This article contains mention of violence and assault.

Summary

Westernmovies grapple with many themes, but the intensity and violence that have come to define Western narratives have led to some of the saddest movies of the genre. This sadness could stem from the loss of an important character, the dying of the West, or the loneliness of the gunslinger lifestyle.Many of the tragic heroes who make up the central figures of the West isolate themselves and embody the ideal of individualismthat is celebrated by these movies. However, hidden within this ideal is the message that this sense of singularity can only lead to heartbreak and unhappiness.

Subverting expectations and questioning the morality of the traditional Western leads to complex interrogations of the myth of the American West.

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However, many different character archetypes populate Western films, andin recent years, movies have been playing with the form of the Western to exciting results.Subverting expectations and questioning the morality of the traditional Western leads to complex interrogations of the myth of the American West. Themost rewatchable Western movies of all timeare nuanced portraits of the Old West, incorporating multiple themes and genres and making emotional appeals to the audience. Even if the people on screen cannot fully express the depth of their sadness, it’s easy for the viewer to be moved by these types of films.

10 Seminal Western Movies That Defined The Genre

The western is a cornerstone of American cinema. From Shane to The Searchers, a lot of the earliest genre-defining westerns still hold up today.

10The Rider (2017)

Directed by Chloé Zhao

The bright spots of familial and friendship connections and Brady’s pure love of riding and horses provide respite in his darkest moments.

Chloé Zhao is a landmark director, and her early, lesser-known works are some of her most moving. Working with real people who experienced the film’s story firsthand, Zhao portrayed the lives of several Lakota Sioux people on the Pine Ridge Reservation in South Dakota.The Riderstars Brady Jandreau as a rodeo star who suffers a near-fatal accidentand must stop riding or risk permanent brain damage. Though this seems like a clear choice, for Jandreau’s character, also named Brady, giving up riding would be saying goodbye to one of the biggest parts of himself.

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The Rideris anunderrated Western from the 2010sthat more people should see, as it blends the narrative and documentary styles of filmmaking flawlessly.There is not a moment in the story in which the audience doesn’t feel deeply for Bradyand the people that populate his life. However, it should be noted thatThe Riderdoesn’t merely exploit Brady’s suffering or paint his life as one of pain and nothing else. The bright spots of familial and friendship connections and Brady’s pure love of riding and horses provide respite in his darkest moments.

9The Searchers (1956)

Directed by John Ford

The director ofThe Searchers, John Ford, collaborated with legendary Western hero and star John Wayne many times, butThe Searchersmight be their most complex narrative. For a Western from the 1950s,The Searcherstakes a nuanced approach to portraying Wayne’s character, Ethan. While, at first, he’s painted as the stereotypically masculine American man who would do anything for his family,the lengths he goes to for the sake of his ego soon grow disgusting and tragic.Though Ethan claims to be chasing his niece, Debbie, to rescue her, it’s merely a justification for his violent actions.

The depiction of the injustice and relationship between the Comanche people and the white settlers is by no means perfect inThe Searchers, far from it, in fact. However,there is no question that Ethan is the villainous anti-hero of the storyand that the audience shouldn’t be rooting for him. In seeing the lengths he and the other characters, the audience grasps the brutality of the West, especially when Ethan almost kills Debbie rather than see her remain with the Comanche. There is little happiness to be found withinThe Searchers, only desperate characters who are beyond redemption.

The Assassination of Jesse James by the Coward Robert Ford - Poster

The Searchers

Cast

The Searchers, released in 1956, stars John Wayne as a Civil War veteran who embarks on a years-long quest to rescue his kidnapped niece. Directed by John Ford, the film delves into themes of obsession and racial tension as the protagonist’s motivations become increasingly complex.

8The Gunfighter (1950)

Directed by Henry King

Peck’s character, Jimmy Ringo, is constantly harangued by up-and-coming gunslingers who wish to challenge him and take their place as the next great outlaw.

Gregory Peck’s best moviesshow him playing intellectuals in movies likeTo Kill A Mockingbirdor the romantic lead inRoman Holiday. However, he makes a surprisingly convincing former outlaw inThe Gunfighter, a movie that questions how far a man can go before he can no longer return home. Peck’s character, Jimmy Ringo, is constantly harangued by up-and-coming gunslingers who wish to challenge him and take their place as the next great outlaw. Unfortunately, this prevents him from reuniting with his wife and son.

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WatchThe Gunfighteron Tubi or Peacock.

