The cinematography captures the vast, Monument Valley-esque landscapes, but rather than using them for tension-filled standoffs, Damiani uses the space for elaborate, Rube Goldberg-style setups. The film’s opening, involving a staged shootout and a "miraculous" survival, immediately signals to the audience that this is a West of performance and illusion rather than blood and dust.
Joe Thanks constantly shifts roles, using the expectations of others against them.
The "pollo" (or "chicken" in the Italian title) refers to the targets of Joe’s elaborate schemes, specifically the corrupt Major Cabot (Patrick McGoohan). The film explores the irony that those who believe they are the masters of the frontier are often the easiest to manipulate. Production and Directorial Vision subtitle A.Genius,.Two.Partners.and.a.Dupe.1975...
Though directed by Damiano Damiani—known for more political "Zapata Westerns" like A Bullet for the General —the fingerprints of producer Sergio Leone are everywhere. The film features a sweeping score by , which oscillates between heroic fanfares and playful, avant-garde melodies that underscore the film’s slapstick nature.
Like Leone’s My Name is Nobody , this film acknowledges that the "Wild West" is becoming a circus. The violence is bloodless, and the legendary gunfighter has been replaced by the professional swindler. Legacy The "pollo" (or "chicken" in the Italian title)
Played by Terence Hill, Joe is the quintessential "trinity" figure—fast with his hands, faster with his mind, and seemingly always three steps ahead of both his enemies and his allies.
Robert Charlebois and Miou-Miou provide the emotional and comedic friction. Their relationship with Joe is built on a tenuous foundation of greed and shared history, highlighting the theme that in the West, loyalty is a luxury. The film features a sweeping score by ,
Introduction