I love movies. During my formative years going to the cinema was the
highlight of the week. I grew up in the seventies and was twelve when
Star Wars came out so I suppose I'm of that generation - the sci-fi
kids, the blockbuster bunch. And yet my favourite movies have always
been westerns, a genre that was in the final stages of its golden age by the time I was born.
I
have an extensive DVD collection and most of my films are stored by
genre - pictured left is part of my western collection. Click on image for a
bigger view.
There are some
classic westerns in my collection - from the acknowledged classics to
curious B-westerns that are often far better than they have the right to
be.
Look at the top shelf and there is a box set called 50 great
westerns and there really are 50 films there - from early Roy Rogers to
Italian Westerns. I got this off Ebay a few years back and I've watched
every film even if the transfer is not of the finest quality with none
of the films remastered. But it contains the unusual White Comanche
which features a very young Captain Kirk as a half breed Comanche. This
is actually a very strong B WESTERN.
There
are several Wyatt Earp movies in my collection - Tombstone, My Darling
Clementine, Gunfight at the Ok Corral, Hour of the Gun and Wyatt Earp -
I'll have to be contrary on this but Wyatt Earp is my favourite simply
because it covers so much of Earp's life when most others concentrate on
the infamous gunfight . Probably Tombstone features the best filmed
version of the gunfight, though but the best film for a cinematic
experience is John Ford's Clementine which features a brilliant
performance by Henry Fonda even if it does play loose and fast with
historical fact.
I've actually got an original wanted poster for Wyatt Earp framed above my desk - this is one of my proudest possessions. Well when I say original - it is actually a reproduction but it's from the 1920's so it's original enough for me and I paid a small fortune for it.
There
are both 3:10's to Yuma - and the original is my favourite. And there's
a large selection of John Wayne westerns - I've even got his debut as
Singing Sandy - yep, the Duke was the first singing cowboy. My favourite
Wayne would be The Searchers, Red River or the elegiac The Shootist.
I'm not one of those who thinks Wayne couldn't act and everytime someone
says he always played himself I point them to Red River, The Searchers,
True Grit,The Shootist- all very different performances, all
technically brilliant. Wayne was an excellent actor. A recent addition was the Coen's version of True Grit which whilst excellent will never eclipse the Wayne original.
It goes without saying that all of the Eastwood westerns are there -from Leone to The Unforgiven. In fact I recently bought a great Eastwood box set that contains thirty five movies, that's all his Warner Brothers films up to his recent Edgar Hoover biopic I've got all of Eastwood's movies though, including the ones he did with Universal,Paramount and MGM.
I've got the
full three seasons of Deadwood - I'm still furious this was canceled
and left so open ended. This really was a brilliant series. And on a more lighthearted but nonetheless entertaining note there's also a box set of Alias Smith and Jones and the complete run of McCloud. The latter of course was the modern day, fish out of water western series that starred Dennis Weaver.
On a
lower shelf - not visible in the pic - is Ken Burn's eleven and a half
hour documentary masterpiece , The West. This covers the West from 1500 -
1914 and was hailed by The New York Times upon its first release. This
may be the definitive documentary on The West and I plan to cover each
part in separate postings on this blog. I paid £80 for this set which is
the most I've ever spent on a DVD but it's well worth it. I've watched
it several times and as someone who writes, Western novels, I tend to
dip into it from time to time.
The days where I step into a store and find a western movie I don't already own are rare, which is something of a pain because I'm always on the lookout for a new western fix. Ahh well at least I've got Tarantino's take on the genre to look forward to when Django hits UK cinema screens early next year.
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1 comment:
Gary,
In the US there are a number of those public domain Western movie sets at WalMart, Best Buy and so on. Once has to be careful or you get the same films over and over under new covers/new packaging.
Another set I would recommend is the following.
I picked up last year the SPAGHETTI WESTERN 44 MOVIE COLLECTION box set which has quite a few good flicks on it spread over 11 dvds.
(If you watch on ebay and be patient you can grab a copy for about $10 although it retails for $20.)
The set has films with Lee Van Cleef, Jack Palance, Chuck Conners, William Shatner, Warren Oates, etc. plus the Sartana series. I thought it was a great pick up.
Tom Roberts
Black Dog books
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