Bright Lights Film Journal

Gothic Eurowesterns: A Grotesque Perspective on a Hollywood Myth

On the manifest destiny of Civil War tricksters and gun-slinging corpses

As the opening credits of Howard Hawks’ Rio Bravo (1959) appear on the screen, a caravan of cowboys on horseback and fully-laden coaches come riding down the mountain into a green valley. With the sun and blue sky behind them, the horses’ hooves and wagon wheels kick up orange dust from the dry road that leads to the western settlement. The western world of Rio Bravo, despite the outside threats its heroes need to overcome, is a predominantly bright world, peopled with brave cowboys, in control of their horses, who face the camera and the villains head-on to save the day, the settlement, and civilization. This west is one of heroic sheriffs, defending beautiful young maidens in flowing dresses from evil outsiders. In contrast, the viewer of Sergio Corbucci’s Django (1966) is confronted during the opening credits with the back of a solitary black-clad figure, walking away from the camera through a sea of grey mud (photo 1). He is not on horseback, but carries the saddle for a horse he does not own. As the camera zooms out to reveal the stranger in full (photo 2), no other cowboys or coaches appear that carry this traveler’s belongings toward an ordered settlement. The dark stranger is revealed to be pulling his own coffin on which what looks like a solitary black candle seems to provide a fragile bright spot on the cinematic canvas (photos 3-4).

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The stylistic and atmospheric difference between a classic American western like Rio Bravo and the opening sequences of Corbucci’s Eurowestern is just one instance of how European directors utilized classic gothic tropes and stylistic devices — in this case the trope of the darkly-clad mysterious solitary wanderer in a bleak desolate landscape — to challenge the dominant Hollywood myth of the American West. This essay will examine how the makers of Eurowesterns employed a cinematic technique I call grotesque perspective in order to subvert the often utopian and mostly nostalgic ideological point view of the classic American westerns of, for instance, John Ford or Howard Hawks.

Hawks’ Rio Bravo is a clear instance of an American western that takes its subject seriously, heroically, and ideologically affirmative. The film ends with two deputies having a private joke at the hero’s (John Wayne’s) expense, as they wonder about becoming sheriff one day. Their eyes are on the future, which, due to the intervention of the all-American hero, is bright indeed. R. Philip Loy argues that the classic Hollywood westerns “mirrored the American commitment to individual responsibility, progress and manifest destiny,” an ideology that he defines as “the belief that God gave the North American continent to whites of European descent as a place in which to build a new democratic political order to serve as an example for humankind.”1 From westerns, Loy argues, “children learned that most folks were basically honest and brave but sometimes they needed a good leader to stiffen public resistance to the few who were corrupt and dishonest” (Loy 6). Westerns underscore the protestant work ethic that helped build America, Loy argues, when he writes that “westerns also taught that very little comes without hard work, but success is sure to follow if one works hard and remains steadfastly committed to one’s goals” (Loy 6). Douglas Pye also shows that the classic Hollywood western was ideologically affirmative. He argues that the community dance sequence in John Ford’s My Darling Clementine (1946) has an ideological function in pointing towards “the possibility of a perfected society in the West that will reconcile opposing forces in an ideal harmony.”2 J. A. Place also observes that the town of Tombstone, in the same film, “goes through a ‘civilization’ process after Wyatt [Earp] takes over as marshal.”3 Over the years several film critics have written about the poetic and nostalgic nature of classic westerns such as My Darling Clementine, or the glorification of heroic violence in cavalry films such as Fort Apache (1948). According to Lindsay Anderson, Ford’s famous westerns neatly fit Loy’s Hollywood western prototype. He wrote about Fort Apache that: “at the end Ford leaves us in no doubt where our sympathies and our respect should lie”; the movie ends by showing “a cavalry troop, riding out on another patrol.”4 The following voice-over is imposed over this image: “they’ll fight over cards and rot-gut whisky, but they’ll share the last drop in the canteen . . . the regular army, now and fifty years from now . . .” (quoted in Anderson 125). For Ford, the heroes of the movie are the rough and rugged soldiers of the cavalry, who are fighting the battle over the West for the American people to cultivate and civilize. Unsurprisingly, the voice-over at the end of Ford’s She Wore a Yellow Ribbon (1949) presents the viewer with exactly such an American idyll:

So here they are — the dog-faced soldiers, the regulars, the fifty cent-a-day professionals, riding the outposts of a nation. From Fort Reno to Fort Apache, from Sheridan to Stark, they were all the same, men in dirty shirt blue, and only a cold page in the history books to mark their passage. But wherever they rode, and whatever they fought for — the place became the United States. (quoted in Anderson 125)

Violence in the classic Hollywood western, as Loy argued, is “socially necessary,” a means toward a noble end, and when used in this light it represented “manly virtue” (Loy 101). The violence pictured between cowboys and Indians, the Cavalry and the Confederates, are all necessary struggles in the larger process of civilization that will ultimately lead to the realisation of a utopian community the settlers were destined to build in this new-found land.

