I like movies. I like them a lot. I especially like war movies, film noir, and Westerns. If I was to list every Western that I like I would never be able to finish this. These are the Western movies that immediately come to mind as “must see.” Ask me in a month and the list might change [slightly]...
The Wild Bunch [1969] – This is Sam Peckinpah’s masterpiece. Up until the making of this film, no Western had ever been this violent or this bloody. Peckinpah’s vision was to have his audience feel what it was like to be shot. Until then, people got shot, people fell down, and they didn’t bleed very much. One didn’t see many bullet holes in people. Peckinpah’s use of slow motion amplified the effect of what bullets can do to “soft pudgies” once they made impact with human flesh. This is the story of Pike Bishop [William Holden] and his gang of aging outlaws [Ernest Borgnine, Warren Oates, Ben Johnson] looking to make one last big score because they are all looking at the “end of the line.” Deke Thornton [Robert Ryan] is a former member of Bishop’s gang who is “hired” by a railroad boss [under the threat of going back to prison] to kill Pike and his gang. You know that when Bishop utters the line “if they move, kill ‘em”, that it’s “game on.” This movie features several Oscar winners [past and future] – William Holden, Ernest Borgnine, Edmund O’Brien, and Ben Johnson. Warren Oates and Robert Ryan weren’t too shabby either. The Wild Bunch is my favorite Western.
Butch
Cassidy and the Sundance Kid
[1969] – Unlike The Wild Bunch, this movie with Paul Newman and Robert
Redford is a more light-hearted affair, but it’s just as serious. The theme is
similar – two aging outlaws are facing an uncertain future in fast-changing
times. Like Pike Bishop and his gang, they too are staring the end of the line
dead in the face. After robbing one train too many, Butch and Sundance
[together with Katherine Ross] are pursued all the way to Bolivia by a dream
team of lawmen [hired by a railroad boss – sound familiar?], whose only mission
is to catch and kill Butch and Sundance. This is one of those movies that if
I’m channel surfing and come upon this movie, the surfing stops, no matter how
many times I’ve seen it. “Who are those guys?”
The
Searchers [1956] –
John Wayne didn’t think much of Clint Eastwood’s anti-hero Western characters,
and yet Ethan Edwards is as big an anti-hero as any portrayed by Eastwood. This
is by far [it isn’t even close] the Duke’s best performance. John Ford once
remarked “I didn’t know the sonofabitch could act.” Ethan Edwards is a Civil
War vet [a Confederate] for whom the war never ended. He would never swear
loyalty to the Union. He liked fighting so much that he went to Mexico to fight
the French. A racist, unreconstructed rebel, he also thinks the only good
Indian is a dead Indian. When Edward’s brother, his sister-in-law and nephew are
killed and their daughters Lucy and Debbie are kidnapped by Comanches, Edwards [with
his nephew Martin Hawley (Jeffrey Hunter)] goes in search of his nieces. The
search takes five years, during which time Lucy is found by dead [and
presumably raped by said Comanches], further enraging Edwards. Edwards
mutilates the Comanche corpses he finds, gouging out their eyes so their
spirits would wander forever in the afterlife. Edwards and Hawley catch up to
Debbie [a sixteen-year-old Natalie Wood], who insisted she wanted to remain
with her Comanche captors. Edwards thought “better dead than red” and tried to
kill Debbie. But ultimately, Edwards and Hawley bring her “home.” The last
scene is a poignant one. There seems to be an unspoken agreement between
Edwards and all the other characters that although his dirty job is done, he
has no place in a world of domesticity. A door literally closes while Edwards
walks away.
Unforgiven
[1992] – As great
Westerns go, this movie deserves every bit of praise showered upon it. Clint
Eastwood had the script of this movie in his stack of stuff for years, but he
waited until he was old enough to play Will Munny. Character development is deep
in this film. The Munny character is a sober, repentant widower with two small
children and a drunken, violent outlaw past. Gene Hackman’s sheriff Little Bill
Daggett is especially loathsome after he refuses to jail a cowboy who slashed a
prostitute’s face. Richard Harris’s “English Bob” is a braggart who wastes no
opportunity to trash America and has the conceit to travel with his own
biographer. One does not feel sorry for English Bob when Little Bill beats the
shit out of him for not surrendering his firearms. The movie’s payoff comes
when Munny, after hearing that his partner Ned Logan [Morgan Freeman] is killed
by Little Bill, starts to drink. Once he takes that first sip, there’s an “oh
shit!” moment and you know that Munny is about to flip a switch.
