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The Good, the Bad and the Ugly: Difference between revisions
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[[Image:GBUColtNavyCartridge-6.jpg|thumb|none|500px|Blondie cleans his Colt Navy. Blondie must shoot his gun quite often to get it so dirty.]] | [[Image:GBUColtNavyCartridge-6.jpg|thumb|none|500px|Blondie cleans his Colt Navy. Blondie must shoot his gun quite often to get it so dirty.]] | ||
[[Image:GBUColtNavyCartridge-7.jpg|thumb|none|500px|Blondie sleeps with his hand on his Colt Navy. Note the silver inlaid snake grips.]] | [[Image:GBUColtNavyCartridge-7.jpg|thumb|none|500px|Blondie sleeps with his hand on his Colt Navy. Note the silver inlaid snake grips.]] | ||
[[Image:GBUperfectnumbercartridge.jpg|thumb|none|500px|" | [[Image:GBUperfectnumbercartridge.jpg|thumb|none|500px|"Blondie: One, two, three, four, five, and six. Six, the perfect number." "Angel Eyes: I thought three was the perfect number." "Blondie: I've got six more bullets in my gun."]] | ||
[[Image:GBUColtNavyCartridge-8.jpg|thumb|none|500px|Blondie fires his Colt Navy during the grave yard standoff.]] | [[Image:GBUColtNavyCartridge-8.jpg|thumb|none|500px|Blondie fires his Colt Navy during the grave yard standoff.]] |
Revision as of 20:55, 13 September 2008
The following guns were used in the film The Good, The Bad, and The Ugly.
Blondie (Clint Eastwood) carries a Colt 1851 Navy revolver with a Richards-Mason cartridge conversion kit (which is anachronistic for the time) throughout the film, his being outfitted with wooden grips inlaid with silver rattlesnakes, of which all his revolvers where fitted with in the Leone trilogy. It is based off the same grips used by Clint as Rowdy Yates in "Rawhide". Tuco (Eli Wallach) also carries a Cartridge converted Navy, his being fitted with a lanyard loop, which instead of a holster, is stuck in his pocket (because Eli Wallach had trouble holstering a revolver without looking at the holster.) Angel Eyes (Lee Van Cleef) also used a Navy Cartridge to murder a sickley old man towards the beginning of the film, firing it through his pillow. He keeps this Navy when serving in the Union, but carries a Remington 1858 for his own use. Throughout the film, it becomes obvious that if they have a cartridge revolver, they are going to fire it in the scene. In any other scene, the revolvers changes to an unloaded Percussion models (with the exception of Blondie's).
This side-by-side shows how Tuco's revolver switchs from a cartridge revolver to a precussion revolver in the scene. A goof also worth noting is how his revolver is capable of firing under water, while he is in the bath tub.
Seen used by Tuco (Eli Wallach) when firing the gun is not required or he must point the gun at a fellow actor.
Remington 1858 "New Army"
Angel Eyes/Sentenza (Lee Van Cleef) carries a Remington 1858 "New Army" as his personal sidearm. When not carrying his 1858, he is carrying his Union issued Colt Navy (cartridge converted, since it is the only gun he fires in the film). He is never seen firing the Remington because it is a percussion revolver only with no cartridge conversion to fire blanks. It is a somewhat notable goof that he keeps a cartridge belt depsite using a percussion revolver. Also, a common continuity is the that the gun is loaded or unloaded with percussion caps.
Winchester 1866 "Yellow Boy" (mocked up as a Henry 1860)
Blondie (Clint Eastwood) uses a Winchester 1866 "Yellow Boy" rifle, with both ladder-elavated sights and a side folding scope. He is prominantly seen using it as a means to con law officials by giving up Tuco, a wanted criminal, for a bounty. He then uses the rifle to shoot the rope before Tuco is hanged, and they split the reward. He also is seen with it when a man named "Shorty" is hung, but Tuco doesn't allow him to shoot the rope, and poor Shorty hangs. A bounty hunter is also seen using one to shoot out Tuco's horse towards the begining of the film. It should be noted that while the gun is anachronistic to the time, it is made to look like a Henry 1860 rifle by removing the wooden forend. The dead give aways are the loading gate on the right side, the lack of a magazine tube loading break switch, and the lack of slits in the mag tube which allows the user to see bullets left in the gun.
Gatling Gun
Seen during Civil War battle scenes (with drum magazines).