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For a Few Dollars More
(Per qualche dollaro in più)

Screening on Film
Directed by Sergio Leone.
With Clint Eastwood, Lee Van Cleef, Gian Maria Volontè.
Italy, 1965, 35mm, color, 130 min.
In English.

A favorite of the most die-hard Leone fans, For a Few Dollars More is his first mature film, a major showcase for Leone’s masterful use of the human face as a expressive object, explored through the bold close-ups that push to a radical extreme Sergei Eisenstein’s notion of typage – characters offered as instantly recognizable representative models of social class and cultural stereo-types. In Leone’s case, however, he turned to the iconic myths of the American West, and of Hollywood cinema, to fashion a fever dream of masculinity and violence using studio and television actors Clint Eastwood and Lee Van Cleef as icons swept off the ordered mantle of studio-era classicism into the raging fire of Leone’s baroque and tempestuous frontier. Cast as rival “bounty killers," Eastwood and Van Cleef are bonded into a laconic partnership, and possible friendship, when they join forces to capture the notorious bandit, “El Indio” brilliantly played as a haunted, decadent man-child by Gian Maria Volontè. Using rapid-fire montage and wonderfully integrating Morricone’s sublime orchestral score into its narrative, For a Few Dollars More is a profoundly sophisticated example of a polyvalent film style that is able to be simultaneously parodic and tragic, comedic and frightening, cooly detached and ardently emotional. – HG

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