For a few dollars more
For a few dollars more
Перевод песни For a few dollars more (Smokie)
For a few dollars more


Ради еще нескольких долларов
Rich girl she buys her dreams.
It’s a rich world behind the scenes.
Green eyes they tell it all.
The more she takes the harder they fall.
She ain’t easy and she ain’t tough.
She’s had it good, but then she’s had it rough.
And I guess it don’t come to much.
Cos with everything she’s got she’s never got enough.
So she’ll cry just a little for a few dollars more.
She’ll lie just a little like she’s done it before.
She’ll take it, she’ll fake it for a few dollars more.
She’ll show you her heart, then show you the door.
You know she’ll die just a little for a few dollars more.
Even fly just a little like she’s done it before.
She’ll take it, she’ll fake it for a few dollars more.
She’ll show you her heart, then show you the door.
Strange things can happen to you.
When you’ve got so much and you’ve got nothing to do.
Oh oh oh what do you know.
How do you get there when there’s nowhere to go.
And so you wonder just what she’ll do.
She’s never known love but then she’s never known you.
And it’s too bad those sad green eyes.
Are so full of questions and so full of lies.
So she’ll cry just a little for a few dollars more.
She’ll lie just a little like she’s done it before.
She’ll take it, she’ll fake it for a few dollars more.
She’ll show you her heart, then show you the door.
You know she’ll die just a little for a few dollars more.
Even fly just a little like she’s done it before.
She’ll take it, she’ll fake it for a few dollars more.
She’ll show you her heart, then show you the door.
Богатая девушка, она покупает свои мечты
Там за кулисами богатый мир
Зеленые глаза, они рассказывают все
Чем больше она берет, тем труднее им
С ней нелегко, она не грубая
Сначала ей легко, а потом сложно
И мне кажется, это немного
Потому что сколько бы у нее не было,
ей все время не хватает
Так что она заплачет ради еще нескольких долларов
Она соврет как она делала это и раньше
Она справится, она притворится
за еще несколько долларов
Она откроет тебе свое сердце,
а потом покажет на дверь
Ты знаешь, она умрет ради еще нескольких долларов
Даже полетит как делала это и раньше
Она справится, она притворится
за еще несколько долларов
Она откроет тебе свое сердце,
а потом покажет на дверь
Странные вещи могут произойти с тобой
Когда у тебя столько всего, а делать нечего
О, что ты знаешь
Как ты попадешь куда-либо, когда идти некуда
Так что ты гадаешь, что же она сделает
Они никогда не знала любви, но она и не знала тебя
И это так плохо, эти грустные зеленые глаза
Полны вопросов, полны лжи
Так что она заплачет ради еще нескольких долларов
Она соврет как она делала это и раньше
Она справится, она притворится
за еще несколько долларов
Она откроет тебе свое сердце,
а потом покажет на дверь
Ты знаешь, она умрет ради еще нескольких долларов
Даже полетит как делала это и раньше
Она справится, она притворится
за еще несколько долларов
Она откроет тебе свое сердце,
а потом покажет на дверь
Данный перевод песни на русском языке является художественным, т.е. перевод недословный. Чтобы узнать дословный перевод песни, можете наводить мышкой на английские слова.
For a few dollars more
Rich girl she buys her dreams.
It’s a rich world behind the scenes.
Green eyes they tell it all.
The more she takes the harder they fall.
She ain’t easy and she ain’t tough.
She’s had it good, but then she’s had it rough.
And I guess it don’t come to much.
Cos with everything she’s got she’s never got enough.
So she’ll cry just a little for a few dollars more.
She’ll lie just a little like she’s done it before.
She’ll take it, she’ll fake it for a few dollars more.
She’ll show you her heart, then show you the door.
You know she’ll die just a little for a few dollars more.
Even fly just a little like she’s done it before.
She’ll take it, she’ll fake it for a few dollars more.
She’ll show you her heart, then show you the door.
Strange things can happen to you.
When you’ve got so much and you’ve got nothing to do.
Oh oh oh what do you know.
