The Seven Greatest Spaghetti Westerns (Great Silence is #7!)
The Magnificent Seven (chronologically, not in order of preference):
(The ones with Ennio music and (except for The Great Silence) Leone-directed or produced):
1) A Fistful of Dollars 1964
2) For A Few Dollars More 1965
3) The Good, The Bad and the Ugly 1966
4) Once Upon A Time in the West 1968
5) The Great Silence 1968 (directed by Sergio Corbucci)
6) Duck, You Sucker! / aka A Fistful of Dynamite 1971
7) My Name Is Nobody 1973 (produced by Leone, he directed a few scenes)
+ 18 Honorable Mentions in no particular order, making it a "Top 25":
(a cut below Leone, but still good, most of which have at least one "Leone element" in them, mostly from the years 1965-1969, '66 and '68 being particularly banner years):
8) A Bullet for the General 1968 (Gian Maria Volonte)
9) Face to Face 1966 (Gian Maria Volonte and Ennio music)
10) The Big Gundown 1966 (Lee Van Cleef and Ennio music)
11) Death Rides A Horse 1968 (Lee Van Cleef and Ennio music)
12) Day of Anger 1967 (Lee van Cleef)
13) Sabata 1969 (Lee van Cleef)
14) The Grand Duel 1972 (Lee van Cleef)
15) The Mercenary 1968 (Ennio music)
16) A Pistol for Ringo 1965 (Ennio music)
17) The Return of Ringo 1965 (Ennio music)
18) Bandidos 1967 (directed by Massimo Dallamano, Leone's cinematographer on Fistful of Dollars and For a Few Dollars More)
19) Ace High 1968 (Eli Wallach)
Under-appreciated (in the US, at least) Corbucci efforts
20) Navajo Joe 1966 (Ennio music)
21) Hellbenders 1967 (Ennio music)
22) Companeros 1970 (Ennio music)
23) Django 1966
Miscellaneous
(very good spaghettis with almost no "Leone elements")
24) A Minute to Pray, A Second To Die 1968
25) The Ruthless Four 1968
+ 25 Other Spaghettis
(not necessarily "good movies", but "of interest" due to "Leone elements", i.e. the participation of James Coburn, Eli Wallach, Charles Bronson, and Ennio Morricone, etc)
A Genius, Two Partners, and a Dupe 1975 (Ennio music, plus Leone may have directed a scene or two)
The Guns of San Sebastian 1968 (Charles Bronson and Ennio music)
Red Sun 1972 (Charles Bronson)
Chino 1973 (Charles Bronson)
Beyond the Law 1968 (Lee Van Cleef)
The Return of Sabata 1971 (Lee Van Cleef)
Long Live Your Death / aka Don't Turn the Other Cheek 1971 (Eli Wallach)
A Reason to Live, A Reason To Die 1972 (James Coburn)
Tepepa 1968 (Ennio music)
Run, Man Run 1968 (Ennio music)
Five Man Army 1969 (Ennio music)
Sonny and Jed 1971 (Ennio music)
What Am I Doing in the Middle of a Revolution? 1972 (Ennio music)
Other vaguely interesting Spaghetti's mainly due to the cast involved:
Adios, Sabata 1970 (Yul Brynner)
A Man Called Sledge 1970 (James Garner)
Deaf Smith and Johnny Ears 1973 (Anthony Quinn & Franco Nero)
Kill Them All and Come Back Alone 1968 (Chuck Connors)
A Bullet for Sandoval 1969 (Ernest Borgnine)
A few more films of the "other Sergio", Sergio Corbucci
(in addition to What Am I Doing in the Middle of a Revolution? and Sonny and Jed (already mentioned above), plus The White, The Yellow, and the Black and Massacre at Grande Canyon 1963 (not listed), which are of interest for mainly historical reasons.)
Minnesota Clay 1964
Ringo and His Golden Piston / aka Johnny Oro 1965
The Specialist 1968
The "Comedy Spaghettis" with the Terence Hill/Bud Spencer, known as the "Trinity" films
(Whether you find these Hill/Spencer westerns funny or not is a matter of taste. The Italians love them, I personally prefer the first three more serious Westerns they made in the 60's to the Trinity films. I have already mentioned Ace High which also stars Eli Wallach, above. Actually, it was part of a non-comedy trilogy with the Hill/Spencer team. Boot Hill and God Forgives, I Don't are the other two.)
God Forgives, I Don't 1968
Boot Hill 1969
They Call Me Trinity 1971
Trinity is Still My Name 1971
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*Well that's it for the "top 50". Actually, I'm not so sure about 26-50, but 1-25 are must see and rock-solid.
If you can't get enough of this type of movie, rather than wasting your time with the mostly substandard 400 to 500 hundred remaining Eurowesterns (the vast majority of which stink to high heaven), I would recommend trying the Clint Eastwood films Hang 'Em High (1968), Two Mules for Sister Sara (1970), Joe Kidd (1972), High Plains Drifter (1973), Outlaw Jose Wales (1976), Pale Rider (1985) and Unforgiven (1992). Obviously, they aren't spaghetti westerns, but the Leone kinship is obvious. Think of them as the Leone/Eastwood films they never got around to making together.
Also, the films of Sam Peckinpah, especially, The Wild Bunch (1969), The Ballad of Cable Hogue (1970) and Pat Garrett and Billy the Kid (1972), which were also key films in the "deconstruction" of the Western. Oh, McCabe and Mrs. Miller (1971) by Robert Altman is another key film.
P.S. By all means, avoid Spanish "Paella" Westerns, which are even worse than the very worst Italian made ones. Especially A Town Called Hell (1971) by Eugenio Martin, it is absolutely lousy despite the stellar cast.
P.P.S. Contrary to what some people may try to tell you, there are no Late Spaghetti Classics (after 1973). No, Keoma, Four of the Apocalypse and China 9, Liberty 37 are not lost classics, they are pretentious, preposterous piles of rubbish, deservedly (and mercifully) forgotten. The two post '73 spaghettis I did mention were only due to the involvement of Leone and Corbucci, I wasn't endorsing those films necessarily.