:07:00
	which actually was
an existing set 35km north of Madrid,
:07:05
	at a place called Hoyo de Manzanares.
:07:07
	The set was built in 1962
for a series of Spanish Zorro films.
:07:12
	It resembled a ghost town,
wasn't used for a while.
:07:15
	It was redressed
by the designer, Carlo Simi,
:07:17
	who put new frontages
on part of the town.
:07:20
	Basically it was a pre-existing set.
:07:22
	They really hadn't got
any money to play with.
:07:25
	Lots of references
to Easter and resurrection,
:07:29
	and the idea of a town
of widows, a town of death.
:07:31
	There's coffins,
there's bells, bell-ringers,
:07:34
	there's Eastwood crucified
on the cantina sign.
:07:37
	There's a resurrection towards the end.
:07:40
	There's a Last Supper, when
the baddies all get together for a meal.
:07:44
	It's riddled with Catholic iconography,
:07:48
	which wasn't, I think,
a deep decision by Leone,
:07:51
	simply that it would be recognisable
to a largely southern Italian audience,
:07:56
	at which this movie
was originally pitched.
:07:59
	The bartender, whose name
is Silvanito, is played by José Calvo,
:08:03
	a well-known Spanish actor
who'd appeared in Italian Westerns.
:08:06
	Fistful of Dollars was not the first
Italian Western, as people think.
:08:11
	There had been about 25 Spanish
and Italian and West German Westerns
:08:15
	made between 1962 and 1964.
:08:18
	But they were copy American Westerns.
:08:22
	Where Fistful of Dollars scored was it was
the first distinctively Italian Western.
:08:26
	The critics compare copyists to
Italianisers, and Italianisers begin here.
:08:31
	The distinctive features are those
of an Italian movie applied to the West.
:08:35
	And this came through
in Fistful of Dollars for the first time.
:08:45
	José Calvo had, in fact, been making
movies since the early 1950s in Spain,
:08:49
	and bore a startling resemblance to Walt
Disney's Geppetto in the film Pinocchio,
:08:54
	which endeared him
to audiences in the west.