1. Ennio Morricone

    Ennio Morricone (born November 10, 1928; sometimes also credited as "Dan Savio" or "Leo Nichols") is an Italian composer especially noted for his film scores. He has composed and arranged scores for more than 400 film and television productions, more than any other composer living or deceased. He is best known for the characteristic sparse and memorable soundtracks of Sergio Leone's spaghetti westerns "A Fistful of Dollars" (1964), …

  2. Sergio Leone

    Sergio Leone (January 3, 1929 - April 30, 1989) was an Italian film director. Leone is well-known for his Spaghetti Western films, and his recognizable style of juxtaposing extreme close-up shots with extreme long shots. Despite only directing seven films, Leone is recognized as one of the greatest directors of all time. Of his seven films, he is best known for his The Man With No Name trilogy, which consists of A Fistful of Dollars, For A Few Dollars More, and The Good, …

  3. Mario Brega

    Mario Brega (March 5, 1923 in Rome - July 23, 1994) was an Italian actor. His heavy build meant that he mostly portrayed a thug in his films. Brega was born in Rome. He was a butcher before he drifted into acting, where he heavy physique ensured him a plethora of character roles. Debuting with director Dino Risi, he then played some minor roles in Sergio Leone's spaghetti western movies "A Fistful of Dollars", as Chico, "For a Few Dollars More", as Nino, …

  4. Luigi Pistilli

    Luigi Pistilli (July 19, 1929 - April 21, 1996) was an Italian actor of stage, screen, and television. In theater, he was considered one of the country's best interpreters of Bertolt Brecht's plays in "The Threepenny Opera" and "St. Joan of the Stockyards". Born in Grosseto, Pistilli studied acting at Milan's Piccolo Teatro, graduating in 1955.

  5. Luciano Vincenzoni

    Luciano Vincenzoni (born c.1920) is an Italian screenwriter and one of Italy's most respected writer's for film known in Italy as the "Script doctor". He has written prolifically for some 65 films between 1954 and 2000. He is probably best known in world cinema for his script writing of Sergio Leone's "For a Few Dollars More" (1965) and the "The Good, the Bad and the Ugly" in 1966 but also wrote for a great number of other Spaghetti westerns.

  6. Tonino Delli Colli

    Tonino Delli Colli was an Italian cinematographer. Born in Rome, he began work at Rome's Cinecittà studio in 1938, at the age of sixteen. By the mid-1940s he was working as a cinematographer and in 1952 shot the first Italian film in colour, "Totò a colori". He went on to work with a number of acclaimed, and diverse, directors, including Sergio Leone ("The Good, the Bad and the Ugly", …

  7. Alberto Grimaldi

    Alberto Grimaldi (b. 1925 Naples) is a major Italian film producer. He is credited with producing some of the most famous films in film history including "The Good, the Bad and the Ugly" in 1965 and "Gangs of New York" in 2002. He shares his name with an antagonist in the "Half-Lives: The First Luisa Rey Mystery" section of David Mitchell's "Cloud Atlas"

  8. Aldo Giuffrè

    Aldo Giuffrè is an Italian film actor and comedian who has appeared in over 90 films between 1948 and 2001. He is known for his roles in "The Four Days of Naples", and as the alcoholic union captain in the Sergio Leone film "The Good, the Bad and the Ugly" in 1966.

  9. Rada Rassimov

    Rada Rassimov born c. 1938, Trieste) is an Italian actress who has appeared in film since the early 1960s and television since 1975. Born to Croatian parents, her career was at its peak in the 1960s and 1970s although she has appeared in film as recently as 2003. She is perhaps best known in world cinema for her appearance in Sergio Leone's Spaghetti Western the "The Good, the Bad and the Ugly" in 1966 in which she played the role of the prostitute, Maria, …

  10. Benito Stefanelli

    Benito Stefanelli (1929 - December 1999) was an Italian film actor and stuntman who made over 60 appearances in film between 1955 and 1990. Stefanelli is best known in world cinema for his roles as henchmen in several of Sergio Leone's Spaghetti Western films, portraying gang members in the trilogy of films "A Fistful of Dollars" (1964), "For a Few Dollars More", (1965) and the "The Good, the Bad and the Ugly" in 1966.

  11. Enzo Petito

    Enzo Petito (born Vincenzo Squatriti on February 19, 1911 in Spain) was a Spanish film actor who has appeared in film in the 1960s. Although never a major actor he made a number of small appearances as character actors and is best known in world cinema for his role as the innocent helpless store keeper in the Sergio Leone film" The Good, the Bad and the Ugly "in 1966

  12. Livio Lorenzon

    Livio Lorenzon (6 May 1923 Trieste - 23 December 1971 in Latisana) was an Italian film actor of the 1950s and 1960s. Lorenzon is best known in world cinema for his small roles in Spaghetti Western films in the 1960s, appearing in "The Good, the Bad and the Ugly" and The Secret Seven in 1966. Lorenzon appeared in some 75 films mostly westerns between 1952 and 1969. He died in 1971 in Latisana in a street accident only aged 48.

