We are here today, not to shoot the bloody hell out of each
other, but to celebrate one another. Today, my fellow gunslingers, barmen,
horse riders, sheriffs, bandits, damsels, whores, we gather to admire what it
is we live through each and every day. Call it the ‘wild, wild west’, we call
just call it the good old west.
Many filmmakers have taken their chances on depicting our
lively lifestyles for the purposes of great entertainment. Over the past few
months we’ve seen some of the very best attempts from Hollywood and elsewhere. Not
every film hit the same notes as strongly, with some rising above the rest with
regards certain particularities of how we rule the west. So, without further
ado, let us highlight some of these movies in the categories that best
represent us. Here are the Silver Six's (for seven categories)!
Films in contention
The Wild Bunch
The Proposition
The Good, the Bad, the Weird
Pale Rider
The Shootist
Opend Range
Ravenous
There’s no place
like a home on the range (Best looking film, most authentic in terms of
its depiction of the Old West)
Open Range (with special mention to The Good, the Bad, the Weird). Open
Range takes the award for best looking and most authentic looking western
film not only because it is gorgeous, but because it strives to show off a
great variety of places to the viewer. A large old town under ideal conditions,
the same large town under a deluge of rain and how that can aversely affect the
dirt roads, the prairies, bars, restaurants, a doctor’s office, etc. Open Range feels as if it takes place in
a fully realized world straight out of the old west.
I’m going to send
you to your grave, you vermin! (Best Death)
Boss kills rival by
shooting through a wall in Open Range
(special mention to Park Chang-yi in The
Good, the Bad, the Weird). Bill did a
tremendous job expressing how viscerally powerful this moment was during the
tremendous final set piece in Open Range
was. It was a welcome surprise and demonstrated the understanding of the filmmakers
of the world they created. A shotgun against a thin wooden wall? Just shoot
through it!
-Well, you don’t
see that roll into town every day....(Best unexpected moment)
The return of Hart in
Ravenous (special mention going
to Boss killing rival by shooting through a wall in Open Range). In a movie filled to the brim with
little and large unexpected moments, this one took the cake for me. Not only
did I have no idea that Hart would come back to life, but the fact that he
actually goes along with the Colonel’s plan, for a while at least, was also
surprising. Thankfully, Hart realizes the error of his ways and eventually
pleads Captain Boyd to kill him off.
Get come some!
(Best shootout)
Opening scene from The Wild
Bunch (final gun fight in Open
Range). Shootouts are a staple of the western genre, and to commemorate the
best one we watched over the past few months, we go back to not only the very
first movie of the marathon under review but also the opening minutes of said
film. The stakes, the setting, the editing, the cinematography, all those and
more demonstrated the brutality of how people could die in the Old West. For
whatever reason, Sam Peckinpah just knew how to depict a person’s final seconds
alive in shockingly memorable fashion. The opening sequence of The Wild Bunch makes no jokes about what
is to come over the next couple hours.
Head honcho
(Best male performance)
Ray Winstone in Proposition (special mention to John
Wayne in The Shootist). Clearly the most
significant highlight in John Hillcoat’s film if anyone remembers my review. So
much so that I would have better enjoyed the movie had his Captain Stanley been
made the principal character of the tale as opposed to the Guy Pierce
character! Just a fantastically relatable, sympathetic guy despite all the
terrible things he has surrounded himself with and even been corrupted with to
a degree.
The head honcho’s
better second half (Best female performance)
Lauren Bacall in The Shootist
(special mention to Emily Watson in The Proposition).
Bacall was the ultimate enemy to John Wayne’s overconfident, old school ways. She
could put him in his place better than any dastardly criminal or bullet ever
could. But she exuded more than just that. She really was a great women, showing
strength in character and even a certain charm despite whatever cold mask she
attempted to hide herself behind at times.
A motion picture
is worth a thousand words (Best film)
The Wild Bunch
(Special mention to Open Range). Once
again we go back to the film that opened the marathon. Almost everything about
this film exceeded whatever expectations I might have had. The source of the
conflict at the center of the story, director Peckinpah’s willingness to let
characters breath in scenes, the unforgettable bloodbaths that open and close
the picture, the historical context, etc. There were more than one fine films
in the marathon, but I don’t need to think twice before declaring The Wild Bunch as not only the best of
the bunch, but the one I know I’ll be re-watching most often in the years to
come.
Readers of Between the Seats and Bill’s Movie Emporium,
thank you for following along in the Shootout at High Noon marathon. It was
tremendous fun. Always remember to keep your six shooter handy when riding into
towns you ain’t familiar with, and stay kind to the dames, if you know what I
mean.
2 comments:
Good show my man, good show. :)
I enjjoyed reading this
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