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They Call Me Trinity 1970 - Trailer

They Call Me Trinity (1970) - Cult Film Index Review

By 1970, the spaghetti western had already mastered myth, violence, and political despair, but They Call Me Trinity flips the genre on its head with a grin, a fistfight, and a plate of beans. Directed and written by Enzo Barboni, working under his pseudonym E.B. Clucher, the film trades operatic fatalism for broad comedy without ever losing the visual cool of the Italian frontier. Originally, Peter Martell and George Eastman were set to play the leads before Terence Hill and Bud Spencer stepped in. Franco Micalizzi's buoyant score is a huge part of its charm, turning every slow horse ride and every brawl into pure feel-good legend. Terence Hill's Trinity drifts into the film half-asleep, filthy, and impossibly fast with a gun, a lazy-looking drifter whose apparent indifference hides a near-supernatural talent for violence. Waiting for him is his half-brother Bambino (Bud Spencer), who has broken the real sheriff's leg and taken his place while planning a horse theft, a perfect combination of brute strength and deadpan irritation. Trinity's arrival complicates everything, especially once they become reluctantly involved in protecting a peaceful Mormon farming community from the bullying landowner Major Harriman, played by Hollywood veteran Farley Granger, known for Hitchcock's Rope, and his hired guns and Mexican bandit allies. One of the most commercially successful Italian films ever made.

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Видео They Call Me Trinity 1970 - Trailer канала Cult Film
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