Western : Westerns

Westerns

Watched 2 good Westerns the past 2 nights on Watch TCM

Stagecoach (1939) - This movie would make my favorites list for Westerns. John Wayne, Claire Trevor, Thomas Mitchell, … directed by John Ford. 9

Colorado Territory (1948) - Joel Mcrea, Vera Miles. This is very good. Of course, the dang code ruins the ending. 7

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It's weird watching Westerns from before WW2, like, that's a different world.

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I was watching the 1929 version of The Virginian with Gary Cooper on YouTube last week. The print isn't that great, but it gave me the feeling I was really watching the old west.

That is the movie that made Gary Cooper a star. I really liked it, and would give it a 9.

Certainly, the old westerns have a slightly different flavor than more modern westerns. Of course the old westerns are black and white. Modern westerns tend to be more stylish and sometimes apply modern values to them.

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What ever happened to Gary Cooper? Now there was an American. The strong, silent type. He wasnt in touch with his feelings, he just did what he had to do.

What they didnt know is that once they got Gary Cooper in touch with his feelings, that they wouldn’t be able to shut him up! And then it’s ‘dysfunction this, dusfunction that, dysfunction vaffanculo!’

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He died in 1961 due to prostate cancer.

He was in one of my favorite movies Friendly Persuasion in 1956.

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I was quoting Tony Soprano =]



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I didn't watch the Sopranos.

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You finook

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Nah, you'll have to look elsewhere for a partner. lol.

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Oogatz!

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Didn't you recently admit to never watching The Sopranos? and only seeing random clips on YouTube.

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I watched Stagecoach a few months back. Excellent western. It took some getting used to seeing such a young John Wayne.

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He was quite something in his youth!

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When it comes to Western Movies, My own Top 3 Favorites are "TOMBSTONE", "UNFORGIVEN", and "THE QUICK AND THE DEAD".

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I saw a ton of westerns growing up in the fifties, even though I wasn't a western fan. They were part of going to the theatre with friends. I was a science fiction and horror movie follower.

Within the last several years, however, I've collected a good share of westerns ranging from the silent days to contemporary.

If I had to pick favorites, those I watch more than others, they would be (in no particular order):

Lonesome Dove
Little Big Man
The Westerner (Cooper)
Man of the West (Cooper, again)
Unforgiven
Open Range
The Good, the Bad and the Ugly

And This, Too, Shall Pass Away

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I watched Little Big Man for the first time, a couple of years back. I wasn't very impressed with it. It seemed sort of stupid to me. I would probably rate it a 6.

Wasn't Lonesome Dove a miniseries? I haven't watched it.

The Westerner (1940) is an entertaining movie with Gary Cooper's character challenging Judge Roy Bean (Walter Brennan). 9

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I haven't seen the three Cooper films you have listed so I'll add those to my list of films to watch.

Lonesome Dove - this would be my pick for best western, tv or film, I've seen, also my favorite western novel
Unforgiven - not as big a fan of this one, I liked it, didn't love it
Open Range - I didn't expect to like this one at all but turned out to be one of my favorites
The Good, the Bad and the Ugly - big sprawling epic of a western with terrific performances, cinematography and one of the great scores, maybe my favorite big screen western

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Do take a look at The Westerner and Man of the West, polar opposites in the Cooper universe. Made roughly ten years apart, the transformation of the lanky, self-amused saddle bum of 1949 into the world weary, ageing former gun slinger of 1958 is startling when viewed back-to-back. I can only think of the towering John Wayne reduced to a dying cancer patient in The Shootist as a comparison.

Lonesome Dove is the greatest western ever made (all due respect to John Ford). It is inconceivable to envision the novel, especially now, in any format except the tv mini-series. If Duvall and Jones had never made another film after that, it would have been a fitting epitaph to their careers. The final scene between them ranks among the greatest moments in the history of the genre.

I found Open Range while surfing the cable channels and, like you, didn't expect much. Duval (again) and Costner (not my favorite actor) hold it all together. The final gunfight is amazing and is probably as close to reality as any actual Old West gunfight ever was, with each man methodically moving for advantage and carefully, expertly, drawing on his opponent as professionals who knew how to use their weapons. The exact opposite of the standard Hollywood running gunfight.

The dark and depressing Unforgiven wins my vote for brilliant film making and depth of character.

Can't say anything more about The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly that has not already been written, except to recommend to those who have not seen it, avoid the butchered American release and check out Leone's complete version.

And This, Too, Shall Pass Away

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I watched The Westerner just the other night on TCM. I had seen it a number of years ago, but had forgotten how much I liked it. I moved my rating up to 9.

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I like The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly. Clint Eastwood is an entertaining star to watch. I think it does suffer some from sacrificing realism for being stylish though. I'd rank it an 8.

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I watched an interesting Western the other night on TCM
The Stalking Moon (1968) - Gregory Peck and Eva Marie Saint. Seemed almost like a Western version of Cape Fear, except that the homicidal Indian chasing them down was more of a mysterious character as opposed to Robert Mitchum. - 8

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Been in the mood for some Westerns after finishing Red Dead 2 earlier in the month. I reckon I'll rewatch Tarantino's Hateful Eight.

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I watched a nice Western the other night on Watch TCM

The Fastest Gun Alive (1956) starring Glenn Ford and Jeane Crain. The bad guy was Broderick Crawford with John Dehner and Noah Beery Jr as his side kicks. - 8
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