However, Jimmy has reneged on his fatherly and husbandly duties for many years, and his wife is hesitant to let Jimmy back into the life of her and their son. Whether or not Jimmy deserves his wife’s forgiveness is of less concern to the story than the consequences of living a life of excitement and notoriety for as long as one can. Of course,just when Jimmy is ready to change, he’s fatally shot by one of his young competitorswho hasn’t yet learned that life as the best comes at a cost few are ready to pay.

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7The Assassination Of Jesse James By The Coward Robert Ford (2007)

Directed by Andrew Dominik

The Assassination of Jesse James by the Coward Robert Forddid not immediately strike a chord with audiences when it was released in 2007. However, critics couldn’t ignore the stellar performances and gorgeous visual language of the movie, which helped develop the slow and tragic atmosphere of the narrative. No character gets what they want in the entirety ofJesse James, andthe narrative focuses on the American idealization of the West and the swift disillusionment with this false talethat follows. The love and idol worship that Robert bestows upon Jesse brings him nothing but pain.

Jesse James and Robert Ford were real figures in American history. However, the story is altered to be a clearer one-to-one comparison with the decline of patriotism and faith in the so-called American Dream. Ford’s journey of realizing that Jesse is not the savior or god Ford thought could be viewed as pathetic if not for the fact that it was a universal experience. As a neo-Western,The Assassination of Jesse James by the Coward Robert Fordlooks back at the legacy of the West and acknowledges the loss that’s felt for something that never was.

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6Paris, Texas (1984)

Directed by Wim Wenders

Paris, Texas, toes the line of neo-Western and road movies in its tale of near Shakespearean tragedy.

Paris, Texas, toes the line of neo-Western and road movies in its tale of near Shakespearean tragedy. Wim Wenders is a prolific filmmaker who demonstrates his brilliant understanding of humanity and loss. As much as the film is about the protagonist, Travis (Harry Dean Stanton), and his desire for redemption and acceptance, it’s equally about his young son, Hunter (Hunter Carson), who has barely ever known Travis or his mother, Jane (Nastassja Kinski).Though the dialogue is sparse, much comes across through the setting and actionsof the characters.

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It soon becomes clear that Travis was abusive to Jane, and that was the reason their marriage deteriorated, and Hunter lives with Travis' brother. Though the viewer anticipates that Travis is concealing a dark secret, it’s an intense reveal after the audience has been rooting for Travis to reunite with Jane and get closer to his son. However, in the end, Travis makes it possible for Jane and Hunter to be together, removing himselfand taking the first step towards becoming a better man. The viewer leaves with the weight of the story and the promise of a better future.

5The Proposition (2005)

Directed by John Hillcoat

The Propositionis an excellent Australian Western that tackles the tenuous intersection between familial bonds, the so-called “lawlessness” of the West, and the devastation and discrimination faced by the Indigenous people of Australia.WatchingThe Propositionis a harrowing experience as death and destruction populate every scene,and the movie isn’t afraid to portray the most horrible acts in graphic detail. At the heart of the story is a tale of brother against brother, as Guy Pearce’s Charlie Burns is sent to kill his older brother, Arthur (Danny Huston).

By the end of the film, Charlie is unrecognizable and alone, having lost both his brothers and much of his sense of self.He’s forced to commit equally violent acts as the men he despisesto protect himself and free his younger brother, but all his actions are for naught.The Propositiongives the viewer little choice but to care deeply for the few characters who contain glimmers of humanity and care for someone other than themselves. Of course, it’s these characters that often suffer the most.

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4The Great Silence (1968)

Directed by Sergio Corbucci

Directed by Sergio Corbucci,The Great Silenceis thought of as one of Corbucci’s best films and one of the greatest Spaghetti Westerns of all time.

Like all great Spaghetti Westerns,The Great Silenceis in conversation with much more than the Western genre and uses its position as an outsider in Hollywood to comment on bigger political issues. Directed by Sergio Corbucci,The Great Silenceis thought of as one of Corbucci’s best films and one of the greatest Spaghetti Westerns of all time.It’s a bleak take on the genre, but the fantastic performances from Jean-Louis Trintignant and Klaus Kinskias the hero Silence and his nemesis, Loco.

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The plight of Silence is an enduring sense of sadness throughout the story, as the narrative begins with the slaughter of his family and his loss of the ability to speak.Though he finds some comfort in allies and lovers along the way, Silence’s life is defined by lonelinessand his standing up to the injustices of the time. Additionally, though it’s clear that Silence’s fate was always written in stone, his tragic end hits just as hard for the audience after spending the entire film rooting for him.