  13. Claudio Scarchilli

    Claudio Scarchilli was an Italian film actor who appeared in film throughout the 1960s. He acted in nearly twenty films within that decade. He is best known in world cinema for his small roles in several of Sergio Leone's films, portraying a Bounty Hunter in the Spaghetti Western the "The Good, the Bad and the Ugly" in 1966, and "C'era una volta il West" in 1968. His brother Sandro Scarchilli was also an actor and also appeared in The Good, …

  14. Sergio Sollima

    Sergio Sollima (born April 17, 1921 in Rome) is an Italian former film director and script writer. Like many Italian cult directors, Sollima started his career by directing mostly sword and sandal movies that were very popular in the early 1960s. After the genre's popularity quickly died out, Sollima was among the first ones to move to spaghetti westerns. "The Big Gundown" (starring Lee Van Cleef and Tomas Milian) was released in 1966 with big success, …

  15. Antonio Casas

    Antonio Casas (11 November 1911 A Coruña, Galicia - 14 February 1982 Madrid, Spain) was a Spanish film actor who appeared in film between 1941 and his death in 1982. Casas originally began as a footballer but entered film in 1941 and made nearly 170 appearances in film and TV between then and 1982. He appeared in Sergio Leone's Spaghetti Western the "The Good, the Bad and the Ugly" in 1966, a film that has consistently been voted one of the greatest of all time.

  16. Antonio Casale

    Antonio Casale was a Spanish film actor of the 1960s and 1970s who appeared in mostly Spaghetti Western Italian films between 1965 and 1976. Although his roles later were greater, Casale is probably most known worldwide for his brief appearance as the dying Bill Carson in Sergio Leone's Spaghetti Western the "The Good, the Bad and the Ugly" in 1966, a film that has consistently been voted one of the greatest of all time.

  17. John Bartha

    János Bartha was a Hungarian film actor who appeared primarily in Spaghetti westerns in the 1960s and 1970s. He is probably most recognizable in western cinema for his role as Sheriff who captured Tuco in the 1966 Sergio Leone film, the "The Good, the Bad and the Ugly", a film that also starred Clint Eastwood. He made nearly 80 appearances in film between 1951 and 1981.

  18. Al Mulock

    Al Mulock (June 30, 1925 - 1968) was born in Toronto, Canada. He is best known for his roles in the Spaghetti Western movies. He committed suicide May 1968, in Guadix, Spain during shooting of "Once Upon a Time in the West". He jumped from a hotel window wearing his movie costume.

  19. Furio Scarpelli

    Furio Scarpelli (December 16, 1919), also called "Scarpelli", was one of the greatest Italian screenwriters. Son of a director of a journalist, had a quite childhood. He liked to write and to design. During WWII, he started to work as ilustrator, and he met Agenore Incrocci, best known as Age. In 1949 started his famous collaboration with Age as the duo Age & Scarpelli. Together with Age, he worked on a total of 120 Italian movies.

  20. Lorenzo Robledo

    Lorenzo Robledo (1921 - September 2006 in Madrid) was a blonde Spanish film actor, who made over 85 appearances in film between 1956 and 1982. He is a familiar face in Italian westerns appearing in a total of 32 Spaghetti Western films throughout the 1960s and early 1970s. Robledo is probably best known in world cinema for his roles in many Sergio Leone's Spaghetti Western films of the 1960s and 1970s, …

  21. Sandro Scarchilli

    Sandro Scarchilli (born c. 1925) was an Italian film actor who appeared in several films in the late 1960s and 1970s. He is best known in world cinema for his small debut role in the Spaghetti Western the "The Good, the Bad and the Ugly" in 1966, whre he played a Sheriff. Sandro however was never as famous as his brother Claudio Scarchilli who appeared in over twenty different films and also appeared in The Good, the Bad and the Ugly in 1966, …

  22. Agenore Incrocci

    Agenore Incrocci, also called "Age", was one of the greatest Italian screenwriters. Incrocci was born to a family including several actors, such as his sister Zoe, and spent his youth moving with them to numerous places of Italy. His first work in the cinema world was a dubber for Mario Monicelli's first movie, "I ragazzi della Via Paal" (1935. Subsequently he worked for a radio, and in the meantime he started to wrote comic scripts.

