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et pour quelques dollars de plus affiche
et pour quelques dollars de plus affiche
et pour quelques dollars de plus affiche
et pour quelques dollars de plus affiche
et pour quelques dollars de plus affiche
et pour quelques dollars de plus affiche
et pour quelques dollars de plus affiche
et pour quelques dollars de plus affiche
et pour quelques dollars de plus affiche
et pour quelques dollars de plus affiche
et pour quelques dollars de plus affiche
et pour quelques dollars de plus affiche

Vintage Poster
And for a few more dollars

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Second opus of Sergio Leone's dollar trilogy, rediscover one of the best representatives of the spaghetti western with this Poster And For A Few Dollars More!

  • Paper characteristic:
    • 🎨 Canvas: world standard in terms of printing and imitating a “painting canvas” appearance .
    • By default, the poster contains a 4 cm white border for framing (frame not included). If you don't want it, please choose "without white border".
    • Size: several choices available . ✅
  • Great UV resistance .
  • Maximum color vibrancy, without reflections .
  • Recycled paper, guaranteeing respect for the environment.
  • Poster carefully packaged and delivered in a protective tube for total protection .
  • FREE STANDARD DELIVERY .

⚠️ Frame not included. ⚠️

Description of this Poster And For A Few Dollars More

And For a Few Dollars More is a 1965 film directed by Sergio Leone.

It is the second film in the Dollar Trilogy (along with A Fistful of Dollars, 1964, and The Good, the Bad and the Ugly, 1966), directed by Leone and starring Clint Eastwood.

In addition to Eastwood and Gian Maria Volonté, who co-star with Lee Van Cleef, there are several actors who had appeared in supporting roles in Leone's previous film, including Mario Brega, Joseph Egger, Benito Stefanelli, Aldo Sambrell, Antonio Molino Rojo and Lorenzo Robledo. Some of them will also be present in the last film of the trilogy.

New Mexico. El Indio, leader of a fierce band of outlaws, is freed by his men from a Mexican prison. During his escape, he mercilessly kills the prison guards and captain, leaving only one soldier alive so he can tell everyone what he saw.

Meanwhile, in another part of the West, a bounty hunter, the Monk, so called because of his habit of using only his left hand, leaving his right free to shoot, travels the country searching for of the most "remunerative" criminals in the region, and like him, Colonel Douglas Mortimer, a former southern officer with refined manners but a skilled bounty killer, takes on the same task. Although in different places, both men have set their sights on the rich bounty of Indio, but while for the Monk it is only a question of money, the Colonel wants it for another reason .

Indio joins his comrades and immediately concocts a plan to storm the El Paso bank, the most impenetrable and secure in the state, explaining to his initially suspicious supporters that it contains a carved cabinet that conceals a safe containing no less than half a million dollars in cash, the existence of which he learned from the builder, a craftsman he met during his stay in prison and whom he killed during his bloody escape.

The Monk and the Colonel both find themselves in El Paso to closely follow the actions of the gang: the Monk, thanks to a young boy who gives him information, discovers the presence of the Colonel in the city, and begins to follow him and to obtain information about him from the Prophet, an old pioneer who, moreover, knows Mortimer well. During a moment of apparent calm, the colonel finds part of the Indio gang in town and, wanting to test their intentions, lights a match on the bump of Wild, a dangerous criminal. Determined to remain the only one to claim the Indio bounty, the monk challenges the colonel to a duel during a nighttime test of pistol skill. During the confrontation, the monk first shoots the colonel's hat, who returns the favor by shooting several times at the young, more impetuous shooter. After the confrontation, the two men, having noted their identical abilities, agree to collaborate and share the money obtained thanks to the bounty from Indio and his supporters: during the planning, the colonel, colder and more rational than the Monco, convinces him to infiltrate the ranks of the Indio, by escaping one of his men, Sancho Perez, detained in a Mexican prison, and thus reach him.

Although both shooters know the gang's objective, namely the El Paso bank, they do not know the entire plan. Thus, despite the double blow of the Monco and the ambush set by the two bounty killers in the city to catch the criminals in the act and eliminate them, the Indio, through a stratagem, manages to take the safe and escape with the loot. At this point, the Monk would like to dissolve the partnership with the Colonel and pursue the criminals alone, but once again, the former officer, more rational than his partner, convinces him to join forces with those of Indio and pursue joint action.

The gang fled east to a seedy village called Agua Caliente, where Indio decided to hide from the authorities. The Monco and the colonel find themselves in the village, to the surprise of the first, who had believed he could deceive the other by changing the direction of the flight; upon the gang's arrival at the local tavern, the colonel is recognized by the Hunchback, who challenges him to a duel in revenge for the humiliation he suffered in El Paso, and he is killed. Posing as a professional thief interested in the same heist, Mortimer offers to help the Indian open the safe, in exchange for a cash reward. The money, however, is stored in a safe to which Indio has the key. During the night, the Colonel and the Monk simultaneously go to the warehouse where the safe is located and steal the money. But Indio, cunning and suspicious, discovers the true intentions of the two allies and has them beaten to pulp by his men. Thinking of exploiting them to thwart the rangers' investigations, Indio decides not to immediately kill his prisoners because they had previously succeeded in hiding the loot from the burglary.

Out of greed, the Indio, in cahoots with his faithful El Niño, thinks he can only divide the entire spoils between the two of them. After freeing the Monco and the colonel, the Indio blames a member of the gang for the escape. The merciless outlaw puts his companions to flight, who are soon eliminated one by one by the two Indians during a shootout in the village.

Indio's plans are thwarted at the last moment by Groggy, who kills el Niño and demands his share of the spoils. But the money is no longer in the safe and Indio has no choice but to come out of hiding to face his destiny.

Douglas Mortimer thus manages to deliver the long-awaited duel with the Indio, thanks to the unexpected help of the Monk who, holding his rifle in his right arm and a music box clock in his left hand, waits like them for the end of the music for the showdown. In the end, Colonel Mortimer kills the Indian but does not accept a single dollar of the bounty he has already received; the final analysis will explain why: the colonel wanted to avenge his sister (with whom Indio was madly in love) and her husband, victims of the outlaw who, dizzy after having spied on them from the window of their room while They were kissing, killed the man and raped the woman who, during the rape, killed herself by shooting herself in the side with Indio's gun. The money went to the Monco who, after collecting all the lucrative corpses, also made the stolen half-million dollars his own, taking it among the branches of a tree, where it had remained since the two partners had been discovered, in order to return it to the El Paso bank and obtain the reward.

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