1. The Good, The Bad And The Ugly 2. Once Upon A Time In The West 3. Dances With Wolves (IMO not Western, but ill play along) 4. Unforgiven 5. Fistful of dollars
I can´t separate The Dollar Trilogy, because of its importance for history of western and films, and because of how good they are!! So... 1.- Fistfull of dollars, For a few dollars more and The Good, the Bad and the Ugly. 2.- High Plains Drifter 3.- Unforgiven 4.- Pale rider 5.- Outlaw Josey Wales
There are many wester films as good as this ones, but I really love the way Clint Eastwood make his films and how he acts in his harsh characters. Could you imagine another actor playing his rol on this films?
I can give the names of all of these everyone already mentioned above as No.2, No.3 & so on, but people - cinema DOES NOT get better than Sergio Leone's 1969 masterpiece.
I can give the names of all of these everyone already mentioned above as No.2, No.3 & so on, but people - cinema DOES NOT get better than Sergio Leone's 1969 masterpiece.
The difficulty for me is trying to identify a top Western based soley on it's own merit. Unforgiven was a great movie.. but was much of it's appeal that it was a swan song for Clint in the Western genre? Would this have been the same movie had he not made all of his previous oaters? Similarly with The Shootist. Very entertaining movie.. but in reality it was an entire career worth of fine character acting brought to a close, and became a great send of for John Wayne. I found Open Range a wildly entertaining movie and Costner truly shines in roles like these. But it could be argued that we are also watching a character we have seen faces of in Wyatt Earp, Dances with Wolves and even Silverado. Now forget all the trick shooting, horse acrobatics and glamorized Outlaws... you can't beat HBO's Deadwood for gritty, raw realism that for my money best gives us a glimpse into the era.
Deadwood?!?!? Are you serious?!? I know that a tack shop specializes in things western, but Deadwood thinks a western should specialize in things tacky. I agonized through three episodes of this drivel, hoping that it would hold some merit. No plot whatsoever, ordinary acting (what else can an actor do with such shallow characters?), no continuity, and it seems like they decided they could cover up what's missing with a barrage of profanity. I have a hard time believing that they talked like that in the old days, and I'm damned sure that women didn't. And even if they did, to use it in a film to that extent simply nullifies whatever effect it is intended to make. Unless they just wanted to demonstrate what boors the people of the old west were. The series is aptly titled, though. Nothing but dead wood. Fit for the fire.
5. The Magnificent Seven, even though it is a direct and unabashed rip-off of Seven Samurai, just as Fistful of Dollars is a direct rip-off of Yojimbo.
what was wrong with young guns? ive seen and own Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid and i dont think its any gd i dont know that many new western movies but the old ones can be boring
1.young guns 2 young guns 2 3. tombstone 4 back to the future part 3 j/king
1) Magnificent Seven (1960)- Yul Brenner is the epitomy of cool. Defined hero for me as a kid. Eli Wallach was brillantly as Calvera, 6 years before he topped this performance with Tuco in The Good the Bad and the Ugly.
2) High Noon (1952)- Okay Gary Cooper was cool before Yul Brenner. No Western has topped High Noon for tension building.
3) The Wild Bunch (1969)- Sam Peckinpah deserves recognition for developing the anti-hero protagonist in American cinema. His over-the-top gun battle finale did for explosive climaxes what Bullitt and French Connection did for car chases. Had the censors twitching spasmodically by the end.
4) The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly (1966). An obvious choice for cult classic western, the best of the Man With No Name Clint Eastwood series. And, who didn't love every minute Eli Wallach was on screen? Tuco is one of the best movie villans of all time.
Best Quote from a Western: "You see, in this world there's two kinds of people, my friend: Those with loaded guns and those who dig...You dig."
5) The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance (1962)- What are you kidding me? How can you list the top 5 westerns of all time without having a John Ford film? This one had John Wayne AND Jimmy Stewart to boot.
Honorable mention goes to Silverado (1985) for reintroducing the Western to modern Superplex Summer Blockbuster cinema by showing Hollywood you can make money with Westerns again. Okay, kind of a not-so-subtle drama where you're emotions are obviously manipulated, but the acting was tight, Lawerence Kasdan's direction was solid, and the script was filled with great gag lines. Who didn't love John Cleese as the English Sheriff walking in the door saying "What's all this then?" Kline, Costner, and Dennehy were brillant. Rosanne Arquette and Scott Glenn were stiff, but they aren't exactly talking about Streep and Brando are we.
Butch Cassidy & the Sundance Kid Once Upon a Time in the West Pat Garrett & Billy the Kid the Ballad of Cable Hogue Bite the Bullet Red River the Magnificent Seven Unforgiven the Searchers the Hi-Lo Country