The co-writer and director was Lawrence Kasdan, who had written some of the Star Wars and Raiders of the Lost Ark films. I think Raiders is especially connected to "Silverado": the first Indiana Jones adventure kind of gave us a "clean" Disney-fied world of jungle adventure and desert action.
Without disrespecting them, Kasdan was out to reject both the slo-motion gore (blood spurting) of Peckinpah's The Wild Bunch and the slow moving operative foreign-ness of the Leone films(of which, said, Kasdan, "they were Westerns but never seemed to be set in the real American West.") Westerns in the late sixties and seventies had largely been grimy, muddy, grim affairs -- with anti-heroes and outright villains prevailing.
So Kasdan made sure that nobody(almost nobody?) bleeds when they get shot in Silverado(OK, Scott Glenn takes one to the thigh in the finale), even as LOTS of bad guys (and some good guys) do get killed. Kasdan kept the images clear, the clothes clean, the mud and the blood minimal.
He essentially made "Raiders of the Lost Ark" as a Western. And with four heroes who ALL survived the adventure(another rarity in modern Westerns.)
It was a fun movie.
And its about all we got of that nature. Eastwood's Pale Rider of the same 1985 summer made more money with a more dull story(but it had Clint in a Western.) More Westerns were coming, but they would be grim(Unforgiven) and gory(Tombstone and its failed competition, Wyatt Earp). Young Guns and Bad Girls would be rather "gimmick Westerns," neither authentic nor grim. Interesting to me: when did the Spaghetti Western END? I don't remember many after Leone quit making them.
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