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1%%
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3%% Note!!!
4%% * Characterisation tropes go on the characters sheet
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8[[quoteright:310:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/once_upon_a_time_in_the_west.jpg]]
9
10->'''Harmonica:''' The reward for this man is 5,000 dollars, is that right?\
11'''Cheyenne:''' Judas was content for 4,970 dollars less.\
12'''Harmonica:''' There were no dollars in them days.\
13'''Cheyenne:''' But sons of bitches? Yeah.
14
15''Once Upon a Time in the West'' (in Italian: ''C'era una volta il West'') (1968) is considered Creator/SergioLeone's masterpiece (alongside the ''Film/DollarsTrilogy''); according to Website/ThatOtherWiki, it's a prime example of an Epic Western.
16
17It features Creator/ClaudiaCardinale as Jill, the young widow with a past, Creator/HenryFonda as the [[PlayingAgainstType villain]] Frank, Creator/JasonRobards as the bandit Cheyenne, and Creator/CharlesBronson as a [[NoNameGiven "man with no name"]] seeking revenge.
18
19CitySlicker Jill arrives at the town of Flagstone by train just as Bronson's [[TheDrifter nameless character drifts]] into town. By chance, their paths cross at a roadside establishment. Cheyenne, who has just escaped from his prison escort, dubs Bronson's character "Harmonica." Jill then discovers that her husband and his children have been murdered at their homestead. Frank, the real killer, frames Cheyenne.
20
21Harmonica has a personal vendetta against Frank, so he and Cheyenne fight against Frank and his boss, the [[RailroadBaron railroad tycoon]] Morton (Gabriele Ferzetti). They defend Jill's homestead and discover her late husband's plan to make a fortune.
22
23Based on a story created by Leone, Creator/BernardoBertolucci and Creator/DarioArgento. Under Leone's direction, Music/EnnioMorricone composed the soundtrack before the actual filming started, and most of the narrative is built around the music[[note]][[https://youtu.be/JiQLHL10BYo?t=313 as demonstrated here]][[/note]], instead of the traditional way of fitting the soundtrack to the film.
24
25----
26!!Frank sent us these tropes from ''Once Upon a Time in the West'':
27
28* AccidentalPublicConfession: A chilling version occurs at the beginning of the movie. Frank and his men have just finished massacring a family, only to exit the house and find a small boy staring at them.
29-->'''Mook:''' [[WouldntHurtAChild What're we gonna do with this one]], Frank?\
30'''Frank:''' [[PreMortemOneLiner Well, now that you've called me by name...]]
31* ActorAllusion:
32** In a [[invoked]]DeletedScene, Frank gets a shave at a perfume shop. Creator/HenryFonda sits in the same position he did in ''Film/MyDarlingClementine''. At the end of the film, he wears a similar outfit to the one he wore in ''[[Film/Warlock1959 Warlock]]''. The latter film also contains a sequence in which Fonda's character kicks a crippled man off his crutches, as Frank does to Mr. Morton.
33** This is the second western where Creator/CharlesBronson plays a harmonica, the first being ''Film/VeraCruz''. He also whittled a piece of wood in ''[[Film/TheMagnificentSeven1960 The Magnificent Seven]]''.
34** Creator/ClaudiaCardinale primping herself in front of a dirty mirror, recalling her appearance in Visconti's ''Film/TheLeopard''.
35* AlasPoorVillain: [[spoiler:Morton had the desperate goal of seeing the blue ocean of the Pacific before he succumbed to his fatal disease. He instead dies slowly face down in a mud puddle while he imagines to hear the ocean.]]
36* AnachronismStew:
37** Jill wears fake eyelashes throughout the movie. Fake eyelashes were invented by Max Factor in the early 1910s.
38** While preparing for the wedding feast, Brett's daughter sings a few lines of "Danny Boy". The words to this song were written in 1910.
39* ArtisticLicenseGunSafety: In the opening scene, one of the gunmen catches an annoying fly in the barrel of his gun, then keeps it in by putting his finger on the end, keeping his index finger on the trigger the entire time.
40* {{Auction}}: Frank holds a rigged one to sell Jill's land, sending his goons to intimidate people from bidding. Harmonica bids $5, 000 with the bounty on Cheyenne's head.
41* AwkwardSilenceEntrance: All eyes are on Jill when she enters the inn.
42* BadassBoast: Harmonica's first scene, [[ShowdownAtHighNoon when three of Frank's men are waiting for him]]:
43---> '''Harmonica:''' Did you bring a horse for me?\
44'''Snaky:''' Looks like we're shy one horse.\
45'''Harmonica:''' (shakes head) You brought two too many.
46** Cheyenne's reaction upon hearing Harmonica's account of the shooting: "One, nobody around these parts got the guts to wear those dusters except Cheyenne's men. Two, Cheyenne's men don't get killed." He then spins his revolver and states that he can count "All the way up to six if I have to, and maybe even faster than you."
47* BadassLongcoat: Cheyenne's gang. Frank sports a similar outfit when framing Cheyenne for the murder of the [=McBain=] family.
