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Saddle up for some great Westerns

Posted: Tuesday, September 16, 2008 6:43 AM by Paige Newman
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There’s something so basic about watching a Western. Good guys and bad guys. Horses. A Western is the perfect way to spend a fall afternoon (these films work better in the daytime, beer in hand, than in the evening). Here are some of my favorite types:

Starring Clint Eastwood: The best Eastwood Westerns are directed by Sergio Leone. Many of the actors are Italian and dubbed into English, and the voices just barely match the characters, which only makes them more enjoyable. “The Good, The Bad and the Ugly” (if you rent, get the director’s cut) features the wonderful Eli Wallach as Tuco (aka “The Ugly”). Eastwood and Wallach spend the whole movie trying to outsmart each other. It’s an “I hate my buddy” flick. The film is also clearly anti-war (though in this case it’s the Civil War), as evidenced when Eastwood’s Blondie overlooks the carnage and says, “I've never seen so many men wasted so badly.”

Classic Westerns: John Wayne, James Stewart, Gary Cooper, Henry Fonda. Cooper’s “High Noon” is the classic. My favorite is “Red River,” which tells the story of a standoff between a father (John Wayne) and his adopted son (Montgomery Clift) as they drive cattle from Texas to Missouri. Wayne’s philosophy is summarized in these words: “We brought nothing into this world and it's certain we can carry nothing out.” For those who think Wayne was just an icon who couldn’t really act, this movie will show you just how much range he truly had, especially when playing off a great actor such as Clift.


Warner Bros.
The gang heads toward the final showdown in "The Wild Bunch."

Realistic violence: Westerns don’t get much more violent that Sam Peckinpah’s “The Wild Bunch” (again, rent the director’s cut), which tells the story of a band of aging outlaws (William Holden, Ernest Borgnine, Ben Johnson among them) who must face off against  deputized bounty hunters (including Holden’s old buddy Robert Ryan). This movie is brutal in a way that modern horror films can’t touch (you'll think Bonnie and Clyde got off easy). It’s the flip side of “The Magnificent Seven” because these guys are in no way “Magnificent.” They aren’t out to save anyone but themselves, but at the same time they are loyal to a fault. The image at the end of the film, when the four remaining men walk toward certain death together, will give you shivers.

Modern Westerns: There have been some great Westerns in the last few years, including the remake of “3:10 to Yuma,” “The Assassination of Jesse James By the Coward Robert Ford” and my personal favorite, “The Proposition,” which features Guy Pearce as a gunslinger who is blackmailed into tracking down his own brother (Danny Huston) to kill him. Let’s hope “Appaloosa” and “Australia” keep the resurgence going.

Of course, the genre is about as vast as an open plain, so I can really only name a few favorites here. Do you like Westerns, if so what are some of your favorites and why? If not, why don’t you like them?