Christopher Frayling argues that across the Atlantic Sergio Leone made westerns that reacted directly to the naive and idyllic picture of the American West as presented by Hollywood. According to Frayling, Leone believed that it was his personal interpretation of the history of the American West, as a foreigner and outsider, which was the most important difference between him and Ford.5 Leone tells in an interview how the Catholic Irish American immigrant Ford imbued his movies with a traditional American Christian vision of the West; as a result, his characters always present a typically American optimistic future. Leone has described that, as an Italian and a descendant of the Romans and therefore an outsider, he necessarily had to develop a different perspective on the history of the American West: to him it represented a world characterized by “the reign of violence by violence” (quoted in Frayling 135). To materialise this alternative vision, Leone chose to present his version of the American West from a grotesque perspective, an example of which is his penchant for extreme close-ups on the eyes of two dueling cowboys, an image that has gained iconic status in western popular culture.

Philip Thomson writes that “the most consistently distinguished characteristic of the grotesque has been the fundamental element of disharmony,” which is present not only in the work of art but also in the reaction of the observer or even in the temperament of the artist.6 According to Thomson, the grotesque is characterised by ambivalence, a violent coming together of binaries, especially the fluid merger of the comic and terrifying, the mixture of which “may be disproportionate” (Thomson 21). Important to the grotesque, Thomson emphasises, is that the grotesque is not concerned with the creation of a fantasy world; it is not a purely aesthetic principle: “far from possessing a necessary affinity with the fantastic, the grotesque derives at least some of its effect from being presented within a realistic framework, in a realistic way” (Thomson 8). All these elements of the grotesque are prevalent in Leone’s work.

As an artist, Leone was clearly ambivalent about the West. Frayling writes: “Leone may admire Hollywood westerns, but he does not believe in the dreams they embody” (Frayling 135). One of the most obvious grotesque techniques Leone uses to create his satirical vision of the West is his choice to represent a hyper-realistic setting using surrealistic camera angles. Leone’s camera lens is restless, shooting its subject from either too high or too low a position, from too far away or too close up to the action; focusing either too short or too long on the object in view or the scene; moving too much or too little, and always placed in the most unusual of optical positions. For example, while in the opening scene of Rio Bravo the cowboys are presented as coming down the mountain, passing a fixed roadside camera, in the opening sequence of For a Few Dollars More (1965), the camera is placed on high, taking in a vast desert landscape surrounded by mountains through which a tiny cowboy makes his way on horseback. While the convoy of cowboys in Rio Bravo safely arrives at their destination, the tiny lone cowboy in Leone’s film is suddenly shot and immediately falls off his horse, which subsequently runs away in a gallop. This sequence reveals that the camera is also the sight of the rifle that has just shot the tiny cowboy. The typically grotesque, comically horrific atmosphere is created by the multiple aesthetic and structural clashes: the hard reality of the western landscape photographed by surrealist camerawork, which in turn surprises the viewer with a slapstick rendering of a brutal killing that invokes laughter instead of terror. As in Rio Bravo, the cinematic technique, setting, and representation of the cowboy set the tone for the rest of the film.

Leone peoples this grotesque world with grotesque individuals. The hero and focalising character of his movies is no longer the famous western hero Wyatt Earp, or a heroic cavalry general, marked by his integrity, moral steadiness, and engagement with the welfare of the community and the nation. Frayling explains that in Spaghetti westerns, “the hero-figures are usually identifiable by a collection of external gestures, mannerisms, stylish articles of clothing, or even motifs on the soundtrack, rather than by anything remotely to do with the inner man” (Frayling 61). The anti-hero of Leone’s Spaghetti westerns is a man without a name, history, nationality, or moral values. He is only recognisable from his multi-cultural external identity, immortalized by Clint Eastwood in Leone’s Dollar Trilogy: a stylistic combination of American cowboy and Mexican peasant with his ever-blazing cigar and perpetual five o’clock shadow. The grotesque effect of such an identity is created by fusing two character types that in the traditional westerns had always stood diametrically opposed to each other: the heroic cowboy (immortalised by John Wayne) and the Mexican or Indian outlaw (unsurprisingly sometimes played but never immortalised on the silver screen by any Hollywood actor). The grotesque effect of this mode of characterisation on the viewer is that he or she is forced to conclude that not all people wearing a poncho and a sombrero are slothful and dim-witted.

