Appaloosa (2008) |
Dances With Wolves (1990) |
Lonesome Dove (1989; TV mini-series) |
Open Range (2003) |
Seraphim Falls (2007) |
The Missing (2003) |
The Proposition (2005) |
Tombstone (1993) |
Unforgiven (1992) |
[Tie] 3:10 to Yuma (2007) |
[Tie] True Grit (2010) |
Appaloosa (2008) |
Dances With Wolves (1990) |
Lonesome Dove (1989; TV mini-series) |
Open Range (2003) |
Seraphim Falls (2007) |
The Missing (2003) |
The Proposition (2005) |
Tombstone (1993) |
Unforgiven (1992) |
[Tie] 3:10 to Yuma (2007) |
[Tie] True Grit (2010) |
9 comments:
I'm partial to Sam Raimi's The Quick and the Dead. Just a flat-out exceptional cast and loads of fun with existing tropes.
I'm surprised how many of these I haven't seen. Open Range is a big favorite of mine. The gunfight at the end of the movie is perhaps the best I've ever seen. It's exciting and seems more realistic than many.
I'm not a big fan of Dances With Wolves, but I'm not surprised other people like it. It just doesn't speak to me. I like some of Costner's sci-fi stuff better.
Unforgiven is tough, but bogs down a bit for me. Eastwood is magnetic though especially in the finale.
3:10 to Yuma is a fine hard western story, but seems a bit far-fetched given the sense of reality they worked for. I like watching it, but I stay outside it.
Tombstone is a hoot and half, lots of fave scenes to savor over and over, though the whole movie is too long.
The Missing I've never seen all the way through, but I can tell I might like it. I'll give it a chance.
Lonesome Dove is epic. Wonderful characters and the storytelling is immaculate. Astonishing characters!
Rip Off
Dances With Wolves gets a nod due to its portrayal of the Lakota Indians, making it a worth addition to this list. The Quick and the Dead, I would say "you've gotta be fecking kidding me", but that would be mean (accurate but mean)and another similar film that stretches the imagination, but ends up on too many lists is Silverado. Each of these movies has prominent characters (largely through the fault of the actor in the role), who really doesn't understand that they were filming a western. In Silverado, Jeff Goldblum and Kevin Costner were badly miscast and horrifically played, Leonardo DiCaprio all by himself ruind Dead. The directors were dopes for allowing this shit to end up on screen.
Thanks for the list, Chuck.
I haven't seen many of these, but would like to enlarge my Western experiences.
My favorite genre and I reckon it's on a roll at the moment - Tarantino's Django is not too far away. Oh and good choices, man.
I vote we add "Blueberry" and "Dead Man" to the list.
Lazlo, let's pretend that I just used a "deathray" on this dumb idea, which must surely have been inspired by your abuse of peyote.
"Go into the light, pal" (aka step out of the sweat lodge).
There is "Into the West", which begins in the 1820s and "Centennial", which begins in the 1790s. The Old West can be set in any time frame before post-WWI, I believe.
"Into the West" is far too recent to be included, and nothing about that show really grabbed me. "Centennial" I liked quite a bit, but the overall impression from that epic mini-series was melodrama and less pure western, so I would not include it here either.
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