48-->'''Cheyenne:''' That's a crazy story, Harmonica, for two reasons. One, nobody around these parts got the guts to wear those dusters except Cheyenne's men. Two, Cheyenne's men don't get killed.
49* BaitAndSwitchGunshot: The camera lingers on a flock of [[DisturbedDoves disturbed pheasants]] in the air above the [=McBain=] farm. Then a shot rings out but no bird comes down. Then [=McBain=] looks around to see his daughter collapsing.
50* BestServedCold: Harmonica has spent most of his life hunting down Frank, who [[spoiler:murdered his brother when they were teenagers. By putting a noose around the brother's neck, and forcing him to stand on Harmonica's shoulders until his legs gave way, no less]].
51* BetterToKillThanFrighten: Frank massacred the [=McBain=] family, even [[PsychoForHire personally shooting]] their [[WouldHurtAChild little son in the face at point-blank range]], against the orders of his boss who sent him and his goons to scare the family into leaving their home. His deadpan defense to Morton chewing him out is "people scare better when they're dying".
52* BittersweetEnding: [[spoiler: The bad guys die and the train finally gets to Sweetwater, which will grow into a beautiful town where Jill is going to be a very successful woman. On the other hand, Cheyenne, perhaps the most likable character in the film, dies, and Harmonica leaves to (presumably) never be seen again.]] It's also true on a metaphorical level, as it's shown that the advent of the new industrial era (a major theme of the film) [[TwilightOfTheOldWest wipes the old-fashioned individualist characters]] - noble warriors and crude villains alike.
53* BlackAndGrayMorality: Cheyenne and Harmonica are not good people, the former being a feared leader of banditos and the latter being a stone-cold gunslinger. Frank, however, is much worse than both of them and is responsible the dark path Harmonica took.
54* BlackDudeDiesFirst: [[spoiler:{{Inverted|Trope}}; Stony is the ''last'' of the three gunmen to be killed in the opening. He even manages to shoot Harmonica as he goes.[[note]]He is, however, the only black character in the movie[[/note]]]]
55* BloodlessCarnage: When Cheyenne shoots the man who's guarding Harmonica through the train window, there is no blood on the chair the man was sitting in, despite the fact that he was shot at point-blank range.
56* BreakTheCutie: [[spoiler:Played with. It's straight for four minutes with Jill, in the second last scene, once she realizes that Harmonica will not stay with her, and that she will most likely live as a widow until her death... then inverted, after Cheyenne gives her some advice that takes a few minutes for her to fully comprehend, and then adhere.]]
57* ButForMeItWasTuesday: Frank doesn't remember who Harmonica is, although Harmonica isn't keen on reminding him until the end. On the other hand, when Frank demands Harmonica's name, Harmonica responds with a couple pseudonyms -- which Frank ''does'' recognize as the names of other men he's killed. FacialDialogue shows him finally recognizing Harmonica; Frank asks the man for his name and gets a harmonica stuffed into his mouth for an answer.
58* ButNowIMustGo: [[spoiler:Harmonica and Cheyenne are drifters with no place in a settled town. Cheyenne is also about to bleed to death, unknown to any of the other characters.]]
59* ButtMonkey: Wobbles. Harmonica literally puts him through the wringer, while Morton treats him with utter contempt - "You should learn to live like you didn't exist." Finally Frank kicks him off the train and then murders him as a kind of joke, shooting him through both suspenders and his belt after commenting that these garments show that "the man can't even trust his own pants." Still, Wobbles's unctuous, toadying personality keeps him far away from Woobie territory.
60* CaptivityHarmonica: Harmonica has one himself, [[spoiler:having received it from Frank while tied up and forced to hold up his brother from the noose until he couldn't stand anymore.]]
61* CastingGag: Claudia Cardinale and Paolo Stoppa share several scenes together after playing daughter and father in ''Film/TheLeopard'' several years earlier.
62* ClickHello: Frank does this to Harmonica when he catches him climbing down the train.
63* CloseOnTitle: The film has a very long, drawn-out opening scene in which essentially every possible credit is shown except for the title, which shows up when the end credits begin. Hailing from 1968, this is one of the oldest examples of this trope.
64* CoolTrain: Morton's special train.
65* DeathGlare: Jill does this to Harmonica after he rips her clothes and sends her to get some water. She doesn't realize it yet that he did it to distract the bandits that came to get her.
66* DeathOfAChild: Frank kills the [=McBain=] family in his introduction scene, including a little boy. While the others were sniped from a distance, Frank goes right up to the boy, and ''smiles'' as he pulls out his gun.
67* {{Deconstruction}}: This movie definitively deconstructs TheWestern even more than the ''Film/DollarsTrilogy'' did. Sergio Leone filmed much of it in Monument Valley, where the Creator/JohnFord classics were filmed, and the film bears specific allusions to other films such as ''Film/JohnnyGuitar'' and ''Film/{{Shane}}''. Complete with obvious inclusions of typical western stereotypes being used in a very non-typical manner. It says a lot that Leone intended to use the lead actors from ''Film/TheGoodTheBadAndTheUgly'' as the three thugs whom Harmonica kills in the first ten minutes of the film. (All three of the actors ''liked'' the idea, but it was scrapped when Creator/ClintEastwood wasn't available.)