Significantly, Leone’s anti-hero fights for no national goal or political authority but only from himself. He is always on his own, in search of money. In Fistful of Dollars (1964), this figure manipulates two feuding bands of robbers into killing each other; in The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly (1966), he opportunistically works together with other bandits, abuses the American law, and uses the chaos brought about by the civil war, its weapons, and union soldiers to realise his own selfish plans. Leone’s western world parodies Hollywood’s western ideology of manifest destiny and heroic masculinity by highlighting the complete disintegration of community, family, and moral values under the rule of masculine violence and a selfish will to power.

Revenge has been the grand motif of many westerns, American and European. In Ford’s My Darling Clementine, a central theme was the high price of revenge. Tag Gallagher commented on the fact that this film is characterised with “musing over whether one can ever have the right or duty to kill.”7 In Leone’s Spaghetti westerns, however, seeking revenge for wrongs committed against the individual becomes a primary human necessity, on a level with nourishment and shelter. Instead of functioning as melodramatically staged moral lessons, the revenge plots in Leone’s westerns are represented through comical tableaux. The never-ending twists in the plot, in which each anti-hero tricks and gets his revenge on the other, endow Leone’s films at times with an undercurrent of slapstick humour. At the end of The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly, the man with no name has tricked his adversary and hung him on a tree, only to shoot down and free him from the noose at a distance, leaving the bandit to swear revenge, pointing out that after the end credits the story will start all over again in the imaginary world of the film.8 The circularity of the plot stands in marked contrast to most of Hollywood’s Western plots, which are founded on a model of linear progression.

John R. Clark points out that the grotesque as an artistic mode has strong links with ideological critique. He argues that “the ‘serious grotesque,” as opposed to the comic grotesque, “is significantly utilized in the eighteenth-century gothic novels,” where it functions as “an antidote to Enlightenment optimism.”9 The serious nature of the grotesque in the gothic is created by unbalancing the relationship between the comic and the terrific in favour of terror in which the engagement with symbolism and the supernatural is favoured over the satirical engagement with the real (as is the case in Leone’s Spaghetti westerns). After the success of Leone’s Fistful of Dollars, many European filmmakers followed his lead, and the exploitation film market was flooded with Spaghetti Westerns. The most successful of these post-Leone films was Django (1966). This film was also the first gothic Eurowestern, in which the Leone-style man with no name is pulling his coffin through the mud only to reveal a humungous machine gun with which he ends up maiming a fascist gang. Sergio Corbucci was the first to alter the nature of the anti-hero from Leone’s immoral, opportunistic trickster into the mysterious apparently immortal wanderer so frequently found in gothic fictions, such as Godwin’s St Leon (1799) or Maturin’s Melmoth the Wanderer (1820). This figure, as Manuel Aguirre argues, symbolises the “abandonment of the journey” toward an optimistic resolution, which typifies the linear plots of quest or epics, as well as Hollywood westerns. The sense of Django’s immortality was heightened by the many unofficial sequels to Corbucci’s film and by the fact that as late as 1987, Django, now a monk, digs up his coffin and with it his machine gun in order to again try to bring about justice. Castelari would take up this trope in Keoma, heightening the Hell-on-Earth gothic atmosphere by using symbolic colour schemes.

