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Meganekko is no longer a trope. It's a Fanspeak term. Moving wicks to Bespectacled Cutie when appropriate.


* {{Meganekko}}: Mary.
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* PrecisionFStrike: At the end, when being left behind, Mary screams at Lozoya and Orlowsky, "You fucking bastards!"
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* DeathOfAChild: [[spoiler: Miguelito, Lozoya's nephew.]]



** Orlowsky hits Mary across the face at one point.
* WouldHurtAChild: Huerta's soldiers also end up murdering [[spoiler: Lozoya's nephew]].

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** Orlowsky hits Mary across the face at one point.
* WouldHurtAChild: Huerta's soldiers also end up murdering [[spoiler: Lozoya's nephew]].
point.
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[[quoteright:350:http://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/dont_turn.jpg]]
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* {{Brownface}}: Polish-American Eli Wallach plays a Mexican bandit for the [[Film/TheMagnificentSeven fourth]] [[Film/TheGoodTheBadAndTheUgly and]] [[Film/AceHigh final time]].

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* {{Brownface}}: Polish-American Eli Wallach plays a Mexican bandit for the [[Film/TheMagnificentSeven [[Film/TheMagnificentSeven1960 fourth]] [[Film/TheGoodTheBadAndTheUgly and]] [[Film/AceHigh final time]].
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* {{Bandito}}: Max Lozoya.

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* {{Bandito}}: Max Lozoya.Lozoya is an anti-heroic example. He steals, cheats and deceives. He's a thief, a murderer and a pervert. But he's up against a cruel regime of men even worse than him.
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* AccidentalPervert: Lozoya (possibly) when he seems to feel up a horse's leg that turns out to be a female horse trader's.
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* AccidentalHero: In the full Italian version, Lozoya only killed those soldiers to get to the gold. This leads to the peasants believing that he saved them.

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* AccidentalHero: In the full Italian version, Lozoya only killed those soldiers to get to the gold. This leads to the peasants believing that he saved them.them (partly thanks to Mary).
-->'''Lozoya''': Who told them I was El Salvador?
-->'''Orlowsky''': It wasn't me, it was your admirer.
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* AccidentalHero: In the full Italian version, Lozoya only killed those soldiers to get to the gold. This leads to the peasants believing that he saved them.
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** When Lozoya and Orlowsky are cornered by soldiers in the full Italian version, hundreds of peasants show up to support them.
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* LovableSexManiac: Lozoya comes across as this. In the uncut version, while riding behind Mary to escape from Yuma Prison, he gets a chance to cop a feel. He puts his hands behind her head when she suspects that he's doing so.
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* AlliterativeName: Lupita's maiden name: '''L'''upita '''L'''ozoya.
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''Don't Turn the Other Cheek!'' (originally titled ''Viva la muerte... tua!'', or ''Long Live Your Death'') is a 1971 comedy SpaghettiWestern directed by Duccio Tessari. It's loosely based on a Western pulp novel, "The Killer From Yuma", by Lewis B. Patten. Set during UsefulNotes/TheMexicanRevolution, it tells the story of a Russian conman named Dmitri Vassilovich Orlowsky (Franco Nero) looking for the other half of a treasure map, tattoed on the buttock of Mexican convict Max Lozoya (Eli Wallach). Their little treasure hunt gets complicated when bubbly, bright young Irish reporter Mary O'Donnell (Lynn Redgrave) wants to break El Salvador out of prison, wanting to motivate the Mexican people against the corrupt system, and get a good news story in the process. Hearing of this, Orlowsky, knowing that El Salvador is long dead, pretends that ''Lozoya'' is El Salvador. At first, Lozoya only wants to be an "honest bandit", but wears the "El Salvador" name like a thin veil. Then something triggers and he actually starts to care...

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''Don't Turn the Other Cheek!'' (originally titled ''Viva la muerte... tua!'', or ''Long Live Your Death'') is a 1971 comedy SpaghettiWestern directed by Duccio Tessari. It's loosely based on a Western pulp novel, "The Killer From Yuma", by Lewis B. Patten. Set during UsefulNotes/TheMexicanRevolution, it tells the story of a Russian conman named Dmitri Vassilovich Orlowsky (Franco Nero) (Creator/FrancoNero) looking for the other half of a treasure map, tattoed on the buttock of Mexican convict Max Lozoya (Eli Wallach). (Creator/EliWallach). Their little treasure hunt gets complicated when bubbly, bright young Irish reporter Mary O'Donnell (Lynn Redgrave) (Creator/LynnRedgrave) wants to break El Salvador out of prison, wanting to motivate the Mexican people against the corrupt system, and get a good news story in the process. Hearing of this, Orlowsky, knowing that El Salvador is long dead, pretends that ''Lozoya'' is El Salvador. At first, Lozoya only wants to be an "honest bandit", but wears the "El Salvador" name like a thin veil. Then something triggers and he actually starts to care...
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** Orlowsky may have been based on Yodlof Peterson from ''Film/{{Companeros}}''.

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