Here’s a year’s end tally of the best of the 48 westerns
reviewed this year at BITS.
This is a gem of a 1950s western
(released in 1960) and another fine one from the team of Budd Boetticher, Burt
Kennedy, and Randolph Scott. It’s a high-stakes and tightly knit story with a
handful of well-drawn characters. Shot in CinemaScope in the Alabama Hills of
Lone Pine, California, the film is also gloriously handsome. More…
Historians may object to the
liberties taken in this story about the aftermath of the gunfight at the OK Corral
in 1881. But in its broad outlines, it doesn’t depart too widely from the
record. The feud between Ike Clanton and the Earp Brothers did not end on that
October day in Tombstone. More lives were to be taken, including that of
Wyatt’s brother Morgan. More…
This western noir stars Robert
Ryan in another of his hard-bitten and slightly psychotic roles. Shot in black
and white, the story is set in a small mountain town knee-deep in Wyoming
winter snow. The location photography gives the film a gritty realism. So does
the adult material. This is not a western for kids. More…
Tracker (2010)
I’m calling this a western even
though it was shot and takes place in New Zealand. It has most of the elements
of a good western—sweeping unpopulated landscapes, guns, horses, immigrants,
soldiers, and natives. It’s 1903; the story is of searchers on the trail of a
man wanted for murder; there’s plenty of action, and most of it happens
outdoors. More. . .
Rio Grande (1950)
The story goes that Herb Yates
at Republic Pictures agreed to make John Ford’s The Quiet Man only if he’d make another western first. So Ford went
with a script from a James Warner Bellah story to Moab, Utah, and shot this
classic western with John Wayne and Maureen O’Hara. More…
The Hi-Lo Country (1998)
The Hi-Lo Country is an area of
northeast New Mexico, celebrated by writer Max Evans in his novels. Published
in 1960, The Hi-Lo Country was made
into a film in 1998 by British director, Stephen Frears. Set in the 1940s, it
recalls an even earlier era of the West, when cattle ranching and cowboys ruled
the open range. More. . .
6 Black Horses (1962)
This western based on a Burt
Kennedy script is a perfect vehicle for Audie Murphy. He gets to play a decent
man, a cowpuncher down on his luck, who gets involved in a desert quest with a
trail partner (Dan Duryea) and a blonde with money (Joan O’Brien). More…
You don’t think westerns when
you think of Fred MacMurray, but he was a versatile actor and equally at home
in just about any kind of role. Here he plays a character found in other 1950s
westerns, a lawman alone against a town that has lost faith in him. More…
Gun the Man Down (1956)
As interested in character as it
is in action, this film brings together the talents of a screenwriter, two
actors, and a director at the beginning of long successful careers. In 1956,
James Arness was about to begin his 20-year tenure as marshal Matt Dillon in
TV’s Gunsmoke. Angie Dickinson had
her first feature role in the film. More…
This Howard Hawks western bears
a strong resemblance to his previous western, Rio Bravo (1959). The elements are much the same, as if Hawks
wanted to have another go at them. John Wayne appears again, this time as a
hired gun. Particular about who hires him, he turns down a dirty job in the
opening scenes offered by a land-greedy rancher (Ed Asner). Wayne ends up
working instead with a sheriff (Robert Mitchum) to help a family keep their
ranch out of Asner’s hands. More…
Looking forward to a 2013 that's full of more of the same great westerns from the past, and some good ones worth a mention from the present.
Coming up: Top 10 early western novels for 2012
Looks like I've got some good viewing ahead of me.
ReplyDeleteDo that, Charles, and you might start having western dreams. . .
DeleteI've seen all these films except for The Hi-Lo Country. Somehow I missed your review. I just ordered it from amazon. Also saw some rave reviews about The Good Old Boys based on the Elmer Kelton novel. Ordered it also. Great, two more westerns for me to see for the first time. Usually I'm watching ones I've seen more than once.
ReplyDeleteI have a copy of Max Evans' novella and think I'll be reading it next. Kelton's book has been a recommendation to me I've been meaning to read, too.
DeleteAll fine movies to enjoy over and over.
ReplyDeleteSaw a bit of EL DORADO on TV yesterday and it was like finding an old friend. Hate the commercial interruptions, though, and switched to something else.
DeleteRon, thanks for reviewing all these fine western films—there are so many I haven't seen yet and look forward to viewing at least some of the 48 movies in 2013.
ReplyDelete