the gold is hidden – but while Tuco goes to get water, a dying Blondie manages to crawl past and get the name of the grave in which the treasure is buried just as Carson dies. Tuco realizes that he can't find the bounty without Blondie. The two form an uneasy alliance. During their journey to the treasure, they are arrested by Union Army soldiers and brought to a prison camp in which Angel Eyes is posing as a Sergeant. Angel Eyes tortures Tuco into revealing his half of the secret and recruits Blondie to show him the grave. All three ultimately leave the prison. Blondie, Tuco, and Angel Eyes commence a game of betrayal and subterfuge. Tuco and Blondie are blocked by a brutal conflict between the Union and the Confederacy. Blondie subsequently tricks Tuco into revealing the name of the cemetery. The gunslingers eventually arrive at the graveyard where the treasure is hidden but find themselves in a three-way standoff with victory uncertain for anyone. Blondie takes up a burnt-ended cigar and a rock; he tells the others that he will write the name of the grave marker on the bottom of a stone. He then places the stone in the middle of the cemetery, and the film's iconic "Mexican standoff" duel begins. After the duel, Blondie takes half of the money and leaves Tuco in a noose, balancing on an unstable gravestone. Blondie rides into the distance as Tuco curses him loudly. After Tuco nearly hangs himself, Blondie frees him from a distance using his rifle. The Good, the Bad and the Ugly was released on 29 December. The original Italian domestic version was 177 minutes long, but the international version was shown at various lengths. Most prints, specifically those shown in the United States, had a runtime of 161 minutes, 16 minutes shorter than the Italian premiere version, but others, especially British prints, ran as short as 148 minutes. The Dollar Trilogy is a masterpiece of Western filmmaking, Sergio Leone's signature long-drawn and close-up style of filming, sweeping long shots and extreme face close up with an excellent score, soundtrack from Ennio Morricone make these a pleasure to own a watch. Review: Good quality - The films were in very mint condition, worth its value of money.
| ASIN | B00KB2GFGA |
| Actors | Clint Eastwood, Gian Maria Volonte, Marianne Koch, S. Rupp, Wolfgang Lukschy |
| Aspect Ratio | Unknown |
| Best Sellers Rank | 24,302 in DVD & Blu-ray ( See Top 100 in DVD & Blu-ray ) 442 in Western (DVD & Blu-ray) 691 in Military & War (DVD & Blu-ray) 3,983 in Box Sets (DVD & Blu-ray) |
| Customer reviews | 4.8 4.8 out of 5 stars (3,447) |
| Director | Sergio Leone |
| Is discontinued by manufacturer | No |
| Item model number | 2068201086 |
| Language | English (Dolby Digital 5.1) |
| Media Format | PAL |
| Number of discs | 3 |
| Package Dimensions | 19.3 x 13.8 x 2.4 cm; 0.28 g |
| Producers | Alberto Grimaldi, Arrigo Colombo, Giorgio Papi |
| Release date | 2 Jun. 2014 |
| Run time | 6 hours and 18 minutes |
| Studio | Warner Home Video |
M**N
One of the best westren trilogy ever
The Dollars Trilogy also known as the Man with No Name Trilogy is an Italian series consisting of three Spaghetti Western films directed by Sergio Leone. The films are titled A Fistful of Dollars (1964), For a Few Dollars More (1965) and The Good, the Bad and the Ugly (1966). United Artists distributed their English versions, while Unidis and PEA distributed the Italian ones. The series has become known for establishing the Spaghetti Western genre and inspiring the creation of many more Spaghetti Western films. The three films are consistently listed among the best-rated Western films in history. Although not Leone's intention, the three films came to be considered a trilogy following the exploits of the same so-called "Man with No Name" (portrayed by Clint Eastwood, wearing the same clothes and acting with the same mannerisms). The "Man with No Name" concept was invented by the American distributor United Artists, looking for a strong angle to sell the films as a trilogy. Eastwood's character does indeed have a name (albeit a nickname) and a different one in each film: "Joe", "Manco" and "Blondie", respectively. A Fistful of Dollars The first film has the Man with No Name arriving, for unexplained reasons, in the Mexico–United States border town of San Miguel, the base of two rival smuggling families, the Rojos and the Baxters. The Man with No Name (referred to by the old undertaker Piripero as "Joe") decides to play them against each other by collecting prizes for giving information, capturing prisoners and killing men, while also helping a woman, her husband and their son, held captive by the ruthless Ramón Rojo, to escape. He is discovered by the Rojos and tortured but escapes. The Rojos massacre the unarmed Baxters while searching for him, but helped by Piripero he is hiding away from the town. The Man with No Name returns as the Rojos prepare to hang the local innkeeper Silvanito, who had befriended him. He cold-bloodedly kills Don Miguel Rojo, uses his last bullet to free Silvanito, and engages and kills Ramón in a gunslinging duel. After the last remaining Rojo brother, Esteban, is killed by Silvanito while trying to shoot from a window, the Man with No Name – knowing that the US and Mexican governments will investigate – departs from the now-peaceful town A Fistful of Dollars is an unofficial remake of Akira Kurosawa's 1961 film Yojimbo starring Toshiro Mifune, which resulted in a successful lawsuit by Toho. For a Few Dollars More The second film introduces the Man with No Name (here