Vintage Cinema presents
Westerns
Westerns are the major defining genre of the
American film industry - a eulogy to the early days of the expansive American
frontier. They are one of the oldest, most enduring genres with very
recognizable plots, elements, and characters (six-guns, horses, dusty towns and
trails, cowboys, Indians, etc.). They have evolved over time, however, and have
often been re-defined, re-invented and expanded, dismissed, re-discovered, and
spoofed. Variations have included Italian 'spaghetti' westerns, epic westerns, comic
westerns, westerns with outlaws or marshals as the main characters, revenge
westerns, and revisionist westerns.
The basic themes of westerns include conflicts
between white pioneers and Native Americans as well as between cattle ranchers
and fence-building farmers.Specific settings include lonely isolated forts,
ranch houses, the isolated homestead, breathtaking settings and open
landscapes, the saloon, the jail, the livery stable, the small-town main
street, or small frontier towns that are forming at the edges of civilization.
They may even include Native American sites or villages. Other iconic elements
in westerns include the hanging tree, horses, spurs, saddles, lassos and Colt
.45's, canteens, stagecoaches and distinctive western clothing (denims, chaps,
boots, etc.).
Usually, the central plot of the western film is
maintaining law and order on the frontier. It is normally rooted in a conflict
– good vs. bad, virtue vs. Evil, settlers vs. Native Americans.
Often the hero of a western meets his opposite
“double“, a mirror of his own evil side that he has to destroy. Western heroes
are often ranchers, army officers, cowboys, territorial marshals, or skilled
gunfighters. They are normally masculine persons of integrity – courageous,
moral, and self-sufficient, maverick characters. The Western hero usually
stands alone and faces danger on his own.In many ways, the cowboy of the Old
West was the American version of the Japanese samurai warrior, or the Arthurian
knight of medieval times. A mythical western hero was acting as a noble knight
in shining leather in its tale of good vs. evil. They were all bound by legal
codes of behavior, ethics, justice, courage, honor and chivalry.
Historical overview of this popular genre:
1. Silent-Era Westerns
Edwin S. Porter’s innovative 1903 short, The
Great Train Robbery, marked the real birth of the genre. The earliest Western
stars emerged: Gilbert M. “Broncho Billy” Anderson (the first cowboy hero), Tom
Mix (an actual cowboy who often did his own stunts), and William S. Hart (a
veteran of Thomas H. Ince’s Westerns). The first sagebrush sagas were either
filmed on soundstages or made on the East Coast, until the wide expanse of the
West opened up for on-location filming. Many of the genre’s greatest directors,
such as John Ford, developed their craft and scored their first hits within the
Western category. Even the cowboys’ horses were superstars, such as Mix’s
“wonder horse,” Tony. Some of the earliest traditional Westerns were based on
Wild West pulp novels and stories, including the genre’s first epic — the
pioneer spectacular The Covered Wagon (1923).Prime Examples: The Covered Wagon
(1923), The Iron Horse (1924), and Tumbleweeds (1925).
The Great Train Robbery
(1903) by Edwin S. Porter
2. B-movie Westerns
From the thirties to the late forties,
inexpensive, formulaic B Westerns were churned out each year by the hundreds by
lesser studios (Columbia, Universal, and Republic) — mostly for kiddie
audiences at matinees. Some were multiple-chapter serials with cliff-hanger
plots or series (a succession of films with familiar characters). They featured
another round of clean-cut heroes: Hoot Gibson, Harry Carey, Ken Maynard, Tim
McCoy, Buck Jones (the Red Rider), Bob Steele (the Two-fisted Hero of the
West), William Boyd (Hopalong Cassidy), the Three Mesquiteers, and the Lone
Ranger. “Horse operas” had crooning added; they were popularized by Gene Autry
(the Singing Cowboy) and Roy Rogers (the King of the Cowboys), with his wife,
Dale Evans. The frontier heroes usually represented the ideal masculine role
model, never smoking, lying, drinking, swearing, having sex, or gambling. John
Wayne was the only truly iconic figure to emerge from the simplistic
plots.Prime Examples: In Old Santa Fe (1934), The Desert Trail (1935), Tumbling
Tumbleweeds (1935), Hit the Saddle (1937), Adventures of Red Ryder (1940),
Border Patrol (1943), and King of the Cowboys (1943).
