Do you or anyone know the origins of the brass frame revolver mythology in those early Italian Westerns ? Why brass ?
After I read your question, I watched "The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly" for a bit this morning and fast-forwarded to the segment popularly referred to as "Tuco In The Gun Shop". Not one brasser there, but a whole lot of special cartridge conversion guns. Tuco checks out quite a few Colt revolvers (Navies) and never removes a wedge when swapping parts.
The only thing that really springs to mind is the series "Hell On Wheels" where the main character Cullen Bohannon (Anson Mount), a Confederate War veteran, carries a Griswold & Gunnison. IIRC, in the first episode he actually carries a replica G&G (probably a Pietta) but afterward the revolver is substituted by a brass framed 1860 Army .44. Go figure.
I may be anal about this, but I look for somewhat historical accuracy when watching movies/TV series. To my surprise, when watching old "Gunsmoke" reruns, whomever was the set armorer actually portrayed realistic guns in the story line many times, and I enjoyed that. This is a screenshot of a Merwin & Hulbert at the beginning of one Gunsmoke show:
As the M&H is a cartridge revolver, discussion of it is verboten on this forum.
I think the idea of brass framed C&B revolvers are almost universally ingrained in the minds of many folks not well-versed about the Confederacy as being Confederate, and that is not far off the mark. The Union (to include the industrial Northern States prior to the ACW) never manufactured them. It does not help that Pietta and DGW continually label brassers of any type (1851 Navy brass .44, et al) with some sort of Confederate or "Reb" connotation. DGW has historically been at fault for this, and in the past has even advertised a DGW marked Pietta 1851 Navy .36 squareback as a "London" model. Go figure.
I just chalk it up to advertising/marketing, but it does not do a thing for the newcomer buyer insofar as being historical, many of whom believe everything they read on the Internet.
Regards,
Jim