68* DidNotGetTheGirl: [[spoiler:Jill has lots of sexual tension with Cheyenne, Frank and Harmonica, but no one gets her. Cheyenne dies, Frank never stood a chance considering who he was and what he did to her, and Harmonica couldn't return her feelings. Since this aspect of the resolution is played largely from Jill's point of view, it's also a case of Did Not Get The Guy]].
69* DissonantSerenity: Cheyenne goes about his business and doesn't care one iota about the climactic duel, and is just annoyed when the shooting makes him cut himself while shaving. On top of that, [[spoiler:he's secretly dying]].
70* DoesntTrustThoseGuys: "How can you trust a man who wears both a belt and suspenders? The man can't even trust his own pants."
71* DragonInChief: Frank is the focus of the plot, and has his own agenda, which involves getting Jill to sell the land to him so that he can then sell it to his nominal boss, Mister Morton at a higher price. Toyed with during the later parts of the film, as Morton proves that in his own way, he can be just as dangerous.
72* DramaticNecklaceRemoval: Done by Harmonica after the climactic final duel.
73* DuelToTheDeath: Harmonica and Frank's showdown.
74* DyingAlone: [[spoiler:Cheyenne made an effort to return to Jill even asking her if he shouldn't stay, before leaving with Harmonica and collapsing just out of sight of everybody from a bullet he had caught a few hours ago, because he didn't want her to know.]] He specifically requests this of [[spoiler: Harmonica]] as his final words.
75* TheDyingWalk: Before the climax, Frank escapes a shootout with Morton's hired goons and returns to Morton's train to confront him, only to find Morton dying of wounds he sustained during a run-in with the outlaw Cheyenne. Morton, lying pitifully in the dirt, ignores Frank's arrival and instead desperately crawls over to a nearby mud puddle ''representing a stand-in for the Pacific Ocean that he will never be able to reach''.
76* EarnYourHappyEnding: [[spoiler:Cheyenne is dead, but so are Frank and his employer Morton, and Harmonica has avenged his brother. Jill is still a widow, but a respected and wealthy member of the Sweetwater railroad town.]]
77* EstablishingCharacterMoment:
78** A man of few words appears in a train station, blows his harmonica and takes care of the three gunmen who were sent to greet him. He outdraws them while his gun was still in his baggage. Seems like a classic, mysterious gunslinger and drifter, but the third gunman is able to shoot before dying, hurting "Harmonica" and establishing he is not some InvincibleHero.
79** Frank shows up as the leader of a gang that has massacred a family and ends the deed by killing a little boy.
80* EstablishingCharacterMusic:
81** {{Subverted}} with Harmonica's theme - he plays it during his first scene at the train station.
82** Frank's theme plays in full during his introduction, the electric guitar building up to a sweeping orchestra.
83** When Cheyenne appears in the trading post, his theme is quite sinister, giving the impression that he's the villain. When the true nature of his character is revealed, his theme is more laid-back.
84* EvenEvilHasStandards:
85** Cheyenne draws the line at killing children and Catholic priests.
86** Mister Morton loathes senseless slaughter and comes to see Frank as little more than an animal.
87* EvilVersusEvil: Frank and Morton spend the second half of the movie trying to checkmate each other, with increasingly violent results.
88* TheExpyWithNoName: Like Leone's "Man With No Name" character, Harmonica is a skilled gunslinger with a MysteriousPast and a [[TheStoic stoic]] demeanor, whose [[OnlyKnownByTheirNickname actual name is never revealed]]. Clint Eastwood himself was Leone's first choice for the part.
89* FaceFramedInShadow: Almost every introduction of Harmonica into a scene is like this, especially the scene where he's revealed by a lantern being thrown into the corner of the bar where he's sitting.
90* FacialDialogue: As Harmonica leaves, Jill asks if he'll ever come back. He looks at her and the smile drops from her face. After a {{beat}}, he replies, "Someday". It's clear to both of them that is a lie.
91* FalseFlagOperation: The massacre of the [=McBain=]s is carried out by Frank's henchmen (really working for Morton's railroad company) while dressed in dusters like Cheyenne's outlaw gang. A posse spends the first part of the film unsuccessfully tracking Cheyenne.
92* FauxAffablyEvil: Frank can be surprisingly casual when interacting with others, but it only underlines how little he cares about other people.
93* {{Flashback}}: Used to reveal why Harmonica pursues Frank.
94* ForDoomTheBellTolls:
95** A bell sound rings out on the soundtrack right before Frank [[DeathOfAChild kills the little farmer boy]].
96** [[spoiler: Harmonica's brother is hanged from a bell.]]