High
Plains Drifter
[1973] – Carol and I always referred to this movie as the “Paint the Town Red”
movie. There is a bit of the supernatural at play when a stranger with no name
enters the mining town of Lago. He’s able to gun down three gunfighters without
getting as much as a scratch. He manages to avoid getting shot when a prostitute
tries to kill him while he’s taking a bath. He has dreams of the local sheriff
and the night he was whipped to death by outlaws while the townspeople of Lago
did nothing and watched it happen. Is the stranger the ghost of the dead
sheriff? It’s never said, but it’s implied. When the outlaws who killed the
town sheriff are released from prison and
return to Lago [by which time all the buildings are painted red] to settle old
scores, they kill several of the townspeople, and take the rest to the saloon. The
town [which, unknown to everyone, the stranger renamed “Hell”] is set on fire. One
by one, the outlaws end up dead. It seemed as if he was both nowhere and everywhere at
the same time. The next day, a tombstone with the dead sheriff’s name is placed
at his hitherto unmarked grave. The dwarf who made it says he never caught the
stranger’s name, but the stranger tells him he already knows it. He rides off
into the shimmering desert heat and vanishes. Clint Eastwood made a similar
movie [Pale Rider] in 1985. Only in this movie, the stranger is a
preacher, but he’s really one of the Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse [Death].
The
Outlaw Josey Wales
[1976] – Josey Wales [Clint Eastwood] is a Missouri farmer whose home is
attacked by pro-Union Kansas militia. They kill his wife and son and burn his
house down. Wales joins a Confederate guerilla band. When the Civil War ends, Wales’
band of guerillas are offered amnesty if they surrender and swear loyalty to
the Union. Wales refuses. When his band surrenders, they’re quickly massacred, while
Wales escapes and becomes a fugitive. Wales is hunted by the Kansas militiamen
men and bounty hunters alike. His mission is to kill those who killed his
family before they can kill him. When confronted by a bounty hunter we hear the
best line of the movie – “Dyin’ ain’t much of a livin’, boy.” When he’s identified
by a snake oil salesman [“my God, it’s Josey Wales!”], Wales wastes little time
in killing a group of Union soldiers who are dumbstruck by the sight of him
[“Are you gonna pull those pistols or whistle Dixie?”]. There’s a predictable
but satisfying climax when Wales and the militia commander finally meet. Chief
Dan George provides the necessary comic relief to keep things from getting too
serious.
Bad
Day at Black Rock
[1955] – Five Academy Award winners – Spencer Tracy, Ernest Borgnine, Dean
Jagger, Walter Brennan, and Lee Marvin. Robert Ryan brings his usual intensity
to a cast that [with the exception of Spencer Tracy] has a very dark secret to
hide. This film is essentially a crime drama but is considered a neo-Western.
Set in a California desert town after the end of World War II, one-armed Spencer
Tracy travels to the town of Black Rock, where a train hadn’t stopped in over
four years. The townspeople are suspicious of the stranger in their midst and
act accordingly. Tracy’s mission – to give a medal awarded to the son of a man
named Komoko, but Komoko is dead [the “very dark secret”]. One year before The Searchers, racism is addressed head on.
No
Country for Old Men [2007]
– Joel and Ethan Coen make a lot of off-the-wall movies, but this neo-Western
[their first] isn’t one of them. Set in West Texas, this is a story about what NOT to do if you
see a drug deal gone bad. Leave the investigating to the professionals. If you don’t,
a psychopathic hitman with a birth control haircut will come after you and probably
kill you for inconveniencing him. This psychopath will be like Robocop. If he gets
hurt, he’ll shake it off like a minor inconvenience and keep coming for you. He’ll
kill you, he’ll kill your wife, and he’ll kill anybody who tries to help you. Running
away to Mexico won’t help you. If you’re a county sheriff and this happens in
your jurisdiction, take one look at this carnage and ride off into the sunset
of retirement.
Hell
or High Water
[2016] – Like No Country for Old Men, this is another neo-Western set in West Texas. The film is an
advertisement for avoiding reverse mortgages. A family is about to lose its
ranch due to foreclosure. Toby Howard [Chris Pine] and his ex-con brother
Tanner [Ben Foster] have other ideas. To save their ranch, they rob banks all
over West Texas. They launder their stolen money through an Indian casino in
Oklahoma. They have the casino convert their winnings into a check made out to
the bank that has the reverse mortgage on the ranch, making the money
untraceable. Marcus Hamilton [Jeff Bridges] and Alberto Parker [Gil Birmingham]
are the two Texas Rangers who are after the Howard brothers. Hamilton, who is
constantly making Indian jokes at Parker’s expense, is close to retirement. But
he and Parker figure out how Howards’ methods and their next target. Margaret
Bowman steals the show with her portrayal as a very salty waitress in a
restaurant that serves only T-bone steaks. Parker doesn’t survive the movie,
nor does Tanner Howard. Toby Howard pays off the reverse mortgage and puts the
ranch into a trust for his two sons. The ranch has oil under it, and it makes
the trust a fortune. Ironically, Toby uses the same bank that tried to screw his
mother out of the ranch to administer the trust, and the huge monthly checks
that are deposited into it. Afraid to lose Toby’s business, the bank doesn’t
cooperate with law enforcement to solve the Howards’ crimes, so they get away
with it.