Clark argues that “modern grotesques” following on from the gothic “dramatize the corruption of entire communities” in which “individualism and the noble protagonist are equally perverted and destroyed” (Clark 14). The effect that the utilization of a gothic grotesque aesthetic has on the development of the Spaghetti westerns is that these films turn from satires on the naïvely optimistic Hollywood myth of the West into gothic allegories about the Hollywood western genre’s self-deception regarding their civilization’s innate sense of superiority over other cultures, its God-given drive to dominate nature, as well as the androcentric heroism with its reliance on militaristic violence that makes this project of domination possible. Significantly, Frayling argued that Spaghetti westerns found a sympathetic audience in the third world as its people could more easily identify with these movies’ overt engagement with the evils of first-world economic and political tyranny and peasant oppression (see Frayling Chapter 9). Several European directors, in their attempts to distinguish themselves in the now flourishing Eurowestern market, fused Leone’s grotesque perspective with gothic tropes pioneered in the tradition of nineteenth-century gothic romance and further developed and popularised by the horror-film industry since the 1930s. While Leone’s westerns were characterized by their fine balance of the comic, the horrific, and the political, these films heightened the terrifying over the comic. As a consequence they move from the satiric to the monstrous in their response to the classic Hollywood Western.

In Antony Dawson’s (Antonio Margheriti’s) Vengeance (1968), the relationship between hero and villain is no longer characterised by the moral struggle between good and evil, but takes on the hues of gothic psychological doubling. The gothic double, Manuel Aguirre has explained, “is a figure to flee from, or ignore, or destroy, not one to confront and embrace” because “there is no longer a belief in the possibility of restoring the harmony of human nature” (Aguirre 53). This gothic trope is exemplified in late nineteenth-century gothic tales such as Oscar Wilde’s The Picture of Dorian Gray, in which a young man becomes immortal while his youthful portrait grows monstrous as it comes to represent his corrupt mind. Robert Louis Stevenson’s Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, in which the doctor loses control of his experiment and ends up killing his degenerate double, is of course the most famous of gothic doubling stories. The hero and villain of Vengeance increasingly come to embody this relationship, where the monster is not an external force to be defeated with masculine muscle or military might, but an aggressive inner demon of the mind that must be confronted and exorcized.

In Vengeance, this doubling works to critique the Hollywood western’s idealisation of masculine violence noted by Loy.10 Joko, the hero cowboy, finds the dismembered body of his friend Richie and swears to get revenge on the bandits who murdered him, making the film a standard revenge western at the outset. However, as Joko gets closer to finding and confronting the bandit Mendoza, the initially orthodox representation of the West increasingly takes on a surreal character. By the finale, Joko, having become as bloodthirsty for revenge as his adversary Mendoza, is lured into a labyrinthine system of dark caves illuminated in lush shades of yellow and orange through which he pursues his enemy.

 

In this surreal subterranean world, Mendoza’s sinister laugh bounces off the walls as he starts to call out, “I’m over here, here, here . . . Joko, go back . . . you know you can’t kill me!” In response Joko replies: “You’re mad!” as he looks bewilderingly around him and the cavern walls start to spin. There is a clear feeling that these voices are inside Joko’s head. As he pursues the villain deeper into the labyrinth (photo 1), Mendoza, with his face painted white, dressed in a cream-yellow-white suit and trailing a large cape behind him (photo 2) increasingly takes on the form of Joko’s double as he shouts in warning: “get out, get out!” The western setting has now been completely exchanged for a traditionally gothic symbolical underground labyrinth. Both the colour schemes and the traditional western soundtrack recall the cinematography and sounds of Roger Corman’s baroque Poe adaptations for AIP in the 1960s.

Rather than visualizing the underground world an abandoned gold mine, with railway carriages, old beams, and broken pick-axes, Vengeance has the underground passages lead to a central room that looks like a laboratory. Joko’s visage is no longer characterised by the typical macho cowboy gaze oozing his masculine heroic determinism to fight for the good of the community. Instead, his facial contortions show an increasing mental instability. When, after Mendoza’s repeated admonitions, he finally kills the villain, Mendoza’s final words are “you see, you lost, it’s a question of brains, Joko.” The hero’s vengeance is revealed to have served no purpose but to exorcise his own innate aggression, and in the end, Joko literally and willingly gives up his gun. By cutting loose its ties to the American West and focusing on the hero’s psychological struggle with his own violent drives, the movie becomes a gothic allegory of how masculine aggression under western ideological forces has taken monstrous proportions in the form of Mendoza.