97* {{Foreshadowing}}: At the beginning, Mr. [=McBain=] tells his daughter that one day they will be rich and won't have to work any more. Later it is revealed that the whole plot revolves around him buying the land for cheap because he knew that the railway will have to pass it and he will get rich by running a station there. [[RailroadBaron Mr. Morton]] wants to get the land for himself, obviously. Another occurs later when Cheyenne tell Jill she deserves better than her present circumstances; she replies that the last man to tell her that [[spoiler:is buried in her front yard]].
98* GallowsHumor: A dying [[spoiler:Cheyenne]] takes a moment of levity to trifle about his circumstances.
99-->'''[[spoiler:Cheyenne]]:''' Hey, Harmonica - when they do you in, pray it's somebody who knows ''where'' to shoot.
100* GaussianGirl: During their goodbye, the close-up shot on Jill is slightly out-of-focus while the shot on Harmonica is clear.
101* GrandFinale: This film is generally seen as the grand finale to Creator/SergioLeone's SpaghettiWestern films. Or as the prelude to the [[Film/AFistfulOfDynamite grand finale]].
102* HappilyMarried: Brief as it was, Jill and Brett truly loved each other; she also notably insists on using ''his'' last name, not hers.
103* HateSink: Frank is an utterly despicable ChildHater who has no redeemable or likable traits whatsoever. Years ago, he [[spoiler:killed off Harmonica's brother in probably the most sadistic way possible]], and now he goes and kills off a farming family, including their youngest son. [[RapeAsDrama Then he advances on the widow.]] He is clearly meant to garner much of the viewers' hatred and revulsion as possible.
104* HeroicBSOD: [[spoiler: Jill during her final meeting with both Cheyenne and Harmonica.]]
105* ICanExplain: Wobbles tries this line together with YouHaveToBelieveMe when it becomes apparent that he unwittingly led Harmonica to Morton's train.
106* IHaveYouNowMyPretty:
107** Played straight by Frank. [[spoiler:Jill submits however in order to save her life, even pretending to like it.]]
108** There's a subversion in a bizarre scene near the beginning where Harmonica ambushes Jill in a barn, roughs her up a little and rips her dress... but it turns out he's [[InvokedTrope deliberately invoking]] MaleGaze by tearing her dress and [[UnkemptBeauty having her hair whipped around a little]]. There may be assassins just outside, but [[AllMenArePerverts not even they can avert their eyes from the eye-candy]]... except for maybe Harmonica. Look at him closely. He's doing this almost surgically and with extreme care.
109* InstantDeathBullet: ANY character hit by a bullet. Notable cases are the slaughter of the [=McBain=] family as well as the shootout at the railroad in the opening scene. Except for [[spoiler:Frank, Cheyenne and Harmonica.]]
110* IronicEcho: [[spoiler: Harmonica places his harmonica between the lips of a moribund Frank]], a CallBack to the death of [[spoiler: Harmonica's brother, which Frank caused by hanging him from a bell]].
111* ItsPersonalWithTheDragon: Harmonica interferes with railroad baron Mr. Morton's efforts to take Jill [=McBain=]'s land, but his primary goal is to kill Morton's henchman Frank, who killed Harmonica's brother decades earlier.
112* ItsQuietTooQuiet: The DeterminedHomesteader early on senses something is up when the crickets suddenly stop chirping.
113* JackBauerInterrogationTechnique: Harmonica tortures a man to get information of Frank.
114* JerkWithAHeartOfGold: Mr. [=McBain=] abuses one of his sons when the lad talks back, and seems to be a domineering man in general, but it's also evident that the man deeply cares for his family, especially for his daughter.
115* JustTrainWrong: The train's boxcars have four wheels, a rounded roof, and other features more akin to European railroad practice. The passenger cars have a more American appearance, but feature buffer and chain couplers which were not used on US railroads. The locomotive, though fitted with a bell, cowcatcher, and other applications seen on American engines, has a plate frame, whereas American engines have bar frames.
116* KickTheDog:
117** Frank and his gang kill a family of four, including a young child.
118** Frank gets another one near the end of the film in the [[spoiler: "keep your lovin' brother happy" flashback. While Frank does spare the life of young Harmonica, he does it only [[TheSociopath to experience sadistic glee]] at seeing the guy witness the murder of his brother.]]
119** Frank kicking Morton's crutches out from under him.
120* KilledOffscreen:
121** [[spoiler:Cheyenne]] provides a playful double example. First, he's mortally wounded in an off-screen skirmish, and then during his actual death, he asks his companion to look away, which the camera also respects with a brief discretion shot.
122** When Frank shoots the younger [=McBain=] boy, the camera cuts away to the train with Jill arriving at the station, [[MatchCut merging the sound]] [[SmashCut of the bullet with the train's whistle]].
123** [[spoiler: All of Cheyenne's men and the last five of Morton's men, killed in the train battle.]]
