Movies News Talk
Beyond its surface title, Sergio Leone's legendary Spaghetti Western The Good, The Bad, And The Ugly has more nuanced meaning. Releasing in 1966, The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly is generally regarded as the definitive Western film. According to critic Christopher Frayling, Americans were "bored with an exhausted Hollywood genre," at a low point in the industry. (Archive.org). Something had to bring back those tired viewers; Leone was the director for the job, producing a grandiose, gunslinging masterpiece as much as a satire of the genre as it was indulgent in its rules.
With many Americans horrified by the devastation of the war in Vietnam, the 1960s were also a period of polarization and opposition about it. Filmed in Spain, The Good, The Bad, And The Ugly's Civil War backdrop sets the scene for three gunners fiercely vying for buried Confederate gold. It presents a picture of an unforgiving wasteland instead of the exotic country of promise from past years. Leone presents three classic characters on first glance. One questions the simplicity of those archets. He shows in the movie's double-crossing twists and turns that it's not that simple anymore and never will never be again.
The title acts as the main characters' shorthand. Though his ultimate goal is the hidden cache, Clint Eastwood's legendary character Blondie, "The Good," hunts for outlaws. Eli Wallach's performance of Tuco, "The Ugly," is of a merciless bandit with a unique grimace and inclination for profanity. He just knows the cemetery where the buried gold is kept; he has the key to its whereabouts. Lee Van Cleef is Angel Eyes, "The Bad," a cold-blooded killer. Driven just by a taste for gold, Angel Eyes is the most merciless of the three and the real story villain.
Westerns and beyond now consider these classic openings along with their morally provocative titles as a benchmark.
Every gunslinger arrives on the scene in a manner that honed their title. From a dusty haze, Clint Eastwood's The Man With No Name heroically distinguishes as a terrifying loner right away. With a desperate leap that highlights his impulsiveness and mischievous inclinations, Tuco makes a great arrival. Angel Eyes, on the other hand, is veiled in quiet mystery; his eyes clearly reveal his dark side. Most famously used by Quentin Tarantino in Kill Bill: Vol 1 for dramatic flair, these classic introductions—along with their morally provocative titles—have become a touchstone for Westerns and beyond.
Though only a surface expectation, all three title traits apply to every one of the men to some degree. Early on, Tuco's "ugly" qualities—crime, crassness, and buffoonery—are on exhibit. Tuco blooms all around, a complicated mix of cruelty and sensitivity. Using him drives some of the kindnesses, like providing sun-blazed Blondie water and coffee. Other times, he truly gets friendly with Blondie. Tuco is credited with one of the best quotes from The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly since he exposes his priest brother's moral hypocrisy by accusing him of merely being "too cowardly," so rendering him unlike a bandit.
Given that the character is obviously shown as a merciless killer, Angel Eyes boasts far less redeemable features. Still, his presentation is not without subtlety. As The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly reveals, Angel Eyes does have some honor. He won't take money for a job without seeing it through to the end.
Heroes in Eastwood are more antiheroic than the idealized American standards of John Wayne.
Blondie is likewise not exactly great. Eastwood portrays some of the best Western heroes, his heroes more antiheroic than the idealized American values of John Wayne. Blondie responds brilliantly deadpan when Tuco remarks on the peace of the graveyard, "Like a cemetery for instance." This is part of what gives him antiheroic appeal. He keeps some mystery about everything, especially when he uses Tuco's noose trick against him at the end. Ironically, though, polarity is restored – Blondie is finally good, Tuco has been taught a lesson, and Angel Eyes, the unquestionably baddie, is vanquished – shooting the rope brings the story full circle.
The roots of the English language phrase are found in the filmmaking process of the movie. Luciano Vincenzoni, the screenwriter, considered the Italian title "Il buono, il brutto, il cattivo" – "The Good, the Ugly, the Bad." The Italian release took use of this title. The title was changed to "The Good, The Bad, And The Ugly," though, for audiences in the US and UK who speak English. For English speakers, this change sharpened the flow and rhythm of the title.
Robert F. Kennedy's use in his speeches helped explain its frequency in language.
Beyond the movie, the term has evolved into a life of its own used to characterize a comprehensive perspective of any subject. People might discuss, for example, "the good, the bad, and the ugly" of being a Manchester United supporter with all its ups and downs. American politician Robert F. Kennedy even regularly used the title in his public presentations. Ultimately, though, its significance to pop culture is hardly shocking; The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly has a well-earned reputation as among the best Westerns ever produced.
Source: Archive.org