How do you get there when there’s nowhere to go.
And so you wonder just what she’ll do.
She’s never known love but then she’s never known you.
And it’s too bad those sad green eyes.
Are so full of questions and so full of lies.
So she’ll cry just a little for a few dollars more.
She’ll lie just a little like she’s done it before.
She’ll take it, she’ll fake it for a few dollars more.
She’ll show you her heart, then show you the door.
You know she’ll die just a little for a few dollars more.
Even fly just a little like she’s done it before.
She’ll take it, she’ll fake it for a few dollars more.
She’ll show you her heart, then show you the door.
Ради еще нескольких долларов
Богатая девушка, она покупает свои мечты
Там за кулисами богатый мир
Зеленые глаза, они рассказывают все
Чем больше она берет, тем труднее им
С ней нелегко, она не грубая
Сначала ей легко, а потом сложно
И мне кажется, это немного
Потому что сколько бы у нее не было,
ей все время не хватает
Так что она заплачет ради еще нескольких долларов
Она соврет как она делала это и раньше
Она справится, она притворится
за еще несколько долларов
Она откроет тебе свое сердце,
а потом покажет на дверь
Ты знаешь, она умрет ради еще нескольких долларов
Даже полетит как делала это и раньше
Она справится, она притворится
за еще несколько долларов
Она откроет тебе свое сердце,
а потом покажет на дверь
Странные вещи могут произойти с тобой
Когда у тебя столько всего, а делать нечего
О, что ты знаешь
Как ты попадешь куда-либо, когда идти некуда
Так что ты гадаешь, что же она сделает
Они никогда не знала любви, но она и не знала тебя
И это так плохо, эти грустные зеленые глаза
Полны вопросов, полны лжи
For a Few Dollars More
For a Few Dollars More (Italian: Per qualche dollaro in più) is a 1965 Italian-Spanish spaghetti western film directed by Sergio Leone and starring Clint Eastwood, Lee Van Cleef and Gian Maria Volontè. German actor Klaus Kinski also plays a supporting role as a secondary villain. The film was released in the United States in 1967 and is the second part of what is commonly known as the «Dollars Trilogy.»
Contents
Eastwood (marketed as the ‘Man with No Name’) and Van Cleef (as Colonel Douglas Mortimer, and marketed as the ‘Man in Black’) portray two bounty hunters, in pursuit of «El Indio» (Gian Maria Volonté), one of the most wanted fugitives in the western territories, and his gang (one of whom is played by Kinski). Indio is a ruthless, intelligent man. He has a musical pocket watch that he plays before engaging in gun duels. «When the chimes finish, begin» he says. Flashbacks reveal that the watch originates from a young woman (Rosemary Dexter), who killed herself while being raped by Indio after he had found her with her lover (in Joe Millard’s novelization of the film, the young man is her newly-wed husband) and killed him. The watch bears a photo of the woman and was presented as a gift by the young man before being killed.
Mortimer is told that Cavanagh has already been targeted by Eastwood’s character, who is referred to as ‘Monco.’ We see Monco ride into town and track down Cavanagh at a saloon playing five-card draw poker. Monco kills him and his men, and takes the bounty. Eventually, the two bounty hunters, after learning about each other from different sources, meet in El Paso and, after butting heads, decide to team up to take down Indio and his gang.
Indio’s primary goal is to rob the Bank of El Paso and its disguised safe containing «almost a million dollars». Mortimer persuades a reluctant Monco to join Indio’s gang during the robbery in order to «get him between two fires». Monco is offered membership in the gang, after rescuing one of Indio’s friends from prison.
The next morning, Monco and Mortimer shoot down the gang, one by one, in the streets of the town. Standing alone, Mortimer shoots Groggy when the outlaw tries to run for it, but then has his gun shot out of his hand by Indio, who then takes out his pocket watch and begins playing it. As the chimes nears the end, Monco suddenly appears with an identical pocket watch, playing the same tune as Indio’s, which Mortimer realizes had been taken from him earlier. As this happens, Monco holds a Henry rifle on Indio and gives his gun belt and pistol to Mortimer, evening the odds. «Now we start», Monco announces and sits while Mortimer and Indio face off. During the standoff, Monco looks down at the pocket watch and sees the same picture of the woman Indio had raped. The music finishes, and Mortimer outdraws and guns down Indio.
