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Blindman

Blindman is a 1971 Italian spaghetti western film directed by Ferdinando Baldi.

The film achieved over the years a cult status, mainly for the participation of ex-Beatle Ringo Starr in a role of weight.

Usage examples of "blindman".

And here as in a game of blindman's buff the French ran into our vanguard.

There was a door in the alley called Blindman's, where Genat had sat till someone knifed him, She dodged to it with Jensy in tow, this stout door inconspicuous among others, and pushed it open.

She thrust past him to the window and out it, onto the creaking shingles, to the eaves and down the edge to Blindman's.

She tucked the skirt in a seam of itself, hung it about her shoulder, walked with more persistence than strength down Blindman's.

There was a door in the alley called Blindman’s, where Genat had sat till someone knifed him, She dodged to it with Jensy in tow, this stout door inconspicuous among others, and pushed it open.

She thrust past him to the window and out it, onto the creaking shingles, to the eaves and down the edge to Blindman’s.

She tucked the skirt in a seam of itself, hung it about her shoulder, walked with more persistence than strength down Blindman’s.

After dinner, too, the young folks would play at blindman's-buff and hide-and-seek, and it was amusing to see them tangled among the briers, and to hear a fine romping girl now and then squeak from among the bushes.

They could no longer be induced to play at Pope-Joan or blindman's-buff.

Right now she was playing a game of blindman’s buff, and the penalty for losing was very high.

The feeling of playing blindman’s buff with her own life was fright­ening.

It sprang from cornice to cornice, rode nymphs and horns of plenty, devoured plump angels reaching for flowers, burst into the midst of a country carnival, played blindman's buff, mounted a swing festooned with roses, ennobled a group of burghers talking business in baggy breeches, lit upon a stag pursued by hounds, and finally reached the second-story window which allowed the sun, briefly and yet forever, to illuminate an amber eye.

Remembering what he had heard of frontier days on his own world, quilting parties, corn-husking bees, where hardworking farmers whiled the time with what would later be considered games for young children—bobbing for apples, blindman’s buff—he realized he should have expected this.

One of them was not unlike blindman’s buff, with a man and a woman blindfolded and made to seek through the crowds for one another.