NOTE: because of a tie at #1 there is no number #2 movie on the list.Fueled by my growing re interest in the Old West in general, I have been either watching for the first time or re-watching many Westerns. My dad is a big fan of them and I watched quite a few in my youth and teens with him before I drifted away to other pursuits. As I noted in my post about Boot Hill, I never played it since we were so focused on AD&D. With my reawakening to Westerns, my thoughts have turned to western themed RPGs and my favorite westerns of all time.
My list is not going to be to everyone’s taste. Since I was born in a decade where Westerns were decidedly on the decline (the 70s), my list will reflect my age. If I were to ask my dad I am sure his would be different, with some overlap. Some films are timeless. So without further delay, here is my top 10 favorite Westerns of all time.
#1A Unforgiven (1992)
Of all of Clint Eastwood’s westerns, which are considerable, this one stands head and shoulders above the rest. Forget for a moment that it won Academy Awards (earning Eastwood Best Director). Think of the script itself. Eastwood sat on it for 25 years so he would be just the right age to play William Munny. Normally I do not like anti heroes who are anti heroes for the sake of it, but Munny is cut from a different cloth: a man who was a drunken, stone cold killer whose acts include dynamiting the Rock and Island in '69, killing women and children. Let that sink in for a minute. So when he comes out of retirement for one more job, he is doing it for the sake of his kids. Of course he's really is coming out of retirement to kill two men who cut up a prostitute.
The cast is epic: Eastwood, Gene Hackman, and Morgan Freeman. Those three alone make it great. The interplay between William (Eastwood) and Ned (Freeman) carries the movie, then it shifts for the final scene where Munny takes it to Little Bill.
From the story side the best part is that the main characters are contrasted by W.W. Beauchamp’s writings throughout the movie with the mythological West and its events. In other words the hows and whats of what really happened versus how they were reported or perceived. Hackman’s Little Bill is menacing without being over the top, a hard man who utterly ruthless when need be.
The final scene is perhaps the finest scene of cinema related to a Western. They do not get better than the shootout, if one could call it that.
Best lines in Unforgiven:
- “Hell, I even thought I was dead, turned out I was just in Nebraska.” - Little Bill
- "That's right I've killed women and children. Killed just about everything that's walked or crawled at one time or another, and I'm here to kill you Little Bill. For what you did to Ned." - William Munny
- "It’s a hell of a thing, killing a man. You take away all he’s got and all he’s ever gonna have." - William Munny
- "You better bury Ned right...or I'll come back here and kill every single one of you sons of bitches." - William Munny
#1B Tombstone (1993)
It is very tough not to list this movie as number 1, so1B it is. This movie is perhaps the finest retelling of the legendary gunfight at the OK Corral in Tombstone, Arizona, on October 26th, 1881. The previous standard was Gunfight at the O.K. Corral in the 1950s that left a lot to be desired.
The gunfight and the Earp Vendetta ride was THE event of the West, even with the myth that surrounds it, so it is fitting that this movie is at the top of the heap. Tombstone features an ensemble cast including Kurt Russell, Powers Boothe, Val Kilmer, Michael Biehn, Sam Elliott, Bill Paxton, Billy Bob Thornton, Stephen Lang, Jason Priestley, and Charlton Heston amongst others. But it is the acting of Kilmer as Doc Holliday that steals the show. Doc, as Wyatt would later recollect, “was the deadliest, fastest, nerviest man I ever saw.” The whole movie touches on almost every part of the Earp/Cowboy war and where it takes liberties it does a good job making them plausible and seamless.
The telling also does well in presenting a fairly balanced view of the Earps. The Earps were canonically the “good guys” but their dealings in town say otherwise. The Earps were not necessarily the good guys and the Cowboys were not necessarily the bad guys. The fact is that in the events of 1881 people on both sides were split in their loyalties.
The actors, particularly Russell, do a great job with the dialogue, making it seem that you are actually in 1881. With all this in mind Kilmer as a menacing, Latin quoting, stone cold killer with a southern drawl did the best acting as Doc Holliday. Closely behind him is Biehn’s portrayal of Johnny Ringo. Going hand in hand with this is the cinematography since it was actually shot in Arizona.
Best lines in Tombstone:
- "I'm your huckleberry." - Doc Holliday
- “You tell um' I'm coming for um' And Hell's coming with me. You hear? HELL'S COMIN' WITH ME!" - Wyatt Earp."
- "No me, I'm in my prime." - Doc Holliday
#3 The Good,The Bad, The Ugly (1966)
Out of the three in the Dollars Trilogy, The Good, The Bad, and The Ugly is by far the best. That is not to say that the others (A Fistful of Dollars and For a Few Dollars More) are bad. It is that The Good, The Bad, and The Ugly is that good.
The twists and turns of the movie leave you at the edge of your seat as the movie traces Tuco (the Ugly) and Angel Eyes (the Bad) pursuit of $200,000 dollars in Confederate gold. The Mexican standoff at the end with the soaring score is likewise impressive as is the ending.
Best lines in The Good, The Bad, The Ugly:
- "When you have to shoot, shoot. Don’t talk." - Tuco
- “You see, in this world there’s two kinds of people, my friend. Those with loaded guns… and those who dig." - Blondie
- "Two hundred thousand dollars is a lot of money. We're gonna have to earn it." - Blondie
#4 The Searchers (1956)
This is widely regarded as the greatest western of all time and was registered as culturally significant by the Library of Congress in 1989. That alone says something. Additionally the American Film Institute named it the greatest Western of all time in 2008. Directed by John Ford and starring John Wayne and Natalie Wood, The Searchers is THE Western for the older demographic. My own memories of it are hazy as I think I may have watched it one time only. It is already at the top of my list to rewatch. Because my recollections are dim I am looking forward to this one, as it will be like watching it for the first time.