In Django the Bastard (1969), director Sergio Garrone turned to the gothic trope of the ghost who returns to haunt and avenge a tyrannical authority figure, a classic gothic theme present in early gothic novels such as Horace Walpole’s The Castle of Otranto (1764), in Ambrose Bierce’s late-nineteenth-century ghost stories of resurrection and revenge, and even in such contemporary gothic masterpieces as John O’Barr’s graphic novel The Crow. In Garrone’s western, flashbacks reveal that Django and his fellow soldiers had been killed during the civil war because their superior officer had betrayed them into the hands of their enemies. This officer is now a rich and still sadistic landowner who hides himself behind a hoard of Mexican bandits. In the opening scene of the movie, the grotesque perspective that Leone devised to create an alternative point of view of the West is heightened by the use of extremely absurd camera angles, which rather than serving a comic purpose works to give the man with no name a more immediately threatening and supernatural appearance.

Absurd perspectives had been a staple narratological device in gothic fiction to create a sense of the supernatural. Novels such as James Hogg’s Confessions of a Justified Sinner (1824) used multiple accounts of the same story to confuse the reader about the status of the narrative as a tale of the supernatural or an account of madness. Many of Poe’s gothic tales are driven by first-person narrators whose diction and syntax makes the reader wonder whether the world that is represented is not merely a figment of the narrator’s imagination.

 

 

By introducing the stranger with a camera shot aimed directly at the top of his own head (photo 1), the camera is unable to take in any of the surrounding setting or the rest of his body, giving the impression that the figure is gliding along the floor. The extreme close-up of his boots similarly cuts out any reference to the surroundings and reveals the continuity of the symbolic colour of his dress: unlike Clint Eastwood’s character, who wore shades of brown, and exactly like the original Django, Garonne’s Django’s black hat and boots reveal his symbolic function in the film as agent of destruction. Unlike the Hollywood westerns in which the colour black symbolised the villain, the informed gothic Eurowestern viewer will identify this destructive figure as a hero. When he is finally viewed in full in his surroundings (photo 3), this figure stands at a distance and is still unrecognisable as a person. What is revealed now is his pointed black poncho, which gives his outline a formlessness that does not relate to the broad-shouldered, bow-legged posture of the traditional cowboy. By shooting this scene from behind the yellow wagon-wheel, the figure remains out of focus, a mysterious and haunting presence. By the end of the scene (photo 4), when he has planted the cross that adorned his grave in the middle of the road, he announces himself to the town and the viewer not as a villain or a saviour but simply as the avenging angel of death.

In Ford’s westerns, there was no doubt about the heroic status of the cavalry. In Garrone’s western, however, there is no doubt that the cavalry officer who betrayed Django is a representation of a selfish will to power, corruption, and tyranny. However, even though the Union army is shown up as a hotbed of corruption, vice, and selfish greed, the ghost of Django does not symbolise its moral counterpart. In fact, the representation of Django as an avenging ghost works to highlight, even more so than Leone’s westerns, the way in which machismo stands at the heart of moral hypocrisy. As a human cowboy, Django would have been struggling with the very immorality of his revenge because it would lower him to the status of those very villains who had wronged him. As a ghost, however, Django becomes a diabolical, equally self-serving force in the course of the film: his thirst for slow and bloody revenge becomes emblematic of the hyper-masculinity that stands at the root of the corrupt union officers who killed him in the first place.

As in Django the Bastard, in Jose Antonio Balanos’ Lucky Johnny: Born in America (1973), the horrors rather than the glories of the American civil war form the backdrop of the action. The protagonists here are again not Ford’s cavalry, but an old undertaker and his young ward, whose parents have been killed by bandits. They seem to wander through the war-torn West without any sense of direction in search of corpses to bury. This will allow the old man to collect the government premium with which to build a new cemetery to leave to Johnny as his patrimony (photo 1). Whereas Leone’s Dollar Trilogy satirised the American obsession with gold and material wealth, Balanos’s Lucky Johnny utilizes the gothic trope of graveyard excesses to comment on the literal status in the American West of the otherwise abstract concept of “walking over dead bodies.” Whereas in Ford’s cavalry films the battles were ideological and in Leone’s film’s the Civil War was pictured as an opportunity for the trickster to make a profit, in Lucky Johnny the Civil War is reduced to the physical encounter between living and dead bodies. The grotesque universe of the Spaghetti western is distilled from all its comic particles when Johnny and his stepfather are stopped in their tracks by a mountain of corpses (photo 2). The camera surveys this mountain of bodies by the dim light of a gas lamp (photo 3), heightening the surreal nature of the viewing experience and transforming the terrifying scene into a horrific symbol for the outcome of the ideology of manifest destiny. The old man representing the naïveté of the western pioneer is ecstatic at their discovery and professes to Johnny that they are now rich and kisses one of the corpses in a gesture of thankfulness for the bounty he has received (photo 4).

