- Joined
- Aug 28, 2011
- Messages
- 27,700
- Reaction Score
- 70,654
Not the best of all time although I suspect great movies will dominate. Just the film and maybe a sentence why it's a fav. This is a target rich environment.
1- The Good, The Bad, and The Ugly. An absolute epic, a wonderful drama about getting the stolen gold, set inside the larger drama of the Civil War. Huge movie making at its finest blew me away when I saw it as a 20 year old.
2- Once upon a time in the west. Arguably the best opening of any film, western or not. Incredible performance by Hank Fonda, a bad, bad man behind blue eyes.
3- Unforgiven. An unvarnished look at western brutality. A film with no good guys.
4- Blazing Saddles. Also one of the best comedies ever made. Would be impossible to make this policitically incorrect film today. Nailed all the western movie cliches. I recently showed it to my college age nephew and watched his stunned belief at what he was seeing as he laughed his head off.
5- The Magnificent Seven. The Original is and always will be a classic even if the storyline is "borrowed."
Honorable mention: Tombstone, the best of any OK Corral movie, the street scene is a classic. The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance, John Wayne, Jimmy Steward and Somers, Connecticut's own Gene Pitney sang the title song.
It would be easy to list a top ten or twenty as there are that many great films in this genre.. But I'm comfortable with these five, which probably change anytime I watch a western.
1- The Good, The Bad, and The Ugly. An absolute epic, a wonderful drama about getting the stolen gold, set inside the larger drama of the Civil War. Huge movie making at its finest blew me away when I saw it as a 20 year old.
2- Once upon a time in the west. Arguably the best opening of any film, western or not. Incredible performance by Hank Fonda, a bad, bad man behind blue eyes.
3- Unforgiven. An unvarnished look at western brutality. A film with no good guys.
4- Blazing Saddles. Also one of the best comedies ever made. Would be impossible to make this policitically incorrect film today. Nailed all the western movie cliches. I recently showed it to my college age nephew and watched his stunned belief at what he was seeing as he laughed his head off.
5- The Magnificent Seven. The Original is and always will be a classic even if the storyline is "borrowed."
Honorable mention: Tombstone, the best of any OK Corral movie, the street scene is a classic. The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance, John Wayne, Jimmy Steward and Somers, Connecticut's own Gene Pitney sang the title song.
It would be easy to list a top ten or twenty as there are that many great films in this genre.. But I'm comfortable with these five, which probably change anytime I watch a western.