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Once upon a time in the west!  So bad and so good.  Main reason i learned to play the harmonica as a boy.
The Claim.  Combining a western with Thomas Hardy's Mayor of Casterbridge was genius and the cast is perfect.
Best Western?
"The Outlaw Josie Wales" and "The Professionals"
I am a huge western fan. I like just about all John Wayne or Clint Eastwood films. I think that one of the best in the past few years was Lonesome Dove. It was so good my wife even watched it. I also liked Open Range. I think that the reason these movies are so great is you know who is good and who is bad, even if the good guys are a little bad (Kevin Costner/Open Range), and evil is delt with quickly and you move on.  
The Professionals. Richard Brooks’s 1964 offering is sly, cynical, but oddly full of joie de vivre, with a totally satisfying ending. The easy, obviously longstanding relationship between a laconic Lee Marvin and an ebullient Burt Lancaster showcases these actors at their best, with enjoyable support from Robert Ryan, Claudia Cardinale, Jack Palance, Woody Strode, and Ralph Bellamy. Well-written, well-shot, well-paced -- it’s very John Huston-esque and great fun from edge to edge.
I remember watching The Magnificent Seven when I was a kid because I had a thing for Yul Brynner.  What a great movie that was.  I also loved The Good, The Bad, and the Ugly...I think I drove my mom crazy trying to whistle/hum the theme song for it.
For me though, nothing on the big screen is ever going to be on par with Chuck Connors in The Rifleman.  My husband got me hooked on that show, and really what's not to like?  Chuck Connors was a great actor and the show had a neat mix of Western-y violence and manly situations with a nice shmaltzy mix of family values thrown in too.  And did I mention that rifle is totally awesome?
It may technically be a miniseries, but Lonesome Dove is definitely a classic of the Western genre.  I have seldom seen better character development in a movie,and the performances by both Tommy Lee Jones and Robert Duvall are exceptional.  The really resonant concept for me is the loss of all that the main characters stood for, the West they loved that needed their strength and character to tame, was being lost to settlement, and they didn't fit in at all anymore.   That is the tragedy of the movie and its beauty.
What about Tombstone, that is my favorite!
Oh Come one...one of the greatest of all was Shane, with Jack Palance as the killer bad guy and Alan Ladd (The good guy who had holstered his fastest gun) then when the homesteaders are threatened off their land by gunslingers, his love for a family he is staying with and working for, including a hero worshipping child he is forced one more time to strap on his guns. It is Palance at his most evil and best as well as the quiet, good guy Ladd, that make this the best Classic Western ever, next to High Noon.
My favorite western is Silverado. I have seen it many, many times and it never gets old or outdated.
She Wore A Yellow Ribbon, Fort Apache (anything by John Ford)Rustler's Rhapsody (best humorous western EVER), The Gunfighter,.... the list goes on and on.
Okay my favorite John Wayne is McClintock...I think its the best of his westerns although the Searchers comes a close 2nd for me, as for modern I have to say I love American Outlaws with Colin Farrell, Scott Caan, Timothy Dalton... and one on the comedic side would have to be Support Your Local Sheriff with James Garner, Bruce Dern, etc...
Silverado!  Some of the best quotable lines in history: "He's not my friend; he used to be my brother." "Now I don't want to kill you and you don't want to be dead."
If you are a fan of the Italian Westerns try these: Django, Keoma, The Great Silence, and Day of Anger. These films are typical Italian in the haunting musical scores and the isolated feeling of the protaganists. There is a special style that the Europeans have brought to the American Western, not only nostalgia for those days, but the etched lines of the characters. For example, the shots of the eyes and gritty facial features to bring us close to the characters is a mark of the Italian Western. One other distinction is the speed of the gunfights; men shooting three and four men at once with super-accuracy. These super-human characters, combined with the music and dust-filled settings make these movies classics of style bringing the Western into the mythological realm. Django and Keoma star Franco Nero and Day of Anger stars the great Lee Van Cleef; though, he was second-fiddle in the Eastwood Italian movies, he really never took a back seat in regards to playing tough and believable roles. His steely look of the hardened man was as believalbe as I've ever seen in a Western. Two other Italian mentions are:
Sabata
Death Rides a Horse

cheers
Val Kilmer's performance as Doc Holliday in "Tombstone".  
"The Big Country" hands down is the best theatrical western. Gregory Peck Chsrlton Heston, William Wyler directing, tremendous musical score. "Lonesome Dove" for a TV western. It will never be topped.
You forgot what I think is the best Western movie of all time. It is "Silverado". Check it out for great action from well known actors and superb music!
My favorite modern Western is "Silverado." Plenty of action, clear good / bad guys. Not too much "heavy acting," though.
Val Kilmer's Doc Holliday in "Tombstone" is one of my favorite performances in a Western.  I enjoy Westerns because they popularized the anti-hero, even though the "good guys" usually won in the end, but they typically weren't the hyper-macho cartoons of action movies.  Every good Western that I've seen always has a current of nihilism and bleakness that matches the expansive desolate backdrops.  For me, Westerns always seem like the closest imitations of real life to be found on the big screen, even more so than emotional art-house dramas.
If a Western has Roy Rogers, Gene Autry, Audey Murphy, John Wayne, or any other of the dozens of great cowboys, or their sidekicks, then I am there!  I miss Saturday morning cowboy shows and Saturday afternoon movie serials.  I am so politically incorrect...
Tombstone!  Val Kilmer should have won an Oscar for that movie.
"Silverado!" A great western, fabulous score, sweeping vistas, humor, and the always present struggle of good v. evil. What's not to love? I also think "The Cowboys" was excellent, and also displayed The Duke's ability as an actor.
I know there are many great Westerns but I have to say I like "The Shootist" with John Wayne as my favorite.  The message is simple; the death of the Old West and the legends that made it "The Old West" due to modernization.  
I love all westerns!
That is the only movie genre that we can truly call our own.
I never tire of the stories of the Old West and always look forward to more.
Can never get enough!
Looking forward to Appaloosa!
Would appreciate it if Sam Elliott and Tom Selleck would get back in the saddle again and come out with more westerns.
Kevin Costner is working on one now. Thank you very much, Kev!
Thank goodness for old movies!  Westerns are a favorite in our house.  John Wayne, Randolph Scott, Kirk Douglas...I could go on and on.  Best one ever made has to be "How the West was Won"  and I have NEVER seen a bad John Wayne movie!

