Unlike Sam Peckinpah’s The Wild Bunch, a similarly unglamorous deconstruction of Western tropes, The Good, The Bad & The Ugly is a fun, funny adventure story despite all its dark elements. The scene between Tuco and his brother shows that there is a human heart under all the gore and grit, unlike some heavier, nastier additions to the genre. The Good, The Bad & The Ugly wanted the audience to root for its antiheroes and succeeded in winning viewers over, marrying the cynicism of revisionist Westerns with the pure crowd-pleasing fun of classic Hollywood Westerns. In the process, The Good, The Bad & The Ugly became the best Western movie ever made.