Terence Hill’S Best Movies Without His Best Friend

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Terence Hill’s Best Movies Without His Best Friend

The famous actor born in Venice will celebrate his 84th birthday in a few days. Terence Hill’s name is almost synonymous with Bud Spencer, but today we’re not revisiting their joint films, but the work of a skinny guy. Terence’s acting palette is incredibly colorful, when he’s playing a priest he’s a hero of the Wild West, but he’s also playing a cop endowed with superpowers. So check out his most famous performances!

8. Egy zseni, safe haver, egy balek (1975)

Joe likes everything that happens, after all, he lives in the Wild West. Since there is no better option, he travels from town to town and earns money from hand-to-hand stunts, until one day he gets a slap. Redbeard General Milton went to General Cabot’s fortress to collect a large shipment. Joe has a great idea, he convinces his friends, Lucy and Bill, to visit General Cabot’s fortress himself, instead of General Milton, who is busy in the meantime. However, the exact plan only Joe, as well as Balek’s men, know.

7. Vigyazat, vadnyugat (1972)

According to his father’s last will, Joe (Terence Hill) is sent to the Wild West in the hopes that he will eventually become a real hardliner there. However, the dreamy-eyed young man despises gunfire, fights, and violence. Instead, he prefers poems, and prefers his bicycle to a saddle. Joe wouldn’t have given up on this lifestyle if he hadn’t had to defend himself against a gunman who was eyeing the same girl as him.

6. Mr. Milliard (1976)

Guido Falcone (Terence Hill) inherits a huge fortune when his rich uncle dies. But the millionaire relative set one condition: Guido had to show up in San Francisco within twenty days to claim his rights. During his unusual journey, he embarks on countless dangerous adventures: he falls in love with a beautiful detective, and in the meantime, he is pursued by a number of villains who believe the inheritance should be in a place more worthy than them. So it’s no surprise that a trap awaits Guido even before reaching the finish line.

5. A keményfejű (1988)

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Luke Mantie (Terence Hill) is a true lone wolf who has nothing more important than freedom. He travels the roads of the country and accepts only one creature that lives around him for a long time, and that is none other than his horse named Joe Brown. However, one day he meets a feral teenager whose father is serving a prison sentence innocently. He decides to help her, but in order to do this, he will have to give up his familiar nomadic lifestyle.

4. Lucky Luke (1991)

In the late 1880s, an agreement was reached between the whites and the Indians. Prairie Dog allowed settlers to pass through his lands, but they could not disturb them or hunt their animals. Here’s how the city of settlers could slowly be rebuilt: Daisy Town. Churches, schools, barbershops, dentists and, of course, pubs also emerge from the ground in a unique way. But here weapons and unwanted people appear immediately. So we need a sheriff to take care of order, Lucky Luke (Terence Hill) has taken on the task, which shows a lot of courage.

3. Szuperzsaru (1981)

Detective David Speed (Terence Hill) discovers a rocket high above, whose nuclear radiation gives him new, extraordinary abilities. Dave now has telepathy. With his newly acquired abilities, he has no trouble detecting even the most mysterious crimes, and if the situation calls for it, he can even jump off the top of a skyscraper. While others would break his neck, not a single strand of his hair would be broken. Magical power is here or there, but a dangerous criminal has lured him into a trap.

2. Nevem Senki (1974)

No one (Terence Hill), who chose his name after his father’s legendary prank as a child, is tasked by his client as a property hunter to kill Jack Beauregard (Henry Fonda), the nimble old firefighter who has been his role model since childhood. When Jack told her he was giving up on adventures because he just wanted a quiet, peaceful old age. No one thinks the boy deserves one last adventure and arranges for him an unforgettable date with the Vad gang.

1. Don Camillo (1983)

The devil has never seen such a priest: he goes to church on a motorbike. He wore jeans in reverence, and the young couple fell while skydiving. He was crazy about Hawaiian music he heard in church and rollerblading with teenage girls. In his religious arguments, he often uses his fists rather than kind words. He got into a fight with the mayor. A soccer match between Don Camillo’s team (Terence Hill) and the Mayor’s team (Colin Blakely) turns into a massive brawl.

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