Too bad they don't have westerns now.  Maybe it would teach some "good, bad and the ugly"
"The Long Riders". A Mid-western really, but a great touch using three sets of real-life brothers (Carradine, Keach & Quade)to play out-law brothers Younger, James & Miller.
I would say I don't like westerns but I see that I've watched and greatly liked all of the modern westerns that you've listed. Maybe I don't care for the bigotry and racism that would be found in older movies. But I am probably missing out on some goodies because of a few bad ones.  
The Outlaw Josey Wales, without a doubt.
One of the best teams in recent westerns have been Tom Selleck and Sam Elliot (Sacketts, etc). In the past, any male movie star worth his salt had to do a western. I miss those days............
My favorite Westerns:

1. The Wild Bunch
2. Once Upon a Time in the West (Leone's masterpiece)
3. The Good, the Bad and the Ugly
4. The Long Riders (the casting of real-life brothers to play the James/Younger gang siblings was genius)
5. McCabe & Mrs. Miller (sort of an anti-Western, the Altman masterpiece that never seems to get its due credit).
My heroes have always been cowboys! I love every single western cliche in "Silverado" and watch my dvd of it frequently. I'll sit down and watch every time "The Searchers" comes on also. The Duke stars in a lot of my favorites: "True Grit," "The Comancheros" and "The Man Who Shot Liberty Valence." Favorite hidden gem is "The Long Riders" in spite of the graphic violence that rivals "The Wild Bunch." For fun, "Cat Ballou."
oh where to start - Fort Apache, The Shootist, War Wagon, The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance, Big Jake, El Dorado, Rio Lobo, and one of my all time favorite movies - the Sons of Katie Elder for John Wayne - Shenandoah, The Rare Breed, Bandelero, and the Cheyenne Social Club for James Stewart, and Unforgiven for Clint Eastwood - these are some of my favorite Westerns, - a Sunday afternoon, maybe some hot soup or pasta, some ice cream, and I'm a little kid again, watching these movies with my Dad - best Sundays ever -
A few of my favorites in no particular order... Lonesome Dove (the original mini-series)
Rio Bravo (the anti-High Noon)
Dances With Wolves; Open Range; Wyatt Earp
 (why does Hollywood hate Kevin Costner now?)
Tombstone (Val Kilmer over Dennis Quaid)
The Outlaw Josey Wales (my personal Eastwood favorite)
The Missing (Jones and Blanchett are magical together)
Wild Bill (Jeff Bridges channels Hickock)
Junior Bonner (Steve McQueen embodies the cowboy persona)
The Three Burials of Melquiades Estrada (A greatly overlooked movie, Tommy Lee Jones goes Woodrow Call one better)
The Wild Bunch, Silverado, Hondo, Shane and many more.
My generation grew up on the Western genre. Never got tired of them as a youngster. Good modern westerns are getting further and further apart.
As enjoyable as Tombstone and Silverado are, there is little indication that either film-makers have any real feel for the western genre.  As best as I can tell, those were one-off's.  There's no real comparison between Cosmatos or Kasdan to:

Ford (Stagecoach, The Searchers, etc.)
Hawks (Red River, Rio Bravo, etc.)
Mann (Winchester '73, Man from Laramie, etc.)
Boetticher (7 Men from Now, Tall T, etc.)
Peckinpah (Ride the High Country, Wild Bunch, etc.)
Leone (Good, Bad, & & Ugly, Once Upon A Time in the West, etc.)
Eastwood (Outlaw Josey Wales, Unforgiven, etc.)
Well Pard, I kin tell yew ain't got any idee what a good western ought ta be so I'll give ya a quick little lesson.

