Line? No, I was talking about the guy at the urinal, there’s fart missing on the bluray. Also the line “you go fuck yourself” is changed to “you go screw yourself”.
Maybe I’m getting mixed up with another film.
This happened to be on while I was at the in-laws today and I noticed something that hadn’t really dawned on me before.
There were not 150 sons of b*tches. There were 60…maybe 70…at the most.
We were cheated out of a good 80 or 90 sons of b*tches.
The old gunman’s time is over and the new one takes his place. Of all SWs this is the only one that leaves me with a sombre mood.
It is even more sad now when you realize Terence Hill is old. ![]()
Just added a new location page: New Mexico, to cover this movie and Troublemakers.
Credit page has been added…
‘My Name is Nobody’ premiered in the United States as a ‘sneak preview’ at Sack Theatre, Boston, June 7 1974, before going on wider release in late-June 1974.
Sources below: (1) (5) (The Albuquerque Tribune, May 10, 1973) (Wichita Beacon, July 26, 1974)
In the UK it opened at Gala Royal, 9th December 1976. This was one of the final spaghetti westerns released in the UK (‘The Violent Breed’ aka ‘Keoma’, second-billed with ‘Young Lady Chatterley’ from September 1977 to July 1978 was the last of any note). Though unlike the latter this was still playing in cinemas beyond its initial run and into the 1980s. It first aired on television as part of the Viva Leone! season on 25th December 1989 (BBC2 22:40 - 00:30).
Sources below: (Evening Standard, 8th December, 1976) (Marylebone and Paddington Mercury, 17th December, 1976) (Evening Standard, 5th August, 1979)
Given an ‘A’ (PG) for UK theatrical release but then given a 15 on home video although downgraded to 12 for DVD.
Same print in each for A/15/12. Interestingly the BBFC record a cut for the ‘A’ which was the substitution of ‘Screw You’ for ‘F*** you’ said by Leo Gordon to Henry Fonda about 15m into the movie. All prints I have ever seen have the ‘Screw You’ dialogue (you can’t see Gordon’s mouth when he says that - and its not his voice anyway!). This would have been cut in the USA as well for a PG rating.
I have the German Blu Ray of this which credits all of the German actors after Hill and Fonda and and then only a few of the Italian actors and none of the American actors. The opening credits are in German but the closing credits are in English. German and English audio tracks.
Finnish Television Yle Teema channel show this film the next Saturday 21.00.
This guy is marked as ‘unknown’ in the cast list but is in both TGTBTU (in one of the extra Italian scenes as the Confederate who directs Tuco to the monestery) and OUATITW (as the ticket officer in the opening scene).
He can’t possibly be unknown!
This is a well known mystery … some say he’s an English ex-pat living in the south of Spain, but there’s no confirmed identification - Also appears as the bartender who warns LVC about Klaus Kinski in ‘For a few dollars more’. plus a couple of other bit parts in Spags of the mid 1960s period.
PS: I started a thread about another familiar face who has some key roles in major SWs of this time, but is never credited … and ‘your guy’ also gets mentioned.
Yeah, I thought the same thing recently and came close to bringing this up as you have. What I found was that he is called Antonio Palombi. I don’t know if that is correct or not.












