Cimarron Man With No Name for Sale — Clint Eastwood Signature SAA | Impact Guns

Cimarron Man With No Name

The Cimarron Man With No Name is a Clint Eastwood signature SAA revolver built to replicate the revolvers carried by Eastwood’s iconic character across the Dollars Trilogy—A Fistful of Dollars, For a Few Dollars More, and The Good, the Bad and the Ugly. Featuring rattlesnake grip panels, an antiqued finish that replicates the well-worn appearance of the film props, and the specific barrel length and configuration associated with the films, the Man With No Name is Cimarron’s most collectible signature series revolver. Available in .45 Colt.

Read our full Cimarron Man With No Name Buying Guide ↓

The Dollars Trilogy Revolvers: What Eastwood Actually Carried

The revolvers used in Sergio Leone’s Spaghetti Western trilogy were not standard Colt SAAs but rather modified, heavily aged prop guns built for the Italian productions. The characteristic features — rattlesnake grip panels, aged patina, specific barrel length — were created for visual impact on screen. Cimarron’s Man With No Name reproduces these features accurately: the rattlesnake grips are the most visually distinctive element, and the antiqued finish replicates the distressed appearance of the film props rather than the pristine blued finish of a new Colt production revolver. For Eastwood and Spaghetti Western enthusiasts, the Man With No Name is a faithful tribute piece.

Rattlesnake Grips: The Signature Detail

The rattlesnake grip panels are the most immediately recognizable feature of the Man With No Name revolver — the skin texture and pattern are distinctive and unmistakably associated with the film character. Real rattlesnake skin panels are used on some production runs; composite materials that replicate the texture are used on others. Either way, the grip appearance is faithful to the film prop aesthetic and provides the visual impact that makes the Man With No Name immediately identifiable to anyone familiar with the Dollars Trilogy. The grip material also provides excellent purchase during shooting.

Antiqued Finish: Intentional Aging

The Man With No Name’s antiqued finish replicates the worn, used appearance of the film props rather than delivering a new production revolver. This is accomplished through controlled patination and distressing of the metal surfaces, producing a finish that looks as though the revolver has seen decades of use. For display purposes, the antiqued finish adds historical character. For shooting use, it functions identically to a standard blued finish but may show wear differently over time. Buyers who want a pristine collectible for display will appreciate the antiqued aesthetics; buyers who plan to shoot regularly should factor normal wear into their expectations.

Collector Value and Display

Signature series revolvers from Cimarron hold their value well in the collector market, particularly those associated with iconic film characters. The Man With No Name series benefits from Clint Eastwood’s continued cultural relevance and the enduring popularity of the Spaghetti Western genre. A boxed, documentation-complete Man With No Name revolver in excellent condition has strong resale potential among film memorabilia collectors who also value functional firearms. For buyers who see the revolver as both a shooter and a collectible, the Cimarron signature series provides both qualities in one package.

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