124* LeaveNoWitnesses: One of the earliest evil deeds Frank does is kill a child after this sinister excerpt of dialogue:
125-->'''Goon:''' ''[about the boy]'' What are we gonna do with him, Frank?\
126'''Frank:''' ''[beat]'' Well, now that you've called me by name -- ''[shoots the child]''
127* LeaveTheCameraRunning: Creator/SergioLeone's signature style, the first scene has the characters waiting for a train and runs for almost 15 minutes before the first words are spoken.
128* LeftTheBackgroundMusicOn: Just before Harmonica's entrance, the music changes subtly. Everybody starts looking around, then it is revealed the new tune is being played by a man with a harmonica.
129* {{Leitmotif}}: The four main characters have their own:
130** [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hyYg9oqL4Os Jill gets a melancholy, string-heavy orchestral piece with choral backing (sopranos courtesy of Edda dell'Orso)]].
131** [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nt-GOugSPeE&list=PL0105A395C930F103&index=12 Cheyenne gets a laid-back banjo and whistling theme]].
132** [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fdPo_Ww6Dag Frank gets a variation on Harmonica's theme. Usually harsh fuzz guitar, but also played on oboe and trumpet at different points in the film. ]]
133** [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GbATgHJV6ak Harmonica has his ever-present namesake, accompanied by electric guitar and orchestra]].
134* LieBackAndThinkOfEngland: After being kidnapped by Frank, Jill lets him have his way with her in order to save her own life and even pretends to enjoy it.
135* LockedOutOfTheLoop: Cheyenne and Jill don't know what Harmonica's motivation is. But since they know how cruel Frank is, they might not care.
136* LoveTriangle: Very subtle. Over the course of the film, Cheyenne gets a bit of a soft spot for Jill. Who in turn develops one for Harmonica. [[spoiler:Harmonica's feelings are unsaid and he moves on at the end of the film.]]
137* MailOrderBride: The plot is kicked off when Jill arrives at her new home just hours after everyone there was slaughtered as part of a land grab. Definitely ''not'' played for yuks, since he wanted a mother for his children and she wanted a new life.
138* MisplacedWildlife: Brett [=McBain=] is shooting birds, and Timmy (Brett's son) collects the birds and shows them to his sister Maureen. The birds are chukkar partridge, which were introduced into the United States by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service in the 1920s and were not present before then.
139* MotivatedByFear: Frank quipping to Mr. Morton, that people are more likely sell the land to them if they're properly scared and that "people scare better when they're dying".
140* MurderIsTheBestSolution: Morton just wants his opposition bought out or intimidated, but Frank prefers to massacre first and ask questions later.
141-->'''Morton:''' Tell me, was it necessary that you kill all of them? I only told you to scare them.\
142'''Frank:''' People scare better when they're dying.
143* MutualKill: A delayed one. [[spoiler:During a shootout Mister Morton and Cheyenne mortally wound one another. Morton dies a few minutes later, Cheyenne a few hours later.]]
144* MyNameIsInigoMontoya: Beautifully subverted. Harmonica never tells Frank his name. When Frank demands to know, he gives him plenty of names, but none of them are his.
145-->'''Frank:''' Who are you?\
146'''Harmonica:''' Jim Cooper, Chuck Youngblood.\
147'''Frank:''' More dead men.\
148'''Harmonica:''' They were all alive until they met you, Frank.
149* NeverTrustATrailer: The trailer makes it look like Harmonica is the villain, and a ruthless killing machine. Frank, meanwhile, almost looks like he's the hero.
150* NoHonorAmongThieves: Frank's men are willing to kill him for money.
151* NoPlaceForMeThere: Once his business is completed, Harmonica leaves Sweetwater, as the new society has no use for him. Technically Cheyenne does the same, [[spoiler:but he doesn't last long before he dies from his gunshot wound.]]
152* NotMeThisTime: Frank frames Cheyenne for the massacre of the [=McBain=] family, knowing that it's plausible since Cheyenne's no saint himself.
153* NumberTwo:
154** Cheyenne has an unnamed lieutenant, who among other things, is responsible for carrying his coat and smuggles him off the train to Yuma "Two tickets, amigo, to the next station. One way only." He gets killed in the shootout with Morton's men.
155** Frank has two: One participates in the massacre of the [=McBain=] family (he's the one who asks "What are we going to do with this one, Frank?" and the other found Jim and Logan dead, killed by Harmonica and reports that to Frank. Both are killed by Cheyenne's men.
156* ObviouslyEvil: The three gunmen in the intro. Maybe not Woody Strode, but Creator/JackElam with his lazy eye and perma-stubble? Al Mulock cracking his knuckles?
157* OffscreenMomentOfAwesome: Cheyenne gets two: his escape from a prison escort and his shootout with Morton and his henchmen.
158* OneManArmy: Cheyenne runs into Morton one last time and manages to kill all of his goons by himself. [[spoiler:He doesn't get away unscathed, however, and gets a fatal bullet wound for his troubles.]]
159* OneWomanWail: "Jill's America": slow, arching very high and very low, and achingly beautiful. It first appears in the background when she arrives at her house and sees what should have been her new family, every member gunned down in cold blood.
