Favorite Westerns

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  • Villain
    [REDACTED]
    • May 2011
    • 7768

    #16
    Butch and Sundance is a great one if you want to have a Redford/Newman-gasm. I actually just watched half of it last weekend on TV and it's still holding up.
    [REDACTED]

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    • Jmiles
      Member
      • Jul 2011
      • 2578

      #17
      Originally posted by Tailback U
      Tombstone and the proposition are two of my favorites.

      Kilmer's Doc Holiday portrayal is probably one of the best characters of all time!
      Tombstone is one of my all time favorites. I'm not a big western guy, but I will watch tombstone anytime I see it on. I'm your huckleberry.

      Comment

      • Sharkweather
        Senior Member
        • Jul 2009
        • 8906

        #18
        Some of my favorites and obvious ones that have already been listed:

        Tombstone, Good Bad and Ugly, No Country, Django.

        Some others I like not mentioned yet:

        Young Guns I & II
        The Alamo (both the John Wayne one and the 2004 effort)
        Unforgiven
        3:10 to Yuma
        Open Range

        Comment

        • Houston
          Back home
          • Oct 2008
          • 21231

          #19
          Originally posted by Villain
          I have no idea what you're talking about. Please enlighten me and send me in the direction of good movies.
          Japan's G.O.A.T director made two great samurai movies called Yojimbo and Sanjuro. Yojimbo's score on Rotten Tomatoes is 97/97, and Sanjuro's is 100/95 for what it's worth....

          I just happened to see those two first. When I went to watch A Fistfull of Dollars and For a Few Dollars More I learned that they were remakes of Yojimbo/Sanjuro and decided to skip them. Same thing goes for some other big westerns of the 60's.

          Pretty cool how the two genres made their way through time though. Westerns pretty much started from scratch and were here since the beginning of film. Just as the western was starting to wane, the Japs used them as inspiration for their samurai films. Then the Italians saw those and used them as inspiration for their new Westerns. Soon after, the Americans caught on which caused a revival back home where it all started.
          Every action film since owes itself to the movies made during this exchange.

          Without it, a guy like Tarrantino for instance wouldn't even have a career.
          Last edited by Houston; 03-25-2014, 04:28 AM.

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          • mgoblue2290
            Posts too much
            • Feb 2009
            • 7174

            #20
            3:10 To Yuma is a modern great and so is Django. No Country For Old Men is overrated and an above average movie. This holds true for every Coen Brothers movie I've seen except O Brother Where Art Thou which was great.

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            • KINGOFOOTBALL
              Junior Member
              • Feb 2009
              • 10343

              #21
              310 and Tombstone for sure. Django if it qualifies is a certainty.

              I cant name any of the old ones but I grew up watching them all so its kind of a blur. But Eastwood and John Wayne movies were always on my TV when my dad was on the tube.




              My personal favorite is Young Guns and I really like YG2. Theyre alot like Rocky 4 where they arent anything to be taken oscar serious but are fun as hell to watch. Emilio Estevez as Billy the Kid is friggin hysterical and awesome. Those movies have so many great one liners.

              Blazing Saddles is a western classic only if Spaceballs counts as Scifi. Its a spoof IMO so its a comedy but damn is it good.


              Best reason to have a license.

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              • Houston
                Back home
                • Oct 2008
                • 21231

                #22
                Originally posted by mgoblue2290
                No Country For Old Men is overrated.....O Brother Where Art Thou was great.

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                • Villain
                  [REDACTED]
                  • May 2011
                  • 7768

                  #23
                  Originally posted by Houston
                  Japan's G.O.A.T director made two great samurai movies called Yojimbo and Sanjuro. Yojimbo's score on Rotten Tomatoes is 97/97, and Sanjuro's is 100/95 for what it's worth....

                  I just happened to see those two first. When I went to watch A Fistfull of Dollars and For a Few Dollars More I learned that they were remakes of Yojimbo/Sanjuro and decided to skip them. Same thing goes for some other big westerns of the 60's.

                  Pretty cool how the two genres made their way through time though. Westerns pretty much started from scratch and were here since the beginning of film. Just as the western was starting to wane, the Japs used them as inspiration for their samurai films. Then the Italians saw those and used them as inspiration for their new Westerns. Soon after, the Americans caught on which caused a revival back home where it all started.
                  Every action film since owes itself to the movies made during this exchange.

                  Without it, a guy like Tarrantino for instance wouldn't even have a career.
                  Many-a thanka, Houstan-san.
                  [REDACTED]

                  Comment

                  • LiquidLarry2GhostWF
                    Highwayman
                    • Feb 2009
                    • 15429

                    #24
                    Originally posted by mgoblue2290
                    3:10 To Yuma is a modern great and so is Django. No Country For Old Men is overrated and an above average movie. This holds true for every Coen Brothers movie I've seen except O Brother Where Art Thou which was great.


                    Modern masterpiece.

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                    • mgoblue2290
                      Posts too much
                      • Feb 2009
                      • 7174

                      #25
                      No. Above average movie people felt they had to love.

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                      • LiquidLarry2GhostWF
                        Highwayman
                        • Feb 2009
                        • 15429

                        #26
                        Originally posted by mgoblue2290
                        I lack taste, decency, and good form.

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                        • Houston
                          Back home
                          • Oct 2008
                          • 21231

                          #27
                          Just like Spielberg was saying about The Searchers...No Country is a good movie in the basic thriller sense. But because there's so much complexity under the surface that you're bound to miss at first, it holds up during later viewings. One of those rare films that you can really dive into. Similar to Barton Fink if we're sticking with the Coens.

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                          • LiquidLarry2GhostWF
                            Highwayman
                            • Feb 2009
                            • 15429

                            #28
                            Do we place Brokeback Mountain in the "Western" genre?

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                            • LiquidLarry2GhostWF
                              Highwayman
                              • Feb 2009
                              • 15429

                              #29
                              If you want a sleeper post-2000s Western flick, check out Tommy Lee Jones' directorial debut...The Three Burials of Melquiades Estrada. Very good.

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                              • Palooza
                                Au Revoir, Shoshanna
                                • Feb 2009
                                • 14265

                                #30
                                The western is a genre I have rarely jumped into outside of the modern ones mentioned like 3:10 to Yuma and No Country. I should watch more westerns.

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