Leads [ ]
Gang members [ ]
Other characters [ ]
Different Versions [ ]
More than even The Good, the Bad and the Ugly, For a Few Dollars More is notorious for being available in many different versions, both aurally and visually.
Music [ ]
Ennio Morricone composed the film’s soundtrack as he did for A Fistful of Dollars: before production had started, under Leone’s explicit direction. In fact, Leone often shot to Morricone’s music on set. In the United States, Hugo Montenegro released a cover version as did Leroy Holmes who released a cover version of the soundtrack album with the original American poster art. Maurizio Graf sang a vocal «Occhio Per Occhio»/»Eye For An Eye» to the music of the cue «Sixty Seconds to What» track that did not appear in the film but was released as a tie-in 45rpm record.
The rock band Year Long Disaster has recorded a song called «Per qualche dollaro in più». However, it is unknown how large the connection with it is.
British band Babe Ruth famously covered the main theme as part of their song «The Mexican.»
The theme «La resa dei conti» was used as a ringtone for Vertu phones
For a Few Dollars More
1965, Western, 2h 12m
What to know
critics consensus
With Clint Eastwood in the lead, Ennio Morricone on the score, and Sergio Leone’s stylish direction, For a Few Dollars More earns its recognition as a genre classic. Read critic reviews
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User Reviews
As the second of the three films legendary filmmaker Sergio Leone collaborated on with Clint Eastwood (not to mention his first with Lee Van Cleef and his second with ‘Fistful’ actor Gian Maria Volonte), For a Few Dollars More gets well earned respect from the fans of the director and the groundbreaking star. And yet, occasionally there are those who’ll not even know this film from Leone and Clint exists since it does sometimes get under the shadow of their two most infamous works, Fistful of Dollars (which for the most part introduced Clint and Leone to the public’s awareness) and The Good, the Bad and the Ugly (which solidified Clint as a Western icon and gave Leone a similar status for film buffs). But taken as a film unto itself, aside from its place in the trilogy, this is a Western that simply delivers the goods, and it does so with a spectacular marriage of style and substance.
The story begins by introducing our two (anti) heroes, bounty hunters Douglas Mortimer (Cleef), former Colonel, and Monco (Eastwood), a drifter. They both set their sights on the leader of a gang of bandits named Indio (Volonte), who is plotting to go after over a million locked in a bank in El Paso. At first, Monco and Mortimer seem like their after Indio for the same reason- reward money- though there seems to be more than each man counted on with him and his gang.
From the opening scenes with Cleef and Eastwood, to the scenes in El Paso, and then into the set pieces in the stone ruins in the Mexico desert(s), For a Few Dollars More displays the utmost skill by Leone in his storytelling, as well as in his use of the camera. Using Fistful’s camera-man Massimo Dallamano, Leone does what he does best in his spaghetti westerns- he creates a perfectly in sync mood with his characters: each look in a scene, whether it’s intense waiting for guns to be drawn, or just regular conversation, the look of the film draws the viewer in without over-doing it. Some points are made bold or repetitious (like Ennio Morricone’s score, that keeps its whistling theme and serene watch theme completely in check), though it’s not done to any degree of annoyance or by accident.
In fact, that’s what makes his westerns such fun, is that you take them seriously as films, yet he always reminds you that it’s all in the ‘movie-world’ just by the way Mortimer or Monco strikes up a match. As for the actors themselves, Eastwood and Cleef are total pros in this genre, so ever line of dialog comes out naturally, and the supporting actors (however dubbed over from original Italian) all contribute great notes as well. At the least, it can appeal to a new generation of kids looking back to older movies, which may look at this and consider it more modernly crafted than a John Ford oldie. A+
Col. Douglas Mortimer (Lee Van Cleef) and Monco (Clint Eastwood) are both bounty hunters. They’re both after the bank robber El Indio (Gian Maria Volonté) for his bounty. They decide to join forces to bring El Indio and his gang of robbers down.