160* TheOnlyOneAllowedToDefeatYou: Harmonica kills one member of Frank's gang when they betray him for Morton and try to kill him. He's not doing this to save his life, as Jill accuses him of doing, but because Harmonica hates Frank enough to consider himself the only one allowed to kill him.
161-->'''Jill:''' You saved his life!\
162'''Harmonica:''' I didn't let ''them'' kill him – and that's not the same thing.
163* OffIntoTheDistanceEnding: The movie ends with Harmonica (and Cheyenne) riding off into the distance.
164* OutfitDecoy: Cheyenne fires his gun from inside his boot which he lets harmlessly dangle in front of a coach window.
165* OverlyLongGag: Frank's henchman Snaky getting increasingly annoyed by a fly landing on his face. There's also the joke of a residue or water dripping from the ceiling onto Stony's head, and then onto his hat.
166* PetTheDog: Jill serves as a big MoralityPet for Cheyenne.
167* PoliceAreUseless: The Sheriff of Flagstone's only role in the movie is to oversee Jill's auction of Sweetwater. In a deleted scene his deputies rough up Harmonica, and he's revealed to be a DirtyCop on Morton's payroll.
168* PostModernism: See {{Deconstruction}} on [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Once_Upon_a_Time_in_the_West#Film_references Wikipedia]]. French theorist [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jean_Baudrillard Jean Baudrillard]] once deemed ''Once Upon a Time in the West'' the first postmodern film.
169* PreAsskickingOneLiner: "When you hear a strange sound, drop to the ground..." It's [[CallBack referenced in a later shootout]]:
170-->'''Jill:''' I swear we're gonna hear that strange sound again.\
171'''Harmonica:''' Right about... ''now.''
172* PriceOnTheirHead: Cheyenne has a $5,000 bounty on his head, which Harmonica uses to bid for Sweetwater and save it from Frank and his goons during the auction.
173* QuickDraw: Harmonica has a very fast one. In the first scene hemanages to draw his gun and shoot in a row three hostile men who had already their guns in their hands... but then one of them manages to shoot him back before collapsing.
174%% ZeroContextExample ** So does Frank. And Cheyenne %%.
175* RaceLift: Cheyenne was originally Mexican, his real name being Manuel Gutierrez, according to the script. Creator/SergioLeone didn't feel that Jason Robards made a convincing Mexican, so he dropped this.
176* RailroadPlot: [[spoiler:[=McBain=] knew that any train line through the region could only refuel water for the steam engine in a single place and built his farm on the site, expecting to make a small fortune by selling water to the train company. So Morton had the family killed by Frank so that he could buy the land himself.]]
177* RapeIsASpecialKindOfEvil: If you did not hate Frank after he gleefully gunned down [[spoiler: the last [=McBain=] child]], then you ''will'' loathe him after he [[spoiler: forced Jill to sleep with him in exchange for her life.]]
178* RedemptionEqualsDeath: [[spoiler: Cheyenne doesn't get to enjoy his newly heroic life very long.]]
179* TheReveal: [[spoiler: Harmonica's motivation for wanting to kill Frank. Frank hanged Harmonica's brother with sadism; a young Harmonica, on his knees, was made to support his older brother above his shoulders, until the inevitable happened when he either collapsed from exhaustion or his brother kicked him away on purpose.]]
180* RevealShot: Repeated flashbacks are shown of Harmonica's first meeting with Frank, but it's rather sparse on the details. When we do see the scene in its entirety, it's horrifying.
181* {{Revenge}}: Harmonica is driven entirely by a desire for revenge on Frank.
182* RevengeBeforeReason: Both Harmonica and Frank have ample opportunity to have the other one killed off by others or inaction. But for Harmonica ItsPersonal. Frank could have taken Morton's place and lived a life of luxury with all he wanted. But he has to know what it is Harmonica wants and can't let go of grievances.
183-->'''Frank:''' Morton once told me I could never be like him. Now I understand why. Wouldn't have bothered him, knowing you were around somewhere alive.\
184'''Harmonica:'''So, you found out you're not a businessman after all.\
185'''Frank:''' Just a man.
186* RewatchBonus: On the second viewing, [[spoiler: Cheyenne's grave condition]] is painfully obvious. He even [[spoiler: holds his hand over the bullet wound]] while approaching Harmonica.
187* RoaringRampageOfRevenge: Harmonica obviously has a serious beef against Frank, going as far as to protect him from his other enemies just so he can have the privilege of killing Frank himself. [[spoiler:In the end, we find out that he's avenging his brother, who Frank killed in one of the most unforgivable fashions possible when Harmonica was just a little kid.]]
188* SameContentDifferentRating: The film features about the same amount of violence and mature themes as Sergio Leone's previous westerns, but it got an M (a precursor to PG) whereas the others all got Rs. It was updated to a PG-13 in 2003.
189* SayMyName: "MAUREEN!" It's quite heartbreaking.
190* ScareTheDog: The first sign for [=McBain=] that something is wrong is when he hears his dogs whimpering.
191* SceneryPorn: Emphasis on Monument Valley, Utah.
