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A movie with Morricone's
music
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mov-010
Once
upon a time in revolution/C'era
una volta la rivoluzione
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71-09-official
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Relative music
page
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IMDB(English)
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IMDB(Chinese)
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Note
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Only
provide a part of watch in online in every movie page. You
could enter
here to submit your request for more
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About
the movie from IMDB
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Overview
Director:Sergio Leone
Writers:Sergio Leone (story) and
Sergio Donati (story) ...
more
Release Date:29 October 1971 (Italy) more
Genre:Adventure / Western / Action / War more
Tagline:Rod Steiger and James Coburn will blow you apart in
"A Fistful of Dynamite" ("Duck You Sucker")
by the master of adventure Sergio Leone
Plot Outline:An IRA explosives expert on the run in Mexico
meets an amoral Mexican bandit; together they get drawn into
the Mexican revolution. more
Plot Synopsis:This plot synopsis is empty. Add a synopsis
Plot Keywords:Execution / Once Upon A Time In The Title /
Explosion / Flashback Sequence / Cult Western more
Awards:1 win more
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Additional Details
Also Known As:A Fistful of Dynamite (UK) (USA)
(alternative title)
C'era una volta la rivoluzione (Italy)
Duck, You Sucker (USA)
Once Upon a Time... the Revolution
more
Parents Guide:Add content advisory for parents
Runtime:157 min / USA:120 min (initial US release) / USA:138
min / USA:154 min (Laserdisc version)
Country:Italy
Language:Italian / Spanish
Color:Color (Eastmancolor)
Aspect Ratio:2.35 : 1 more
Sound Mix:Mono
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Synopsis
In Mexico at the time of the Revolution, Juan,
the leader of a bandit family, meets John Mallory, an IRA
explosives expert on the run from the British. Seeing John's
skill with explosives, Juan decides to persuade him to join
the bandits in a raid on the great bank of Mesa Verde. John
in the meantime has made contact with the revolutionaries,
and intends to use his dynamite in their service(See
here)
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-------------------------------------------------------
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Review
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In its uncut version, Sergio Leone's final foray
into Western territory opens with a quote
from Mao -- flashed a few words at a time, à la Godard
-- establishing its political nature immediately. Though not the
first to see the spaghetti Western's potential for political commentary,
Leone predictably claims the burgeoning (since the 1968 uprisings)
genre variation as his own. A fantastic opening pitting Rod Steiger's
earthy bandito against a stagecoach filled with rich bigots begins
the film on a fantastic note that Leone has difficulty sustaining.
But what the film loses in momentum, it gains in complexity. Pairing
Steiger's character with James Coburn's nearly disillusioned Irish
revolutionary expands the scope of the film in ways other than the
geographical. While other political spaghetti Westerns simply pitted
the haves against the have-nots, Duck, You Sucker! (named after
a "popular" American catchphrase known only to Leone),
attempts to portray the full scope of revolution. That the director
includes chilling scenes of wholesale massacre on the part of the
ruling class would seem to betray his sympathies, but he also portrays
the impact of revolutionary activity on those who rebel. Mao's
words about revolution being an act of violence take on new meaning
in light of the losses incurred by the two heroes over the course
of the film. Does Leone endorse the statement, reject
it, or simply view it as an inevitability? Whatever the case, the
debate is housed in a film unmistakable for the work of any other
director -- one that's larger than life but still quite affecting
and contains inimitable suspense sequences. Though it includes too
many awkwardly paced passages to qualify as anyone's favorite Leone
film, the film's disastrous financial performance in America granted
it an undeserved obscurity. The strange (even by his own standards)
score by Ennio Morricone alone makes it worth seeking out. ~ Keith
Phipps, All Movie Guide (See
here)
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Strange
and entertaining political Leone western,
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Originally and horribly titled "Duck,
you sucker", Fistful of Dynamite is a very political western
circa early `70s. Rod Steiger plays the role of a Mexican bandit
who ends up in a partnership with James Coburn.Coburn is an expat
Irish revolutionary, complete with dynamite and a motorcycle on
the run in Mexico. Both are simply excellent in their roles even
though Coburn has a tendency to fall in and out of his Irish accent.
Politics plays a central role in this film. It
opens with a quote from Chairman Mao on the nature of violence and
revolution. The first scene is chock full of class warfare
as Steiger's character is humiliated by the upper-class riders on
the stage. Slowly Stieger is converted from bandit to revolutionary
by Coburn. This is also one of Leone's most violent films (which
is saying a lot); in one scene government troops are shown massacring
hundreds in retaliation for rebel attacks.
You don't have to be left wing to enjoy Fistful
of Dynamite. Neither side is really pictured in a positive manner;
even the rebel leadership is duplicitous and even treasonous. In
the end this is a very entertaining film, which has been in the
shadow of Leone's other works. Interestingly he originally wanted
to call this "Once Upon a Time, a Revolution", the first
part of a Once Upon a Time trilogy. And of course don't miss the
eerie and downright weird Ennio Morricone score (which I've been
looking for since I watched this film). (See
here)
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English dub, Chinese substitle 477M,
450kbps rm format, 147 minutes
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See a part of the movie
from CC union (3')
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