Some more similarities -
Most directors leave everything to someone else, someone else, like costumes etc. Leone did everything. He got involved so much in all aspects of film making.
He was going to make it in the 1960s, and he talked a lot about it, also in the 70s. He came back to talking about it towards the end of his life. It's a great idea, wonderful idea. You can imagine Eli Wallach as Sancho Panza, Clint Eastwood as Don Quixote. That contrast. Loud, noisy, fat, eating, belching, swearing sort of man and the silent, tall knight.
Leone had an incredible eye. He (Leone) loved paintings. He was a collector of paintings. 'The Good, The Bad and The Ugly' is full of references to Italian paintings, just like in 'A Fistful of Dynamite' he made reference to Goya's 'Masssacre of December 3rd'. Leone showed Tonino Delli Colli the paintings and engravings of Rembrandt before shooting 'Once Upon A Time in The West'. The monocohrome darkness and portraits of faces. Not portraits of aristocrats but ordinary people like his (Rembrandt's) mother, his friends, someone he met in the street. Rembrandt invented the physiological portrait. In that film you can read the person's history on his face.
from
http://www.fistful-of-leone.com/classic ... /prof.html