nicknamed "Manco") as a bounty hunter killing bandits for money, as well as Colonel Douglas Mortimer, a middle-aged bounty hunter hunting for the same criminals. Both searching for the psychopathic Mexican bandit known as "El Indio", who just escaped from jail, they initially rival each other, but then understand that, to kill him, they must work together. Manco infiltrates El Indio's gang, while Mortimer acts from the outside. Manco discovers El Indio's elaborate plot to rob the Bank of El Paso and is forced to take part in it, though he manages not to wound any innocents. Later, El Indio transfers his gang to Agua Caliente, Mexico, where Manco and Mortimer attempt to steal the money to take it back to the Bank. El Indio discovers their plot but lets them escape as part of an operation to murder all but one of his associates to split the money in two instead of with the entire gang. A battle ensues between the bounty hunters and the bandits, according to El Indio's plan, as the two successfully kill all of them, and the one El Indio meant to spare is also killed. In the end, Manco discovers that Mortimer's hunt for El Indio is far more personal than his own, and lets him kill the bandit personally in a duel. Mortimer lets Manco keep all the money, and, now in peace with his past, rides away. Manco piles the bandit corpses in a horse-drawn cart and rides away with the stolen bank money to collect his bounty earnings. The Good, the Bad and the Ugly In the third film, set during the American Civil War, Mexican bandit Tuco Ramírez and the Man with No Name (whom Tuco calls "Blondie") work together to scam small towns: Blondie will collect the bounties on Tuco and then free him as he is about to be hanged. Meanwhile, a mercenary named "Angel Eyes" is shown to be searching for a man named "Jackson", who has stolen 200,000 dollars from the Confederate Army. Angel Eyes threatens the family of one of Jackson's former accomplices and learns that Jackson now goes under the alias of "Bill Carson" (who has already murdered both of his original accomplices). The partnership between Blondie and Tuco sours when Tuco complains that being repeatedly placed in a noose with only a single bullet standing between himself and death demands a larger cut than 50/50; Blondie immediately betrays Tuco, saying "The way back to town is only 70 miles... if a man like you holds your breath, I think you can manage it". Blondie is later caught out and tortured by a vengeful Tuco who first tries to put Blondie in a noose, but the raging war encroaches and drives them apart. Tuco then catches Blondie and drags him through "this hell [...] a hundred miles, that's a nice walk": the high desert. Tuco's erstwhile revenge is interrupted when they stumble upon a Confederate carriage carrying the bullet-riddled and barely alive Bill Carson. Carson, bleeding and desperate for water, tells Tuco the name of the cemetery in which the gold is hidden – but while Tuco goes to get water, a dying Blondie manages to crawl past and get the name of the grave in which the treasure is buried just as Carson dies. Tuco realizes that he can't find the bounty without Blondie. The two form an uneasy alliance. During their journey to the treasure, they are arrested by Union Army soldiers and brought to a prison camp in which Angel Eyes is posing as a Sergeant. Angel Eyes tortures Tuco into revealing his half of the secret and recruits Blondie to show him the grave. All three ultimately leave the prison. Blondie, Tuco, and Angel Eyes commence a game of betrayal and subterfuge. Tuco and Blondie are blocked by a brutal conflict between the Union and the Confederacy. Blondie subsequently tricks Tuco into revealing the name of the cemetery. The gunslingers eventually arrive at the graveyard where the treasure is hidden but find themselves in a three-way standoff with victory uncertain for anyone. Blondie takes up a burnt-ended cigar and a rock; he tells the others that he will write the name of the grave marker on the bottom of a stone. He then places the stone in the middle of the cemetery, and the film's iconic "Mexican standoff" duel begins. After the duel, Blondie takes half of the money and leaves Tuco in a noose, balancing on an unstable gravestone. Blondie rides into the distance as Tuco curses him loudly. After Tuco nearly hangs himself, Blondie frees him from a distance using his rifle. The Good, the Bad and the Ugly was released on 29 December. The original Italian domestic version was 177 minutes long, but the international version was shown at various lengths. Most prints, specifically those shown in the United States, had a runtime of 161 minutes, 16 minutes shorter than the Italian premiere version, but others, especially British prints, ran as short as 148 minutes. The Dollar Trilogy is a masterpiece of Western filmmaking, Sergio Leone's signature long-drawn and close-up style of filming, sweeping long shots and extreme face close up with an excellent score, soundtrack from Ennio Morricone make these a pleasure to own a watch.
M**R
Good quality
The films were in very mint condition, worth its value of money.
S**X
The Best DVD Western Trilogy
These Spaghetti Westerns were inspired and influenced by Akira Kurosawa and the outcome is a classc-cult trilogy featuring the Man with no name, Clint Eastwood. He is a real angel come down to rid the world of the evil. Clint Eastwood is born for this role and no one anywhere can can anywhere near him. One of my all-time idols whom I always look up to. GOD BLESS YOU, DEAR RESPECTED CLINT EASTWOOD.