Lee Van Cleef makes this a superior spaghetti western. He’s not only as good as Clint. In many ways, he plays a superior character. His character has secrets. He has mysteries. Clint is playing a much more simpler character. For me, this is superior to ‘A Fistful of Dollars’ in the trilogy. The story is more iconic, cleaner. The characters have more depth.
Completely defying the tried & tested Hollywood formula and introducing his own style of narration that was more character driven, glamorized violence & also added a new dimension of moral ambiguity into its characters’ psyche, thus bringing both heroes & villains very much on the same level, Sergio Leone presented a whole new outlook of the Wild West in A Fistful of Dollars but with this second chapter, he further accelerates the inevitable rebirth of the western genre.
The second installment of Leone’s Dollars trilogy is quite an improvement over its predecessor in almost all departments of filmmaking & gradually portrays the developing maturity in Leone’s craftsmanship. Starring Clint Eastwood as a bounty hunter looking for a number of wanted suspects, who later partners with another bounty hunter looking for the same guys & make a deal of splitting the reward but in the end when it comes down to final showdown, one of them shows their real motive behind the hunt.
Featuring an improved direction from Sergio Leone, For A Few Dollars More presents the director in more control of his artistry & has a much stronger script to muster ahead with. The scope of camera-work, the precision of editing & overall production design also get their upgrades plus the performances from the recurring cast turn out to be better than the previous film with Clint Eastwood & new addition of Lee Van Cleef impressing the most.
On an overall scale, For A Few Dollars More is another huge step towards placing the coffin on traditional westerns & presents a significant evolution of every single aspect of its making when compared with A Fistful of Dollars. Ennio Morricone’s music also leaves a bigger mark than before & it’s exciting to observe how seamlessly it accompanies the drama. A rare sequel that improves upon the original, For A Few Dollars More is absolutely recommended.
For a Few Dollars More (1965) is the best Clint Eastwood Western movie and one of my favorite personal classic western flicks ever! It is my third favorite in «The Man with No Name» Trilogy. I grew up watching this film and it was the first Clint Eastwood western movie I ever saw, I fall immediately in love with it and I just love this movie. It is Sergio Leone’s best western film of all time my favorite. It is entraining and brilliant western flick with a great original epic story, great cast and the acting is fantastic. You have a great shoot outs, the music score is original epic. I always enjoy this film. It is my favorite Eastwood western movie.
In my opinion It is Sergio Leone and Clint Eastwood’s classic film that they ever made together. Westerns like this film doesn’t exit this days anymore. I have enjoyed For a Few Dollars More a lot. I love this one to death. The film is very entertained, is not boring and It has a good plot and story to tell. The characters, the action shooting sequences are just amazing and awesome. Sergio Leone does what he wanted to do with the film, and become one of the greatest epic classic western movies. I love this movie to death and it is my favorite film! There are other western films that Clint Eastwood made and directed but this one will be one of his best films in the history ever.
The first film was more about one hero but in this film there are two heroes. The bullets, the shooting is outstanding. The gun fights are awesome. This is a Western that simply delivers the goods, and it does so with a spectacular marriage of style and substance. From the opening scenes with Cleef and Eastwood, to the scenes in El Paso, and then into the set pieces in the stone ruins in the Mexico desert, For a Few Dollars More displays the utmost skill by Leone in his storytelling, as well as in his use of the camera.
What else do you want in an spaghetti Western film like this at all?! The fact is this is the greatest western ever made in the history. I love this film to death! It is my third favorite film in the Dollars trilogy. This movie is a perfect 10 it is my personal favorite western movie.