 

 

By its surreal and excessive piling of corpses and by presenting these corpses as the only viable currency of exchange, the film is not actually concerned with the American West but more with the American economic ideal that underscored western expansionism: a free-market economy in which every man fends for himself and his family, and in which he is increasingly pushed by commercial demands to become ruthless and unconcerned with moral values in order to survive.

Finally, Enzo G. Castellari’s developed Corbucci and Garrone’s use of gothic tropes — such as the immortal wanderer and the ghost — to create the most gothic of all Spaghetti westerns, Keoma (1975). The West in Keoma is initially represented using only shades of grey. This colour scheme had been utilized to great effect by Charles Dickens in the opening pages of his gothic mystery Bleak House (1851) to portray the immorality and hell-on-earth atmosphere of nineteenth-century London. In Keoma, too, the photographic tone sets the moral tone (photo 1 and 2). By the end of the film, this grey western junk heap has transformed itself into a literal Hell on Earth in which the hero, Keoma, has the ambiguous honour of becoming a Christ-like symbol for human suffering as he is nailed to a gigantic wagon wheel (photo 3) while the demonic figures rave it up in the infernal saloon (photo 4).

 

 

The gothic Spaghetti western was not a temporary blip on the popular culture radar of the 1960s and ’70s. As early as 1973, CliEastwood created his own American gothic western, High Plains Drifter (1973), followed later by another ghost story, Pale Rider (1985). Gothic Eurowesterns would also be greatly influential on the goth counterculture of the 1980s and ’90s. British goth rockers Fields of the Nephilim (1985-1992) would copy the look and sound of the gothic Eurowestern for their music and stage show. More recently, the Texas band Ghoultown has successfully blended gothic imagery with Spaghetti-western sounds, becoming key figures in the genre of Hellbilly music. Significantly, the gothic Eurowestern has become a structural as well as aesthetic influence on the world’s most prolific and successful contemporary author of horror fiction: Stephen King. His Dark Tower series was partly inspired by what King described as the “sense of magnificent dislocation” that characterises Leone’s The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly.11 One of the novel’s illustrations pictures the solitary wandering cowboy, standing on the horizon, a gun in each hand, overlooking a trail of dead bodies; he has just exterminated an entire town (King 66).

Note: This article was published in 2005 without illustrations and in a different format in the e-journal kiez21.org

  1. Loy, R. Philip. Westerns and American Culture, 1930-1955 (London: McFarland, 2001), 47 and 121; Loy in future text references. []
  2. Pye, Douglas. “The Western (Genre and Movies).” In Film Genre Reader II. (Austin: University of Texas Press, 1995), 195. []
  3. J. A. Place, The Western Films of John Ford (Secaucus, N.J.: The Citadel Press, 1974), 63; Place in future text references. []
  4. Anderson, Lindsay. About John Ford (London: Plexus, 1999), 124-5; Anderson in future text references. []
  5. Frayling, Christopher. Spaghetti Westerns: Cowboys and Europeans from Karl May to Sergio Leone (London: Routledge & Kegan Paul, 1981), paraphrase of the quotation from Leone on page 135. []
  6. Thomson, Philip. Grotesque (London: Methuen, 1972), 20; Thomson in future text references. []
  7. Gallagher, Tag. “Shoot-Out at the Genre Corrall: Problems in the Evolution of the Western.” In Film Genre Reader II (Austin: University of Texas Press, 1995), 253. []
  8. This latent slapstick quality would be used to great effect in Bud Spencer and Terrence Hill’s comedy westerns like They Call Me Trinity (1970) and My Name Is Nobody (1973) that followed the international success of Leone’s Dollar Trilogy. []
  9. Clark, John R. The Modern Satiric Grotesque and Its Traditions (Lexington: University Press of Kentucky, 1991), 17; Clark in future text references. []
  10. Weisser, Thomas. Spaghetti Westerns — the Good, the Bad and the Violent: 558 Eurowesterns and Their Personnel, 1961-1977 (London: McFarland, 1992), 334; Weisser in future text references. []
  11. Stephen King. “Introduction” to The Dark Tower 1: The Gunslinger, Revised and Expanded Edition (New York, N.Y.: Plume, 2003), xv; King in future text references. []
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