What defines a Western? Many argue it’s an American phenomenon although European filmmakers have left a sizable stamp. It’s more than six-guns and shootouts and Mama, fetch the rifle.
To me, their morality plays with clearly delineated rôles, good and evil, male and female, peace and violence. Good triumphs over wickedness and although we vicariously enjoy violence in pursuit of justice, peace eventually reigns. All becomes right with the world.
List of Lists
I was thumbing through my feed when it decided I needed more exposure to Westerns. The internet is loaded with articles about the 10 Best Westerns and the 20 Best Western Actors. More than most genres, opinions differ wildly but not violently. An actor at the top of one list doesn’t appear on other lists at all. I was surprised one film list opened with WestWorld and The Three Amigos comedy on the list. Are those even Westerns?
So be it. When we were children, lists in no special order might include:
1. | Roy Rogers | 11. | Richard Boone |
2. | Gene Autry | 12. | Jimmy Stewart |
3. | Clayton Moore | 13. | Michael Landon |
4. | Jay Silverheels | 14. | Dan Blocker |
5. | Duncan Renaldo | 15. | Hugh O’Brian |
6. | James Arness | 16. | Gene Barry |
7. | James Garner | 17. | Josh Randall |
8. | Steve McQueen | 18. | William Boyd |
9. | Chuck Connors | 19. | Lash La Rue |
10. | Clint Walker | 20. | … and many more |
Haboob has watched more Westerns than Sergio Leone’s film editor. Some of her favorites are obscure, some she’s watched many times. Her popularity list runs thus:
1. | John Wayne | 4. | Sam Elliot |
2. | Walter Brennan | 5. | Barbara Stanwick |
3. | Yul Brynner | 6. | Maureen O’Hara |
Frankly, I’m not sure Haboob could be trusted in a room alone with Sam Elliot. Similarly, Sharon’s list goes like this:
1. | Kevin Costner | 4. | no one worth mentioning |
2. | Kevin Costner | 5. | |
3. | Kevin Costner | 6. |
To me, the mark of a good film is what we remember five or ten years after viewing it. Some blockbusters (i.e, The French Connection) have left few memory traces, but other less popular movies had scenes that stuck. My own list isn’t as well considered, but I’d hazard my favorite actors include:
1. | Clint Eastwood | 5. | John Wayne |
2. | Lee Van Cleef | 6. | Charles Bronson |
3. | Henry Fonda | 7. | Jack Elam |
4. | Yul Brynner | 8. | umm… |
Jack Elam had a wandering eye. No, not that kind, although he was once called the most loathsome man in Hollywood. Sadly, two of my favorites have been called Mr. Loathsome and Mr. Ugly. Elam injured his eye as a child and it became a kind of trademark, terrifying children with his bad guy portrayals in B-movie after movie Westerns. He appears so often, that he earned a kind of audience affection and went on to become a leading man and even starred in comedies.
I put Fonda on my list not because of his heroic rôles, but when he played a bad guy with chilling ice-cold blue eyes. Fans could easily believe the presence of evil. His interaction with Charles Bronson is memorable.
Since I was a kid, Lee Van Cleef fascinated me. When spaghetti Westerns emerged, Ol’ Squinty Eyes came into his own. He seconded Eastwood in a couple of man-with-no-name Westerns and starred in his own, once matched against a knife-thrower and a psychotic German bounty hunter. He also starred in a near-Western as a ferry operator facing off against an army.
My favorite of the man-with-no-name series was the middle one, A Few Dollars More. Many will challenge that, although I think John mentioned he agreed. The most humane of the films, it combines an intriguing plot with a poignant relationship between bounty hunters Van Cleef and Eastwood. We can see Eastwood doesn’t mind poking fun at himself and we discover Van Cleef is a better nimrod† than Eastwood himself.
Train Spotters
I’ll end with a clip not of Van Cleef, but of Eastwood chatting up an old man in his shack by the railroad. The scene is unusual in that you simultaneously know and don’t know what’s coming, laughing when you least expect it.
To Kill a Dead Man @ Portishead |
† In modern slang, nimrod means fool, but in traditional use dating back to Biblical times, nimrod refers to a good hunter, a good shot with gun or bow.