If you want to see a great (if also absurdly violent and bloody) Western about the dying days of the wild west, check out Sam Peckinpah’s The Wild Bunch (1969). Excellent movie, set in 1913.
Another really great, and highly underrated film about the end of the Old West, is The Shootist.
It’s John Wayne’s last movie, and it serves as a metaphor for his acting career. He plays a legendary, but aging, dying gunfighter who is determined to go down shooting, and other gunfighters come to town to test him. It also features late performances by Lauren Bacall and Jimmy Stewart, and an early film performance by Ron Howard.
A truly great, quiet film, that most people have never heard of.
This was very surprising after having seen a few Western movies from the 1940s. They were already making movies about the period which was in living memory for a lot of people.
I had no idea it was that young.
This lead me to this fun fact: The last stage coach robbery was 2 years after WWI began.
WWI began 1914
Last stage coach robbery was 1916
Also, Titanic had already been sitting at the bottom of the Atlantic for 4 years (1912) when that stage coach was robbed.
If you want to see a great (if also absurdly violent and bloody) Western about the dying days of the wild west, check out Sam Peckinpah’s The Wild Bunch (1969). Excellent movie, set in 1913.
Fffffff, that’s like a movie set in 1974 released today.
Another really great, and highly underrated film about the end of the Old West, is The Shootist.
It’s John Wayne’s last movie, and it serves as a metaphor for his acting career. He plays a legendary, but aging, dying gunfighter who is determined to go down shooting, and other gunfighters come to town to test him. It also features late performances by Lauren Bacall and Jimmy Stewart, and an early film performance by Ron Howard.
A truly great, quiet film, that most people have never heard of.
This was very surprising after having seen a few Western movies from the 1940s. They were already making movies about the period which was in living memory for a lot of people.
Wyatt Earp was an adviser on early silent westerns
I suppose it makes some sense. We were making 1970s throwback shows and movies as early as the 1990s.
Holy shit…
Oh yeah it involved trains and was interrupted by the civil war