HIGH NOON, Gary Cooper
THE SEARCHERS, John Wayne
THE CAVALRY TRILOGY by John Ford
 
Them's westerns Pard.

Yew might talk me into considerin' SHANE or THE MAN WHO SHOT LIBERTY VALANCE.  THE CULPEPPER CATTLE COMPANY is another'n that'd makes mah honorable mentions list.  

BUTCH CASSIDY & THE SUNDANCE KID, temptin', mighty temptin'.  But them boys was too purty to be real men or real westerners.  TOMBSTONE?  Purty good.  But just not in the same class with HIGH NOON.

Now yew can tell yer kinfolks and the rest of the hands down at the deli that yew know what a real western is and what ain't, savvy?

OMG I forgot half of these...Yes there is nothing like Selleck and Elliot in the westerns, and The Outlaw Josey Wales, there really are too many to choose from, Silverado was incredible, so was Wyatt Earp and Tombstone, there really are way too many to choose...
Loved 3;10 from Yuma, and Josey wales is an old favorite as well - but what about Unforgiven? Shouldn't that have gotten a mention in the modern westerns category, as it practically revived the genre?
"Hidalgo" (also a Viggo Mortensen Western) is one of my favorites.  Sure a lot of it takes place in the Arabian desert, but it's still a "western.)  It's not terribly well-known but was just a fun adventure.  (And had one of the best horse co-stars.)
Ah, c'mon....Cat Ballou
Dang it!  Yer right.  I plum fergot STAGECOACH with John Wayne.  That'n goes to the top of the list in mah book.

Ah'll admit that THE OUTLAW JOSEY WALES and LITTLE BIG MAN have ther supporters.  Mostly 'cause of the fine performance of Cheif Dan George.  A reel Indin playing a reel Indin.  

But even with his fine performance ah cain't include them two movies in the herd of prime beef I gave ya before.  Plus STAGECOACH, natchally.

Gotta check the wire on the south 40, hasta la vista amigoes.
Missing
A man called horse
Unforgiven
Will Penny

Can we mention any television westerns? I think HBO did an awesome job with "Deadwood", and maybe I'm alone on this one, but I enjoyed Kevin Costner and Robert Duvall in "Open Range".

And good call on finally mentioning "Unforgiven", one of my favorite movies of all time.
I've never been a fan of Westerns, but I must admit that I love Tombstone.  Val Kilmer was just perfect, and he uttered one of the best movie lines ever: "I'll be your huckleberry".
Magnificent Seven and The Searchers. Hands Down. The Sacketts is awesome too.
You all are right on but what about Blazing Saddles! how much fun can you have than this!
As a kid I loved "The Cowboys" with John Wayne - what kid wouldn't want to be one of the lucky boys who gets to trail ride with "The Duke"!  And on TV, I was a huge "Young Riders" fan (cheesy but oh-so-good!) Modern favorite has to be "Tombstone" - Val Kilmer gives one of the best performance of all time.
McCabe and Mrs. Miller is one of the most beautiful and ugly movies ever made. Shows the west as it really probably was - people were rotten and nasty, weather sucked, mud everywhere, ugly prostitutes...perfect movie.
The Magnificant Seven, just a great movie.  Robert Vaughn was so good in it.  

Silverado, great fun.  

the 3:10 to Yuma remake was so, so good (with such a good ending).

I LOVE Rooster Cogburn (essentially a remake of the African Queen with Katherine Hepburn paired with John Wayne this time) and True Grit (John Wayne's first outing as Rooster Cogburn).  

OH!  And The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance!  I love that movie.

My guilty pleasure, though, is Hang 'em High.  I watch it every time I see it on television.  It's so cheesy, but i like it.


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