192* ScrewTheRulesIHaveMoney:
193-->'''Mr. Morton:''' There are many things you'll never understand. This is one of them. ''*holds a stack of dollars while looking at Frank's drawn gun*'' You see, Frank, there are many kinds of weapons. And the only one that can stop that is this. Now, shall we get back to our little problem?
194** Once Morton realises that [[spoiler: Frank]] has gone too far and needs to go.
195-->'''Goon:''' ''[After Morton deals out stacks of money to him and his men like cards]'' How do you, uh... how do you play this game, Mr. Morton?\
196'''Mr. Morton:'''It's very simple. As long as you use your head, you never lose.
197* SecretStabWound: [[spoiler:Gunshot wound, actually.]]
198* SecretlyDying: [[spoiler:Due to the above gunshot wound. Throughout the whole of the last scene with Jill, you can tell that there's something wrong with Cheyenne, but he's doing his best to hide it from her. It's only once he leaves that we find out what happened.]]
199* SettlingTheFrontier: [[spoiler:Jill becomes the matriarch of the small community literally being built up around her as the railroad approaches.]]
200* TheSevenWesternPlots: Most of the film plays out as something of a mix of a ''Union Pacific'' and ''Ranch'' story, [[spoiler: but with the revelation that Frank was responsible for the death of Harmonica's brother, on top of all the other murders Frank committed, the film is, ultimately, a ''Revenge'' story.]]
201* ShipTease and ShipSinking: Jill seems to be showing interest in Harmonica and Cheyenne as the film progresses. However, [[spoiler: when Jill expresses her interest in Cheyenne, he replies that he's not the right man...and neither is Harmonica.]]
202** However this maybe because [[spoiler: Cheyenne knows he is dying]].
203* ShoutOut: The film is bursting with references both obvious and subtle to classic American Westerns:
204** The low angle shot of a shrieking train rushing towards the screen in the opening scene, and the shot of the train pulling into the Sweetwater station at the end is from ''Film/TheIronHorse''.
205** The massacre scene in West features young Timmy [=McBain=] out hunting with his father, just as Joey Starrett does in ''Film/{{Shane}}''. The funeral of the [=McBains=] is borrowed almost shot-for-shot.
206** The three gunmen awaiting Harmonica is a direct {{Homage}} to Frank Miller's gang awaiting him in ''Film/HighNoon''.
207** ''Film/JohnnyGuitar'' - Jill and Vienna have similar backstories (both are former prostitutes who become saloonkeepers), and Harmonica, like Johnny, is a mysterious, gunslinging outsider known by his musical nickname. Some of the central plot (Western settlers vs. the railroad company) may be recycled from that film.
208** Leone admitted that the rustling bushes, the silencing of insect sounds, and the fluttering grouse that suggests menace is approaching the farmhouse when the [=McBain=] family is massacred were all taken from ''Film/TheSearchers''. The ending of the film — where Western nomads Harmonica and Cheyenne move on rather than join modern society — also echoes the famous ending.
209** The final duel between Frank and Harmonica is shot almost identically to the duel between Creator/KirkDouglas and Creator/RockHudson in ''Film/TheLastSunset''.
210** The dusters worn by Cheyenne and his gang (and by Frank and his men while impersonating them) resemble those worn by Liberty Valance and his henchmen when they are introduced in ''Film/TheManWhoShotLibertyValance''. In addition, the auction scene in West was intended to recall the election scene.
211** Creator/WoodyStrode's gunman wields a "Mare's Leg" firearm (Winchester Model 1892), the trademark gun used in ''Series/WantedDeadOrAlive''.
212* ShootHimHeHasAWallet: Frank almost shoots Morton when the latter tries to produce a stack of bills from his drawer.
213* ShowdownAtHighNoon: Harmonica and Frank finally settle their conflict this way.
214* SignatureStyle: This film signals a shift to the second phase of Creator/SergioLeone's style, being slower and more serious than the ''Film/DollarsTrilogy''.
215* SilenceIsGolden:
216** The opening has no dialogue as a trio of gunman wait for their target to arrive on a train.
217** The final showdown is over nine minutes long, in which a total of 8 words are spoken.
218* SlasherSmile: Frank and some of his men [[spoiler:in Harmonica's flashback.]]
219* SoundtrackDissonance: [[spoiler:Cheyenne's upbeat little motif plays as he dies.]]
220* SpaghettiWestern
221* SpecialGuest:
222** Creator/WoodyStrode and Creator/JackElam as two of the hitmen waiting for the train at the beginning.
223** Keenan Wynn as the Sheriff at the auction, Frank Wolff as Jill's ill-fated husband, and Lionel Stander as the barman at the saloon where we first encounter Cheyenne.
224* SpiritualAntithesis: It's considerably less cynical than the ''Film/DollarsTrilogy'' and feels more like a Classic Hollywood western than SpaghettiWestern. The depiction of the Wild West has gone from CrapsackWorld to on the verge of civilisation.
