Quote:
Originally posted by Dr.Kelvinstein
Anyone familiar with the "supernatural" reading of The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly? I don't know who originally came up with this, but some critics and reviewers think Blondie is an angel sent to watch over Tuco and ensure he gets his share of the gold without getting killed. According to this reading, he slowly reveals his angelic identity until the end when he appears for the gunfight in pure angelic radiance (the sheep-skin vest and poncho we know from the other two movies in the Dollars Trilogy). This reading also explains some of Angel Eyes' dialogue and adds more signifigance to the scene in which Tuco beats his padre brother. And at the end of the movie did Blondie keep on riding to the town of San Miguel, somewhere along the way trading his horse for the mule he's riding in the opening of Fistful?
Monco, Eastwood's name in For a Few, is also Italian for Monk.
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Thats a pretty cool thought. I mean, The Man with No Name rarely seems to get hurt (there are exceptions, of course) and often gets saved by some nearly impossible coincidences. (The Chariots in the desert, the explosion in the hotel etc.) A man who is nearly left for dead by Tuco miraculously talks to Blondie. Pretty cool, maybe he evolved into the High Plains Drifter lol.