- Shane
- Rio Bravo
- The Wild Bunch
- The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly
- The Naked Spur
- The Searchers
- High Noon
- Once Upon a Time in the West
- Red River
- My Darling Clementine
- Warlock
- One-Eyed Jacks
- The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance
- The Big Country
- Ride the High Country
- The Man from Laramie
- Winchester 73
- 3:10 to Yuma
- Ride Lonesome
- She Wore a Yellow Ribbon
- Unforgiven
- Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid
- For a Few Dollars More
- Man of the West
- Stagecoach
- Fistful of Dollars
- Comanche Station
- El Topo
- Rio Grande
- Pat Garrett and Billy the Kid
- The Proposition
- Keoma
- The Last Movie
- Ride in the Whirlwind
- A Bullet for the General
- The Ox-Bow Incident
- Django
- The Tall T
- The Shooting
- The Professionals
Saturday, January 06, 2007
Best Westerns (top 40)
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5 comments:
John Ford: 5
John Wayne: 7
Henry Fonda: 4
Spaghetti Westerns: 7
Let's call it an even 50: McCabe & Mrs. Miller; The Great Northfield, Minnesota, Raid; Dead Man; The Outlaw Josey Wales; Lonesome Dove; Little Big Man; and The Magnificent Seven.
But seriously, The Tall T & Randolph Scott over any of these?
You can tell I had a hard time with the B-Western and where to put it-- aside from the Leone westerns, and arguably "Ride the High Country" (which is mostly a "take" on B-westerns), there is no real B-movie until #27 ("Comanche Station"), and I made sure to get "Stagecoach" and "Fistful of Dollars" out of the way right before that--since I couldn't in good conscience put a Budd Boetticher film before John Ford and Leone's great first films. But I don't know...neither "McCabe & Mrs Miller" nor "Lonesome Dove" have the kind of rip-roaring psychological plot, nor the economy of means, that characterize the Boetticher/Scott westerns. I didn't want my list to be ALL the great Hollywood westerns first, then ALL the great spaghetti westerns, then finally the great Bs, since that hierarchy doesn't reflect my shared enjoyment of all of them--but I have to admit I was remiss in leaving off "Josey Wales" and "Little Big Man." My bad.
The Great Silence is completely ignored, what's up with that?
it was actually number 41...i wrote a huge list and lopped off the last 5 or 6. The Great Silence was 41, and I think Tombstone was also on there, and Open Range.
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