225* StopAndGo: Cheyenne's theme pauses several times so he can say a line, and starts up again. [[spoiler:It even stops to allow his dead body to drop to the ground.]]
226* ThemeMusicPowerUp: The spooky sound of the harmonica accompanies Harmonica's raging revenge through the movie, and every time you hear it you know that he'll do something awesome.
227* TheyJustDontGetIt: Wobbles's case. Throughout the film he tries to gain Frank's respect by proving himself useful but, apart from the fact that every time he takes the initiative he only makes a fool of himself, he does not understand that Frank will never respect him simply because Wobbles is what he is: a pathetic imbecile who can look ridiculous at best. Not to mention that his own nickname is itself disparaging, yet he never seems to be offended by its use, or even grasp it. Wobbles, instead, keeps trying [[spoiler:until Frank kills him.]]
228* TheThreeFacesOfAdam: Frank is The Hunter (ambitious and greedy), Cheyenne is The Lord (sardonic and helpful) Harmonica is The Prophet (driven and resourceful).
229* TragicDream: Morton desperately wishes to see his railway reach the Pacific Ocean before the tuberculosis that has crippled him fully claims his lungs and his life, so much so that he enlists the aid of a monster like Frank to 'clear the track' and eliminate any problems they find in the way (thus jump-starting the plot). Frank makes some grim comments about the progression of Morton's disease as they've crossed the country, and given Morton's pitiably feeble state it seems doubtful he'd ever make it to the ocean even if he weren't ultimately killed in a shootout at the end.
230* TrailersAlwaysSpoil: The synopsis on the back of the DVD case has a pretty significant spoiler about just what Harmonica's beef with Frank is, saying that he [[spoiler: "remembers how his brother was savagely tortured". Although it doesn't say outright ''who'' did it, it isn't difficult to put two and two together, and on top of that, it gives away one of the film's most shocking scenes]]. Averted when this was changed for the Blu-ray cover.
231* TroubledBackstoryFlashback: Harmonica is relentlessly pursuing Frank, with a few flashbacks showing a blurred figure. [[spoiler:In the final showdown, we get a full flashback which reveals the blurred figure is Frank, who had Harmonica's brother hung from a bell and standing on his shoulders.]]
232* {{Turncoat}}: Endemic among the bad guys. [[spoiler:Frank betrays Morton; Frank's henchmen betray ''him'']].
233* TwilightOfTheOldWest: The railroad is used as an analogy for the dying WildWest, with [[BigBad Frank]] and [[TheGunslinger Harmonica]] exchanging these lines:
234-->'''Harmonica:''' So you found out you're not a businessman after all?\
235'''Frank:''' Just a man.\
236'''Harmonica:''' An ancient race. ''[looks to the approaching railroad]'' Other Mortons[[note]]Who's a businessman[[/note]] will be along and they'll kill it off.
237* UndersideRide: Cheyenne clings to the underside of Morton's train.
238* VehicleVanish: Harmonica makes his entrance this way, behind a train.
239* VillainyDiscretionShot: Cheyenne killing his prison escort.
240* WeddingDeathJuxtaposition: PlayedWith. Jill arrives to her wedding with Mr. [=McBain=] a bit too late: Frank and his men have already murdered him and his children while preparing for the wedding. After Jill discovers their corpses, she reveals that she and [=McBain=] had already got married a month before.
241* WesternUnionMan: In the famous opening sequence, the three thugs waiting at the railway station scare the meek telegraphist away simply by showing up in the dilapidated office. Eventually, much to his distress, they rip the cables off, annoyed by the sound the machine keeps making.
242* WhamLine: [[spoiler:"Keep your lovin' brother happy."]]
243* WhamShot: Cheyenne getting the drink he ordered, revealing to the camera his shackled wrists.
244* WhammyBid: Jill's land had been put in auction. The bids were in the hundreds when Harmonica bids $5,000. Instead of paying with money, he brings in Cheyenne, for which a reward in the bid's value had been offered.
245* WhiteShirtOfDeath: Most noticeable on Maureen (well, dress actually) and Timmy [=McBain=].
246* WhyDontYouJustShootHim:
247** Frank and Harmonica have several opportunities to shoot the other sneakily, but [[HonorBeforeReason they wait out their time for a proper duel instead]].
248** [[spoiler: When Frank killed Harmonica's brother, he had the chance to kill Harmonica too. Instead, he left him alive, only for Harmonica to come back for revenge.]]
249* WidowedAtTheWedding: Subverted with Jill. The story begins during her wedding day party with [=McBain=], but it's revealed they already married in New Orleans the month before.
250* YouHaveFailedMe: Frank dispatches Wobbles when he finds out that Harmonica followed him.
251* YouKilledMyFather: [[spoiler:Brother, actually.]]
252* YouRemindMeOfX: Cheyenne tells Jill that she reminds him of his mother.
253-->''"You know, Jill, you remind me of my mother. She was the biggest whore in Alameda and the finest woman that ever lived. Whoever my father was -- for an hour or for a month -- he must have been a happy man."''

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