R**S
Epic Masterpieces
No modern films can match these magnificent movies. Faultless picture and sound quality, and loaded with extras. Watched them on my new projector for the full cinema experience. Best £10 I ever spent.
M**N
Great trilogy
Great trilogy
A**B
Excellent Trilogy
A classic spag bol western set on blu ray at a great price.
J**N
Pull the trigger and collect your bounty
I visited the movie set where these were made this year, had them on dvd and decided to buy the blue ray versions, I thought that they would be more expensive so I was delighted with this purchase, movies look great on my series x but I might upgrade my player next, highly recommended if you love Sergio leones trilogy you won’t be disappointed.
P**T
Not "Perfect Remastered".But for the sheap price It's worth your money.
Amazon don't descriped that this boxset actually "Region Free!"(well,"For a Few Dollars More "Imprint region AB") The UK boxset've three seperate BD case.It look better than US package in my opinion. The Price so sheap.Even MGM still don't "Meticulously Restored"the first two movies(for "The Good,The Bad and The Ugly"newly remastered I think It's look improved from the old BD even many people complaint about"Yellow Tint".But I've no problem at all with newly remasterd.) I 've "Recommended"this Boxset.Great western of all time from Dir.Sergio Leone and for this price you not disapointed! (Also,for the one who's just newcomer of these Leone's classic.Don't forget check "Once Upon A Time In The West".I 've "Highly Recommended".)
V**Z
J'ai acheté ce coffret car "Pour une poignée de dollars" n'est jamais sorti en DVD par chez nous : problèmes de droits sur la VF... Et comme je souhaitais avoir les trois films d'un coup, je me suis tourné vers ce coffret, alléché par le fait que les autres VF devaient y figurer. Je l'ai reçu aujourd'hui, et : - Pour une poignée de dollars : VOSTFR (normal) ; - Pour quelques dollars de plus : VOSTFR / VF (comme indiqué) ; - Le bon, la brute et le truand : VOSTFR... et pas de VF alors que c'est marqué sur le boîtier du DVD ! Je suis donc un peu ennuyé de ne pas avoir droit à ça, la VF étant tout de même excellente. M'enfin, avoir la trilogie pour moins de 20 €, c'est déjà beau. Je précise tout de même pour les têtes en l'air que les DVD sont en zone 1, donc illisibles chez nous sur les platines de salon et même sur PC. Il faut trouver le code de dézonage de son lecteur ou bien utiliser un logiciel comme AnyDVD sur PC. Une dernière chose : l'image n'est pas de bonne qualité, il n'y a eu aucune restauration.
R**N
.....No esta doblado en español,pero tienes el audio en el ingles original y subtitulos para sordos en ingles.la calidad de las restauraciones es suprema y estan llenos de extras como documentales sobre sergio leone,entrevistas con clint eastwood o audiocomentarios del especialista en leone sir christopher frayling.por este precio,olvidate de las peladas ediciones de divisa!
T**R
This pack is fantastic. 3 Great movies for a pretty low price. The visual quality on all three movies are INSANE! How they were able to get such high visual quality out of movies that are over 50 years old at this point baffles me. Especially in The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly. The visual quality is so high you can see the pores on the actors faces even at a mediumish range shot. Now, there is one thing I should address about The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly that some others have raised concerns about. That would be the "Yellowing" of the movie. Is it really that bad? Well, no, it isn't. In fact, I didn't even notice any sort of "Yellow" filter or anything over the picture like others have said. I couldn't even notice the so-called "Yellow" sky, because any time the sky wasn't just white (Like it was in the original non remastered version) it looked pretty damn blue to me. No yellow at all! The only "Yellow" I could notice was that sometimes, maybe 2 or 3 times during the movie, some yellow objects were over saturated. They really popped out. That said, it was only the objects that were already yellow, and it didn't at all carry over to anything else weirdly enough. It was just some of these objects, like sand in one scene, and an actors face in another with the sun on him, for example, that were really over saturated for some reason. Again, every other color in these scenes were absolutely normal. This pack also contains a ton of great extra content, like commentaries, deleted scenes, interviews, trailers, that sorta stuff. One thing that felt like it was missing was The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly didn't come with a "Then and Now" part like A Fistful of Dollars did (I forgot to check if A Few Dollars More has it, but I'm assuming it does too). It would have been even more awesome if this set included that, because I'd love to watch it.
A**S
Two of the Blu ray cases were fine but the one for 'For a few dollars more' was cracked and one side broken away from the hinge. Box was abit bent out of shape as well
D**Y
If you are or know an Eastwood junkie or fan of the quintessential "spaghetti western" this trilogy is the best of the best of Westerns. The price was right, & my hubby was happily entertained by Eastwood, Lee Van Cleef, Eli Wallach & other greats for many an afternoon or evening.
ترست بايلوت
منذ شهرين
منذ شهر