  23. Antonio Molino Rojo

    Antonio Molino Rojo (born c.1925) was a Spanish film actor who appeared primarily in Spaghetti westerns in the 1960s and 1970s. He made nearly 90 appearances in film between 1955 and 1988 but is probably most recognizable in western cinema for his roles in the Sergio Leone trilogy of Spaghetti westerns a "A Fistful of Dollars" (1964), "For a Few Dollars More", (1965) and the "The Good, the Bad and the Ugly" in 1966.

  24. John O'Neill

    John O'Neill (1926-1999) was a professional musician from County Durham, England famous for his whistling abilities. He had a hit in 1967 with the song I Was Kaiser Bill's Batman, was a regular on the Black and White Minstrel Show and also worked as a session singer on many television programmes such as Monty Python's Flying Circus and the Morecambe and Wise Show. His most well known achievement however was the whistling on the famous theme tune to The Good, …

  25. Sergio Mendizábal

    Sergio Mendizábal is a retired Spanish film actor who made over 100 appearances in film between 1955 and 1996. Mendizabal is probably most recognizable in wetsern cinema for his role as the Blonde Bounty Hunter in the 1966 Sergio Leone film, the "The Good, the Bad and the Ugly", a film that also starred Clint Eastwood. He made his last appearance in 1996 in a film called Africa.

  26. Gonzalo Gavira

    Gonzalo Gaviria (1925 - January 9, 2005) was a Mexican movie sound technician. He formed part of the team that won an Oscar for the movie "The Exorcist" in 1973. He worked on more than 60 other films, including the disaster movie "The Towering Inferno" and western "The Good, the Bad and the Ugly".

  27. Jackson Beck

    Jackson Beck (July 23, 1912 in Manhattan, New York - July 28, 2004 in Manhattan) was an American actor best known as the voice of Bluto in over 300 Popeye cartoons. His father, Max Blank, was a silent-film actor. Beck had a career in radio, television and animation dating from 1931 with "Myrt and Marge".

  28. Trevor Lawler

    Trevor Lawler (February 27, 1988) is an American film director, Editor, and Writer. Trevor Alan Lawler, born to Greg and Debbie Lawler, entered the film industry at a young age, beginning work full time in the industry directly after graduating high school. Quickly finding jobs as a Inhouse Editor and Creative executive for Alliance Group Entertainmetn and BDE Films respectively, Trevor is currently working on his debut feature fim 'Vengeance of the Befitted', …

  29. Troy Zantuck

    Troy Zantuck (born 1 November 1968) is an Australian radio presenter. The brother of VFL Australian rules footballer Shane Zantuck, Troy is best known for his work on SEN 1116's "World Sport Overnight" program, appearing on the "Gladiators of Sport" as well as "The Good, the Bad and the Ugly" and "The Wonder Years" regular specials. He is known for his one-liners and continual bagging of Stephen J Peak.

  30. Clint Eastwood

    Clint Eastwood (born Clinton Eastwood, Jr. on May 31, 1930) is an American actor, composer, film director and producer. While his recent work as a director, on films like "Million Dollar Baby" and "Letters from Iwo Jima", is consistently praised by critics, Eastwood is perhaps most famous for his tough guy, anti-hero acting roles, …

  31. Glenn Erickson

    Glenn Erickson is an American film editor and film critic. He started in the film industry in 1975 as an editor of low budget films and later worked in minor technical crew capacities in such major films as "Close Encounters of the Third Kind" (1977) and "1941" (1979). As an editor, most of his credits have been in creating supplemental documentary materials for DVD releases of "The Good, The Bad, and the Ugly" (1966), "Buckaroo Banzai" (1985), …

  32. Brian Barnes

    Brian Barnes (born 20 August 1944) is an English artist. He was educated at Ravensbourne College of Art and Design from 1961-1966 and the Royal College of Art 1966-1969. Based in Battersea, London since 5th February 1967, Barnes is noted for colourful, large-scale murals in Battersea and the London area, designed in collaboration with local groups. His most famous mural is "The Good the Bad and The Ugly", also known as "The Battersea Mural", …

  33. Alessandro Alessandroni

    Alessandro Alessandroni (born March 16, 1925 in Rome) is an Italian musician. He plays multiple instruments, including the guitar, mandolin, sitar, accordion, and piano, and has composed over 40 film scores. Being an accomplished whistler, Alessandroni collaborated with his childhood friend Ennio Morricone on a number of soundtracks for Spaghetti westerns. Morricone's orchestration often calls for an unusual combination of instruments and voices.

  34. Stephanie

    high heels to break your backs, gold rings to crush your jaws, short skirts to make you horny.

  35. Sophie

    i gotta tote bag, fulla crap. i don't even know what's in there.

  36. Judi

    The Good The Bad and The Ugly started in 2001 in the East Village of New York City. Now we've got a bigger, better, sluttier (yet sophisticated) location:.