
There were three men in her life. One to take her… one to love her —and one to kill her.
As the railroad builders advance unstoppably through the Arizona desert on their way to the sea, Jill arrives in the small town of Flagstone with the intention of starting a new life.
- 8.3
- 1968
- Released
- 2h 46m

Claudia Cardinale
Jill
Henry Fonda
Frank
Jason Robards
'Cheyenne'
Charles Bronson
'Harmonica'
Gabriele Ferzetti
Morton
Paolo Stoppa
Sam
Woody Strode
Frank's Gunman
Jack Elam
Frank's Gunman
Keenan Wynn
Sheriff
Frank Wolff
Brett McBain
Lionel Stander
Innkeeper
Frank Braña
Frank's Gunman (uncredited)
Stefano Imparato
Patrick McBain (uncredited)
Al Mulock
Frank's Gunman (uncredited)
Antonio Palombi
Station Agent (uncredited)
Renato Pinciroli
Bidder (uncredited)
Aldo Sambrell
Cheyenne's Gunman (uncredited)
Conrado San Martín
McBain's Neighbor (uncredited)
Enzo Santaniello
Timmy McBain (uncredited)
Simonetta Santaniello
Maureen McBain (uncredited)
Luana Strode
Cattle Corner Woman (uncredited)
Fabio Testi
Frank's Gunman (uncredited)
Marco Zuanelli
'Wobbles' (uncredited)
Antonio Molino Rojo
Frank's Gunman (uncredited)
Román Ariznavarreta
Logan (uncredited)
John Frederick
Jim (uncredited)
Aldo Berti
Frank's Gunman (uncredited)
Spartaco Conversi
Frank's Gunman (uncredited)
Saturno Cerra
Frank's Gunman (uncredited)
Paolo Figlia
Frank's Gunman (uncredited)
Dino Mele
Harmonica as a Boy (uncredited)
Simonetta Stefanelli
Maureen McBain (uncredited)
Regina Elena Bisio
Old Woman in the Tavern (uncredited)
Michael Harvey
Frank's Gunman (uncredited)
Joyce Gordon
Jill McBain (Voice) (Uncredited)
Bernard Grant
Mr. Morton (Voice) (Uncredited)
Edward Mannix
Vecino (Voice) (Uncredited)
Dan Sturkie
Wobbles (Voice) (Uncredited)


Released
it
$5,000,000.00
$5,380,118.00
- #small town
- #loss of loved one
- #harmonica
- #wedding party
- #spaghetti western
- #arizona territory
- #intercontintental railroad
- #outlaw gang
- #water pump
- #mysterious character
- #boom town
- #railroad company
- #hope for a new life
- #railroad construction
- #techniscope
Reviews
This is a masterpiece in story, sound and vision. The detailed long lingering beautiful shots and scenes building tension are a fabulous antidote to today's movies where stuff or extreme proportions must just happen every 3 minutes whatever! The opening scene is my favourite. Who would think it would be so captivating to have so little happen for so long (11 minutes till the first line is de

Great western that I never watched despite owning the old DVD, but with Paramount releasing this on 4K UHD, decided to sit down through the 165-minute duration and it was a wonderful experience. Great performances all around, but most notably Jason Robards and Charles Bronson. Just another homerun from Sergio Leone though I think I prefer "The Good, the Bad and the Ugly" but it's close. **4.5/5**

**One of the great western movies.** Western movies made in co-production by Italians and Americans (called "spaghetti-western") have been considered among the best that emerged within their genre, cleverly combining the tough action of Wild West gunslingers with the taste for raw realism and detail of the Italian filmmakers. I believe that such a thing may displease North Americans, who consid

The worst of the worst Leone Westerns. Leone destroyed the Westerns with his garbage, but the blame goes on to the critics who praised his lack of motivation, lack of inspiration, lack of credibility, lack of entertainment value, lack of strategy, just a total lack. This is the worst of his stupid Westerns. It's the most contrived of his contrived Westerns. It's another "classical Greek hero" s
I can't say that this script doesn't play on Clint Eastwood's "Man with No Name" (which Sergio Leone also directed), but it's not important. If you're a spaghetti western fan, this film is a step up. The idea of putting Fonda in a bad guy role, and casting Bronson as anti-hero was a little shocking at first. At the end, I see how it worked to film's advantage by making all the characters more comp

With apologies (not really) to fans who disagree, this is truly a classic western. I read a criticism that some scenes run long with agonizingly lengthy close-ups, but I found the cinematography intriguing. Those shots divulge nearly as much into the characters' personalities as a wad of dialogue from older traditional westerns. Sometimes in a spaghetti western I find myself thinking, aw, why
All what you can expect from a western.