Italian director Sergio Leone changed the face of the Western genre in 1964 when he introduced what would be known as the «Spaghetti Western» with the brilliant «Per un Pugno di Dollari» («A Fistful of Dollars»). Not only the films looked grittier, violent and realistic; the characters in Leone’s westerns became complex men with complex and obscure moral codes, very far away from the classic clear moral opposites of previous westerns. «Per Qualche Dollaro in più» («For a few dollars more»), is the epitome of all this. It is a powerful, raw and ruthless masterpiece that transcended its genre and became one of the best movies of all-time.
«For a Few Dollars More», the second in the so-called «Dollars trilogy» (a group of films by Leone with the same style), is the story of two different yet very similar men, Manco (Clint Eastwood) and the Colonel Douglas Mortimer (Lee Van Cleef) are two bounty hunters who are after the criminal named «El Indio» (Gian Maria Volontè). An unlikely alliance occurs between the two lone wolves as they decide to cooperate and divide the reward, but are these two killers after «Indio» for the same reason?
Written by Fulvio Morsella and Sergio Leone himself, the film’s main characteristic is the complex moral code the main characters follow. They are no longer the perfect clean heroes of classic westerns, both Manco and the Colonel have well-developed attitudes, motivations and purposes; they are neither completely good nor completely bad, they are just real. The story unfolds with a fine pace and good rhythm, it is probably the best structured of the «Trilogy» and the easiest to follow. It is also the one that represents the elements of the Spaghetti Western style the best.
Stylistically, the film follows closely the conventions established by Leone’s previous film but it takes them to the next level. The excellent use of minimalistic cinematography and the superb musical score by Ennio Morricone complement Leone’s realistic vision of Westerns and completely redefined the genre’s conventions. «For a Few Dollars More» is a violent tale of two hunters, and visually the film transmits the same emotions the characters feel. No more myths, the Westerns never felt this real.
Clint Eastwood’s super performance as Manco is very important for the success of the film, as he is the one that takes the audience through this brave new world, however, the star of the film is Lee Van Cleef as Colonel Mortimer. In one of his best performances ever, Van Cleef manages to be both menacing and interesting, giving life to Leone’s brilliant script with great talent. Gian Maria Volontè as Indio complements the two big talents as the crazed criminal with a dark past, he is the perfect counterpart of the two lone wolves.
«Per qualche dollaro in più» is a near flawless movie, as every piece of the puzzle falls into the right place to create a marvelous and unforgettable picture. It’s only minor problem may be the dubbing, but fortunately, it still is superior to the one heard in other Italian productions of the same time and it doesn’t hurt the film.
Fans will always argue about which of the three films of the «trilogy» is the best, and while personally I prefer «The Good, the Bad and the Ugly» over this one, it is just a matter of personal taste as this film is as perfect as that one. A real classic that changed the face of Western as we knew it. 10/10
The film begins as you see Lee Van Cleef tracking down and killing wanted men. He is so cold, calculating and non-emotional that he is perhaps one of the creepiest heroes in Westerns. Then, the action switches to Eastwood—doing pretty much the same thing, though with a bit more bravado and a little less menace. Both men are bounty hunters and apparently are nearly unstoppable. Then, the film switches to a prison break, where «El Loco» is being extracted as his gang wipes out almost everyone in the prison.
Eastwood AND Van Cleef both infiltrate the gang (after Van Cleef kills Kinski to prevent him from talking). All seems to be going well and the two guys are waiting for their chance to pick them off one by one and return the stolen money to El Paso. However, it turns out that the incredibly sadistic El Loco is quite the schemer and knows the two are bounty hunters. So, the gang beats the stuffing out of the duo (though only a short time later they look just fine!) and tie them up and place a guard on them. However, El Loco is a major jerk and plans on killing off most of the gang and keeping the money for himself. So, he arranges for Eastwood and Van Cleef’s escape (this is a really DUMB plan and a big shortcoming in the story). He reasons that the gang and the bounty hunters will wipe each other out as El Loco and his friend escape with the dough.