Best lines in The Searchers:
- "That’ll be the day." - Ethan
- “I don't stand talkin' in the wind." - Ethan
#5 High Plains Drifter (1973)
A Clint Eastwood western with a touch of the supernatural? Yes please. High Plains Drifter is a great story because the real villains in the movie are the townspeople themselves that the Drifter is there to defend. They are villains because the townsfolk murdered the sheriff. Time goes by and the mysterious Drifter appears in town. It is alluded to (but never said definitively) that the mysterious Drifter is the sheriff having returned from the grave. Drifter is one of those movies that makes you think, especially at the very end when the Drifter rides away from Lago and the midget is working on a tombstone that you cannot see what is inscribed on it. The midget says he does not know the Stranger, to which the Stranger replies, and as he rides away it shows the tombstone of Joe Morgan, the murdered sheriff.
Best lines in High Plains Drifter:
- “The only problem you've got Sheriff is a short supply of guts." - The Stranger
- "Yes, you do." - The Stranger
#6 Dances with Wolves (1990)
Costner makes the list again, but this movie is impossible to ignore in the Western genre. It is telling that it is a great story that has nothing really in common with other westerns, mainly focusing on Indians and Lt. John Dunbar’s interactions with them. In other words it is a story that happens to take place in the west.
Dances with Wolves is a visual and auditory masterpiece with sweeping vistas and scenery and a magnificent soundtrack to accompany it. The majesty of Dunbar’s first ride through the plains cinematic gold with the swell of Journey to Fort Sedgewick/Shooting Star from the soundtrack swelling.
The movie and its characters span the range of human emotion: despair, loneliness, hope, friendship, love, hate, madness, pragmatism, and laughter.
Perhaps my favorite scene of the movie is the one where the old Indian chief pulls forth a Spanish conquistador helmet when he and Dunbar are talking about the coming of the white man. The chief says this was from the time of his grandfather’s grandfather, implying that the Indians would survive this too. The viewer gets a great sense of sadness knowing that the Chief does not know the tidal wave of settlers that is coming. Costner (the director too) side steps this by having the Indians leave their winter camp before the Army arrives. He then wisely ends the movie then and there, but sadly tells the story of the end of the Indian way of life as the end credits roll.
In short Dances with Wolves is nothing short of breathtaking.
Best lines in Dances With Wolves:
- “Somebody back east is sayin' "Why don't he write?" - Timmons
- "The strangeness of this life cannot be measured: in trying to produce my own death, I was
elevated to the status of a living hero." -John Dunbar
#7 True Grit (1969)
If I had to pick just one John Wayne film it would be this one. His portrayal of Rooster is great! Some might not like it because it is John Wayne playing John Wayne, but I liked it well enough.
Best lines in True Grit:
- “Fill your hands you son of a bitch!" - Rooster Cogburn
- "I call that bold talk for a one-eyed fat man." - Ned Pepper
#8 A Fist Full of Dollars (1964)
Ride into town on a donkey, tell the undertaker you need three coffins momentarily and then shoot the hell out of some desperadoes? Oh Hell yeah.
Best lines in A Fist Full of Dollars:
- “My mule don’t like people laughing at him, gets the funny feeling they are laughing at him. ” - The Man with No Name
- “My mistake…. four coffins.” - The Man with No Name
#9 Silverado (1985)
This is my guilty pleasure movie as far as Westerns, but you cannot go wrong with the cast. It is damn impressive: Kevin Kline, Brian Dennehy, Jeff Goldblum, Scott Glenn, Kevin Costner, Danny Glover, Rosanna Arquette, John Cleese and many more. It seems that ensemble casts work well in westerns and Silverado certainly has the right actors.
Silverado is a throwback to the traditional western tales after the revisionist westerns of the late 60s and 70s. The tale is fun. You care about the good guys and actually want them to win. The fact that the movie is well shot, directed, and done well in terms of cinematography just adds to it. The final gun battle at the end has so many great scenes it is hard not to like this movie.
Best lines in Silverado (so many its hard to choose!):
- “I don't want to kill you and you don't want to be dead." - Mal
- "Now we're going to give you a fair trial, followed by a first-class hangin'" - Cobb
- "Where's the dog" (running gag)
#10 Open Range (2003)
This will surprise many people I think, but it is actually quite a good movie. Kevin Costner and Robert Duvall are great in this movie as is Annette Benning. In a few places the movie wanders off script in terms of logic and consistency, but for the most part it tells a very good story of the end of the open range and the rise of the cattle barons. In fact the end of the open range was one of the defining moments of the Old West.
Costner’s character Charlie is not an anti hero per se, but a man troubled by his past. When it comes to gun fighting however Charlie is more akin to an Old West version of Liam Neeson’s character in Taken. He just goes to town and obliterates everything in sight.
While some might see it as contrived the budding romance between Costner and Bening’s characters is a good representation of how people approached courtship in the 1800s: stilted, awkward but well meaning.
Best lines in Open Range:
- “I ain't got no problem with Killin' Boss, never have." - Charlie
- "Now he asked you twice, ain't gonna ask you again." - Charlie
- "You won't find it so funny when you're shot to hell and dying." - Baxter
Honorable Mentions
Pale Rider, Hang em High, Little Big Man, Outlaw Josey Wales, Once Upon a time in the West, and Two Mules for Sister Sarah. There are plenty of great westerns and it is a shame that the current regimes in Hollywood have rendered them as “already been done”. The remake of True Grit and the movie Appaloosa are worthy westerns as well.
How about your Top 10? There are so many to choose from its near impossible!