3Brokeback Mountain (2005)

Directed by Ang Lee

Equal parts romance, drama, and Western,Brokeback Mountainwas a groundbreaking film that was an early mainstream depiction of an LGBTQ+ relationship that received great critical and audience acclaim. Starring Heath Ledger and Jake Gyllenhaal as the main couple, Ennis and Jack,the movie is set in the early 1960s and chronicles the doomed relationship between the two men who never get the chance to live as their true selves.It’s this fear and shame that keeps them apart and never allows them to bring their passion and love into the open.

Jack wants to see each other more and explore his queerness, while Ennis is too ashamed to act on his feelings with anyone but Jack when they’re alone on the mountain. This prevents Ennis from ever admitting the full scale of his love for Jack until it’s too late. Unfortunately,Brokeback Mountainalso grapples with the realities of how dangerous it was to be queer during this period,and Jack is killed in a hate crime. It’s absolutely heartbreaking on its own, and seeing Ennis' reaction and his goodbye to Jack is emotionally harrowing.

Brokeback Mountain

Brokeback Mountain is a film set in 1960s Wyoming where two men, portrayed by Heath Ledger and Jake Gyllenhaal, navigate a complex emotional and sexual relationship. As they marry and start families, their enduring bond challenges societal norms and profoundly impacts their lives.

2True Grit (2010)

Directed by Joel and Ethan Coen

Though she’s just fourteen, Mattie quickly proves herself to be resourceful and determined to find money and a Deputy U.S. Marshall to track down her father’s killer and see him hanged.

The Coen Brother’s reimagining of the classic 1969 film of the same name,True Grit, is a tale of woe from the start.Mattie Ross (Hailee Steinfeld) is left on her own to contend with the brutality of the Westwhen her father is murdered. Though she’s just fourteen, Mattie quickly proves herself to be resourceful and determined to find money and a Deputy U.S. Marshall to track down her father’s killer and see him hanged. She never expected that this man, Cogburn (Jeff Bridges), would become a surrogate father figure and that her life would change even more.

Throughout the movie, Mattie and Cogburn are separated, kidnapped, and faced off with the meanest men in all the West, but Mattie’s spirit is never broken. It’s easy to forget that she’s only a child dealing with forces and cruelty that she had never been exposed to before. In the end, Cogburn saves her, but their relationship is not one that can exist outside the open country.It’s devastating when the movie jumps forward in time, and just before they’re about to be reunited, Cogburn dies,leaving Mattie alone again in the world.

True Grit

An adaptation of Charles Portis' 1968 novel of the same name, True Grit tells the story of 14-year-old Mattie Ross (Hailee Steinfeld), who enlists the help of morally-questionable lawman Rooster Cogburn (Jeff Bridges) in order to avenge the death of her father by apprehending the criminal Tom Chaney (Josh Brolin). They are joined by a cocksure Texas Ranger named Labeouf (Matt Damon), who insists upon collecting the bounty on Chaney’s head. The three travel across the Arkansas plains in pursuit of Chaney, risking life and limb against outlaws and wild animals in pursuit of justice.

10 Great Westerns Where The Hero Isn’t Actually A Gunslinger

Though shootouts and marksmanship are essential parts of the Western genre, plenty of movies allow their hero to have many other talents.

1Unforgiven (1992)

Directed by Clint Eastwood

Ofall the Westerns Clint Eastwood made,Unforgiven, which he directed and starred in, was his magnum opus. In the film, he grapples with his legacy as a Western star and his movie’s impact on culture and cinema.His character, Will Munny, an extension of Eastwood himself, is an aging gunslingerwho saddles up for one more adventure against one of the most heinous villains in movie history, Little Bill Daggett (Gene Hackman). The cruelty of Daggett is casual and cutting, forcing the morally ambiguous Munny to take up the mantle of hero, even if he doesn’t wear it well.

There are quite a few casualties throughoutUnforgiven, and though Munny makes it out alive, it’s not without great cost. There is an air of grief and sadness from the movie’s start, as Munny is a widower raising his children alone. His loss is almost painted as recompense for his past as a violent outlaw.Even when Munny demonstrates amazing feats of skill, it’s with a heavy heart,and there are no winners by the conclusion of the story. The heroic cowboys soon turn out to be scared, weak men who all have something to hide and be ashamed of.

Unforgiven

Unforgiven follows retired gunslinger Will Munny as he is drawn back into his former life for a final mission, seeking justice with his old partner and a young outlaw called The Schofield Kid.