Fistful of Dollars
List Price: $29.98
Low Price: $1.99
Savings: $27.99
(93.36%)
Avg Rating: 4.5 of 5.0 by 72 users.
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Alibris
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DVD | $3.95 |
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DeepDiscount.com
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Product Information
The first true Spaghetti Western follows the exploits of a nameless drifter (Clint Eastwood) who wanders into a town torn apart by greed, corruption, and revenge. The clever, tough-talking gunslinger then plays the town's two feuding families off each other to his own benefit. As members of each family are planted in the ground, the gold in his pockets gets heavier and heavier. This violent remake of Akira Kurosawa's YOJIMBO made Eastwood a star, and sparked two sequels--FOR A FEW DOLLARS MORE and THE GOOD, THE BAD AND THE UGLY--to form what is now referred to as the Man with No Name trilogy. All three films starred Eastwood, featured Ennio Morricone's distinctive musical compositions, and were directed--in a wonderfully gritty style--by Sergio Leone. Although the film was not released in the United States until 1967, it was produced and released internationally in 1964.Actors and Key Contributors: Clint Eastwood,
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Review Summary
72 Amazon user ratings

0 Epinion user ratings
Not Rated
Spotlight Review
The Man With No Name Trilogy - Simply brilliant!
Written
By K. Wyatt
on 2003-03-23This is simply put, one of the best western trilogies to have ever graced the silver screen and the home theater system! If you're into westerns and are interested in viewing some of the best, these are the ones you want. These are the films that brought the genesis of the "spaghetti western" and set the tone for many westerns to come!
A Fistful of Dollars - A true genre classic!
A Fistful of Dollars is truly one of the big classics in the western genre and one that began a newer, better style of western films. First in a string of Clint Eastwood's "spaghetti" westerns, it has a style and cinematic class all to itself. This is where Clint Eastwood began his style of western hero who doesn't say much, but gets his point across through his facial expressions and of course his actions... (Read Full Review)