Hud [1963] – If a honey badger took
human form, it would be Paul Newman’s Hud. He didn’t give a shit about anybody
except himself. In his mind, rules that he doesn’t like don’t apply to him.
He’ll screw anything that walks or crawls, especially if they’re already
married. The Bannons have a housekeeper named Alma [Patricia Neal]. Hud’s
nephew Lonnie also lives at the Bannon house. He practically worships his uncle
Hud. Hud’s father Homer Bannon [Melvin Douglas] doesn’t like him very much. He
blames Hud for his older brother’s death. Hud is highly annoyed with his father.
Hud wants to lease parts of the ranch to oilmen to bring some much-needed
cashflow into the ranch, but Homer wants nothing to do with oil. It’s a
constant struggle between a man’s disappointment with his son, and a son’s constant
anger at his father because Homer hates him. Things come to a head when their entire
cattle herd has to be slaughtered because some of the cattle purchased by Homer
have foot-in-mouth disease. A drunken Hud tries to rape Alma [saved by Lonnie].
Homer dies shortly thereafter, Alma leaves the Bannons for parts unknown, and
Lonnie gets over his Hud hero worship. Lonnie leaves the Bannon ranch. One
assumes Hud leases the ranch to the oilmen but that is never revealed.
The
Long Riders [1980]
– Four sets of brother actors [David, Keith and Robert Carradine, James and
Stacy Keach, Dennis and Randy Quaid, Christopher and Nicholas Guest] star in
this excellent movie from director Walter Hill that tells the story of the
James-Younger Gang. You get the sense of the close-knit community of family,
neighbors, and strangers who just hate banks that will go the extra mile to
protect their local folk heroes. The outlaws are presented as family men. Jesse
James has a moral code, booting Ed Miller from the gang after he kills a bank
teller in a robbery. Before their last job, he got his nose out of joint
because the rest of his gang were entertained at a brothel while he stayed at
home with his wife. The Pinkertons who are trying to apprehend them were
depicted as trigger-happy incompetents. The real Belle Starr was an outlaw, but
Hill turns her into a prostitute. There’s a great knife fight between Cole Younger
and Cherokee Sam Starr.[Younger wins]. The climax is an ambush scene in
Northfield, Minnesota that pays homage to Sam Peckinpah. He would be proud. The post-Northfield
downward spiral is completed after Bob Ford shoots Jesse James in the back.
Frank James surrenders to the Pinkertons to bury his brother. Fade to black…As
a bonus, Ry Cooder created a superb soundtrack which I highly recommend.
The
Shootist [1976] – I
have a soft spot for this one because it’s John Wayne’s last movie, and it’s a
good one. It’s not great, but it’s good. J.B. Books is an ageing gunfighter who
has many kills to his credit. He lives by a simple creed - “I won’t be
wronged, I won’t be insulted, I won’t be laid-a-hand on. I don’t do these
things to other people and I require the same of them.” It’s the beginning
of the twentieth century [January 1901]. He’s dying and wants to see a doctor
he knows [James Stewart] in Carson City,
Nevada for a second opinion. The doctor confirms Books’ original diagnosis. He
gives him six weeks, maybe two months left to live, and that it will be painful
at the very end. Knowing this, Books plans ahead for his own death. He doesn’t
want to die a bedridden, agonizing death – he wants to go out in a blaze of
glory. Until that time comes, he rents a room from Bond Rogers [Lauren Bacall].
Her impressionable son Gillom [Ron Howard] takes a liking to Books, who teaches
him how to shoot. Meanwhile, two crooks try to kill him so they could gain
notoriety for being the guys who killed J.B. Books [he kills them instead]. An
old flame tries to marry Books, only for him to find out she wants stories of
his exploits so she can “be somebody.” After ordering his own tombstone from
the local undertaker [John Carradine], he invites three men to have a drink
with him at the local saloon on January 29th, his birthday. One man [Richard
Boone] has a longtime grudge against him. The other two [Hugh O’Brian and Bill
McKinney] are eager to earn fame by killing the famous gunfighter. In the end,
Books and his guests have their shootout. Books’ “guests” all die, Books is
shot in the back by the bartender and subsequently dies, and Gillom kills the
bartender. Given that John Wayne died of cancer three years after this movie, one
can’t help but think this film is art imitating real life. The Duke wasn’t
dying yet, but The Shootist is a very poignant elegy.
Trilogies
Fort
Apache [1948] / She
Wore a Yellow Ribbon [1949] / Rio Grande [1950] - John Ford’s Cavalry
Trilogy. If you don’t like these, you’re unAmerican.
A
Fistful of Dollars [1964]
/ For a Few Dollars More [1965] / The Good, The Bad, and The Ugly
[1966] – What is understood need not be discussed. Sergio Leone’s Spaghetti
Western trilogy that made Clint Eastwood a star. Any questions?