Unfortunately for El Loco, the gang is quickly wiped out and he is face-to-face with Van Cleef at the end of the film. Van Cleef shoots him but the wound is not fatal and El Loco’s shot knocks away Van Cleef’s gun! This leads to El Loco’s trademark—he has a shoot out with his opponent which is to begin the second his pocket watch stops playing music. Well, just before the music stops, Eastwood shows up and saves Van Cleef’s life—allowing him to retrieve his gun. It turns out Van Cleef had an identical watch to El Loco’s because many years earlier El Loco had murdered Van Cleef’s sister and brother-in-law! So, Eastwood being a cool guy and all, lets Van Cleef have the honor of killing El Loco in the gun fight. Van Cleef is so thrilled that Eastwood gave him a chance for revenge that he decides that he doesn’t want the money and tells Eastwood he can have all the reward money. The final shot is of Eastwood stacking up all the MANY bodies and figuring how much money he will have earned. The dollar amount isn’t quite right and he quickly spins around to waste the one surviving bad guy who just came out of hiding—telling Van Cleef he must have either miscounted or forgot to kill one of them!
Now that I’ve given a pretty thorough overview of the film, let’s talk about what I liked. The music is classic spaghetti Western music—over-the-top and really, really cool! The villains are pure evil and fun to watch. The good guys are also pretty scary and fun to watch. But what I liked most about the film was its sense of humor (despite being a very violent film). The scene where Eastwood is talking to the crazy old man in the shack is wonderful and so are several little vignettes spaced throughout the film. The not-quite-a-prequel to this film, A FIST FULL OF DOLLARS was based on Kurosawa’s Yogimbo and Sanjuro—and in this film, humor was also occasionally used to break the violence and tension extremely well.
One final note is about the performances of Klaus Kinski and Van Cleef. I was absolutely amazed at Kinski’s facial expressions—as he was able to make his face tick violently when he was scared. This was amazing and I doubt many people could do this. As for Van Cleef, I really think he stole the show in the film despite Eastwood being so strongly associated with the film. He was truly menacing and the focal point for much of the film.
За копейку For a few dollars more Smokie
Она богата и купит мечты,
Веселую жизнь и блеск красоты.
В зеленых глазах отражается всё
То, что лежит на душе у неё.
Ей нелегко, но и не тяжело,
Искала добро и видела зло,
Добилась немалого в жизни своей,
Но вряд ли хватает этого ей.
Припев:
И всего за копейку будет плакать она,
Снова лгать и обманывать станет она,
Тебя соблазнит и оставит она
Всего за копейку – такая цена.
За копейку готова продаваться она,
Притворяться и клясться готова она.
Тебя соблазнит и оставит она
Всего за копейку – такая цена.
Странные вещи случались порой,
Всё вроде есть, но что делать с собой?
Ну, а сейчас ты желаешь узнать,
Что тебе взять, чтобы не потерять.
Чему удивляться, если она
Не знала любви, и чья тут вина?
Взгляни ей в глаза и сразу поймешь –
Нет в ней загадки, одна только ложь.
Smokie
For A Few Dollars More lyrics
Songwriters: CHAPMAN, MICHAEL DONALD / CHINN, NICHOLAS BARRY
Rich girl she buys her dreams
It’s a rich world, behind the scenes
Green eyes they tell it all
The more she takes, the harder they fall
Now she ain’t easy she ain’t tough
She’s had it good, and then she’s had it rough
And I guess that it don’t come too much
But all she’s got she ain’t got enough
So she’ll cry just a little for a few dollars more
She’ll lie just a little like she’s done it before
She’ll take it, she’ll fake it for a few dollars more
She’ll show you her heart, then she’ll show you the door
You know, she’ll die just a little for a few dollars more
Even fly just a little like she’s done it before
She’ll take it, she’ll fake it for a few dollars more
She’ll show you her heart and then she’ll show you the door
Strange things can happen to you
When you got so much you got nothing to do
Oh oh oh, what do ya know
How’d ya get there when there’s nowhere to go
And so you wonder just what she’ll do
She’s never known love, then she’s never known you
And it’s too bad those sad green eyes
Are so full of questions, are so full of lies













