Screen Rant
By Charles Nicholas Raymond
July 7, 2025
The Man With No Name was supposed to have a detailed backstory in Fistful of Dollars, but thanks to Clint Eastwood, the plan was nixed. As his title implies, Eastwood's character in Sergio Leone's Dollars Trilogy is a man of mystery, despite being the central protagonist of the three Spaghetti Westerns. There's such little clarity as to his real identity that there's often confusion among audiences as to whether the poncho-wearing gunslingers played by Clint Eastwood in Fistful of Dollars, For a Few Dollars More, and The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly are the same person or three different characters entirely.
All three movies in the Dollars Trilogy manage to tell their stories without emphasis on the Man With No Name's past as he involves himself in the matters of the other characters in the films. As a drifter with no personal connections to any of the figures in the casts, Sergio Leone's Clint Eastwood Westerns are able to make this work. Interestingly, though, there was once an intention to explain a key part of his backstory, which would have cleared up some questions about his motivations.
Sergio Leone Wrote A Prologue For Fistful Of Dollars That Was Supposed To Explain The Man With No Name's Backstory
Fistful Of Dollars' Prologue Would Have Been Juxtaposed With Marisol's Fate
Richard Schenkel explained in his Clint Eastwood biography, Clint Eastwood: A Biography, that a prologue was written (but never shot) for Fist of Dollars that would have tied into the movie's narrative. The prologue was supposed to feature a young Man With No Name and his mother, who would have died in the scene. Exactly what happened isn't clear, but it was stated in the book to be "similar" to what happens to Marisol in Fistful of Dollars. Played by Marianne Koch, Marisol was the woman taken away from her husband and son during the Rojo-Baxter conflict.
it's likely that the Man With No Name's mother was going to be murdered by gang members in the prologue, and that this crime would have been witnessed by the child version of Eastwood's character.
Since the two scenes were meant to connect with one another, it's likely that the Man With No Name's mother was going to be murdered by gang members in the prologue, and that this crime would have been witnessed by the child version of Eastwood's character. Evidently, Leone envisioned the Man With No Name as a person shaped by a tragedy. That does make sense, considering that he's a drifter with no known family or home to go back to. Being hardened by the violence in his past would also help explain his acceptance of the death that follows him in Fistful of Dollars and the trilogy's subsequent installments.
One Moment In Fistful Of Dollars Hints The Cut Prologue Scene Did Happen
A Clint Eastwood Line In The Movie Seemingly References The Cut Scene
Of course, the prologue scene was ultimately cut and never filmed, but its influence on the story remains. In Fistful of Dollars, much of what Clint Eastwood's Man With No Name does is for his own benefit, meaning that he's not a Western hero in a traditional sense, ala the characters typically played by Randolph Scott, John Wayne, and James Stewart. He's much more of an anti-hero, and yet, there are moments that highlight a selfless side to the character. One such scene comes when the Man With No Name risks his alliance with the Rojos by freeing Marisol in the middle of the night and sending her off with some money.
When she asks the Man With No Name why he helped her, he explains, "Because I knew someone like you once, and there was no one to help." He doesn't outright say who he was talking about, but the idea that he helped Marisol because of something that happened in his past goes hand-in-hand with Leone's cut prologue. And it does line up perfectly, as it provides a working explanation for his moment of heroism in Fistful of Dollars; no one saved his mother from injustice when he was a child, and he didn't want to see the same thing happen to Marisol and her family, who may have gone through the same pain he did.
Clint Eastwood Convinced Sergio Leone To Cut Fistful Of Dollars' Prologue
Clint Eastwood Maintained That The Prologue Was Unnecessary
Because of what happened to Marisol, the prologue
certainly would have been relevant to the character and the story. As for why
it cut anyway, the reason for that can be attributed - according to Clint
Eastwood: A Biography - to the star himself. The book notes that Eastwood
appealed to Sergio Leone, telling him that the prologue need not be included.
Eastwood's argument was that where the Man With No Name came from didn't
matter. It was Eastwood's opinion that his character's past ought to be left to
the audience's imagination. He suggested that instead of explaining directly,
the movie should just offer a hint of a "little incident."




Regarding the Man With No Name's past, in GBU, at the bridge battle, he tells the captain he was from Illinois. Just sayin'.
ReplyDeleteBut was he really or did he just give it because it's a Northern state?
ReplyDelete