3. Classic Westerns
As B Westerns began to disappear from theaters
and appear on television, the genre’s development was saved by some respectable
A Westerns. They included John Ford’s influential Stagecoach (1939); Ford’s
take on the Wyatt Earp legend, My Darling Clementine (1946); and Ford’s
acclaimed Cavalry trilogy. Also Howard Hawks’s definitive generational-conflict
and cattle-drive tale, Red River (1948). During the era, the much-censored
Outlaw (1943) and scandalous Duel in the Sun (1946) infused the genre with sex.
The traditional Western experienced a resurgence in the fifties, brought about
by Fred Zinnemann’s allegorical High Noon (1952), George Stevens’s Shane
(1953), and the wide-screen epics Vera Cruz (1954) and The Big Country
(1958).Prime Examples: The Plainsman (1936), Dodge City (1939), Jesse James
(1939), Union Pacific (1939), Red River (1948), She Wore a Yellow Ribbon
(1949), Rio Grande (1950), High Noon (1952), Shane (1953), and Rio Bravo
(1959).
4. Noir Westerns
During the postwar period of the forties and
fifties, Westerns took on brooding, dark, and intense themes. Hollywood infused
them with cynicism, character complexities, flawed outlaw heroes, and dark
pessimism. Anthony Mann teamed with James Stewart for a cycle of five Westerns
with themes including revenge, paranoia, and obsession, while neglected
director Budd Boetticher collaborated with Randolph Scott on six B Westerns
with lean and simple plots. A few others also showed strength: Nicholas Ray’s
Johnny Guitar (1954), Samuel Fuller’s Forty Guns (1957), and Joseph H. Lewis’s
campy Terror in a Texas Town (1958).Prime Examples: The Ox-Bow Incident (1943),
Pursued (1947), Blood on the Moon (1948), The Gunfighter (1950), Bend of the
River (1952), The Naked Spur (1953), The Far Country (1954), The Searchers
(1956), Forty Guns (1957), Ride Lonesome (1959), and The Man Who Shot Liberty
Valance (1962).
5. Spaghetti Westerns
Sergio Leone’s trilogy of spaghetti Westerns was
representative of a subgenre of foreign films featuring American stars (e.g.,
Clint Eastwood and Henry Fonda). They included revenge seeking, rough violence,
bandits, bounty hunters, jarring soundtracks, and minimalist styles. Spaghetti
Westerns paved the way for the further globalization of Westerns, resulting in
films like Akira Kurosawa’s Seven Samurai (1954) — which, incidentally, was
remade as John Sturges’s Magnificent Seven (1960), bringing the genre full
circle, back home to its American roots.Prime Examples: A Fistful of Dollars
(1964), For a Few Dollars More (1965), The Good, the Bad and the Ugly (1966),
and Once Upon a Time in the West (1968).
6. Revisionist Westerns
So-called revisionist Westerns reinvented,
redefined, ridiculed, and questioned the themes and elements of traditional
classics. Delmer Daves’s Broken Arrow (1950) was considered the first Hollywood
picture to take the side of the Native Americans. It was followed 40 years
later by Kevin Costner’s politically correct Dances With Wolves (1990). Bad Day
at Black Rock (1955); the anti-Western Hud (1963), with Paul Newman; Little Big
Man (1970), with Dustin Hoffman as Jack Crabb; Robert Aldrich’s Vietnam
allegory, Ulzana’s Raid (1972); and many other similar films turned the genre
upside down. Spoofs such as Cat Ballou (1965) and Blazing Saddles (1974) made
fun of the form’s conventions.Prime Examples: Broken Arrow (1950), Bad Day at
Black Rock (1955), Cat Ballou (1965), Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid
(1969), Support Your Local Sheriff! (1969), The Wild Bunch (1969), Blazing
Saddles (1974), The Outlaw Josey Wales (1976), Dances With Wolves (1990), and
Unforgiven (1992).
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