Straight-Shootin' Facts About Westerns


For more than a century, audiences have flocked to theatres to watch the adventures of heroic horsemen like John Wayne and Clint Eastwood. The Western has a distinctly American aesthetic, but in the 21st century, far removed from the Old West, filmmakers from all over the world are using Western tropes to tell increasingly sophisticated tales of resilience, courage, and the difference between good, bad, and ugly. So saddle up pardner, because here are 42 straight-shootin’ facts about Westerns.


Westerns Facts

42. The Great Train Robbery

The first Western was also one of the first movies ever to use modern film-making techniques. Clocking in at 12 minutes, The Great Train Robbery tells the story of…well, of a great train robbery, and may have been inspired by an actual train robbery committed by Butch Cassidy just three years prior.

 Wikimedia Commons

40. Cripple Creek Bar Room Scene

Even though The Great Train Robbery was the first real movie, it was not the first time a Western scene was depicted on screen. In 1899, James White directed Cripple Creek Bar-Room Scene, a one-minute scene of a Colorado saloon which established many of the tropes of the Western genre.

 Shutterstock

39. Broncho Billy

The first big Western star was “Broncho” Billy Anderson. Broncho Billy played THREE roles in The Great Train Robbery. From 1910 to 1919, he starred in more than 400 “Broncho Billy” serials with names like “Broncho Billy and the Baby” and “Broncho Billy’s Narrow Escape.”

 Wikimedia Commons

38. 1939

1939 is considered one of the best years in film history–that was the year of Gone with the Wind, Mr. Smith Goes to Washington and The Wizard of Oz. It was also a particularly good year for Westerns, with studios granting more and more of their budget to Western movies. 1939 saw the release of Union Pacific, Jesse James, and perhaps the first great Western film, Stagecoach.

 Wikimedia Commons

37. Stagecoach

Stagecoach was an important film for several reasons. Not only was it one of the most expensive Westerns made to that point, it was also a breakthrough role for John Wayne. Stagecoach was also iconic Western director John Ford’s first sound film.

 Flickr

36. Back in the Stagecoach Again

Stagecoach was remade as a TV movie in 1986. It starred Johnny Cash, Willie Nelson, and Kris Kristofferson.

 Stagecoach (1986), Heritage Entertainment Inc.

35. A Lifelong Collaboration

Stagecoach marked the first time John Ford directed John Wayne in a starring role. Wayne and Ford would collaborate for the next 25 years, making nearly 25 films, including Fort Apache, The Searchers, and How the West Was Won.

 Wikimedia Commons

 

34. The Duke

John Wayne’s real name was Marion Mitchell Morrison. In need of something a little tougher, he was billed in his first movie as “Duke” Morrison. "John Wayne" was later selected for him by the head of Fox Studios. Wayne had no say in what his name would be, but hey, most people don’t.

 Wikipedia

33. Wyatt Earp

Wayne owed his film persona to Wild West legend Wyatt Earp. Wayne claimed to have been introduced to Earp by cowboy movie star Tom Mix who, like John Ford, was a close friend of the legendary lawman.

 Wikimedia Commons

32. Yakima

Wayne also drew his persona from Yakima Canutt, a rodeo rider and Hollywood stuntman. Wayne learned horsemanship from Canutt, and together the two invented the standard form of screen fighting that actors still use today.

 Wikimedia Commons

31. Rising Stock

Wayne was part of what was called the "John Ford Stock Company," the crew of actors Ford regularly used for his Westerns. The group included Henry Fonda, Harry Carey (the actor, not the Cubs' announcer), and Wayne’s best friend, Ward Bond. Some members of the company made as many as 40 films with Ford.

 Wikipedia

30. Right on the Money

A lesser-known member of Ford’s company was Chief John Big Tree. A member of the Seneca nation, Big Tree claimed to have been the model for the “Indian Head” nickel.

 Wikipedia

29. Everybody’s a Critic

John Ford won six Academy Awards over the course of his career, including four for Best Director. None of them were for Westerns.

 Wikimedia Commons

28. Monument Valley

John Ford loved filming in Monument Valley, Utah; he filmed seven of his most successful movies there, including Stagecoach and The Searchers.

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27. Red River

In 1948, John Wayne starred in Red River. This time, Wayne worked with director Howard Hawks instead of his frequent collaborator John Ford. After seeing Wayne’s performance, Ford remarked “I never knew that big son-of-a-b**** could act!”

 Wikimedia Commons

26. Buckle Up

When Red River finished shooting, Hawks gave Wayne a belt buckle with the logo of the Red River D (the cattle brand of the ranch from the movie). Wayne can be seen wearing the buckle in his later movies, including El Dorado.

 Flickr

25. Hollywood Indians

Frequently, Native Americans were deployed as the antagonists in Westerns. Needless to say, the lives and cultures of Native Americans were seldom depicted accurately–anachronisms abound, and cultures and languages were often mixed in a senseless hodgepodge. Worse, the important roles almost never went to actual Native Americans. Burt Lancaster, Charles Bronson, and even Audrey Hepburn played lead or supporting roles as Native Americans in Westerns.

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24. Historical Heroes

Perhaps more than any other genre, Western movies have relied on historical events and characters for material. Wyatt Earp has been portrayed in more than 40 films. Billy the Kid has been portrayed in more than 60, including a 42-film series that ran from 1940 to 1946.

 Wikipedia

23. Searching for Accuracy

Still, that doesn’t mean Westerns always strived to be an accurate depiction of the Old West. The Searchers, for example, is rife with temporally out-of-place objects: set in 1868, it shows characters using aluminum pots, riveted jeans and sun-glasses, none of which had been invented. In one scene, a car is even visible in the background.

 Wikipedia

22. High Noon

Gary Cooper’s career was waning when he was offered the role of Will Kane in High Noon. The role had alredy been offered to John Wayne, Gregory Peck, Charlton Heston, Burt Lancaster, Marlon Brando, Kirk Douglas and Montgomery Clift—all turned it down. High Noon was nominated for Best Picture at the Academy Awards that year; Cooper won Best Actor.

 Wikimedia Commons

21. How the West Was Won

In 1960, MGM Studios attempted to make a massive Western epic in the style of Ben-Hur or The Ten Commandments. The result was How the West Was Won, a four-part, two-and-a-half-hour history of the west. It cost an eye-popping (for the time) $15 million dollars and starred more than two dozen major Hollywood stars.

 Flickr

20. All-Stars

The cast of How the West Was Won included John Wayne, Henry Fonda, Jimmy Stewart, Gregory Peck, Karl Malden, and Debbie Reynolds. Each art of the movie's four parts were taken by a different director, most notably John Ford.

 Wikipedia

19. From the High Plains to the High Seas

During the filming of a scene on a logging train in How the West Was Won, stuntman Bob Morgan lost his leg. After years of recuperation, he returned to acting, landing a role as a peg-legged pirate in the movie Swashbuckler.

 How the West Was Won, Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer

18. The Movie That Got Made Three Times

BH McCampbell’s short story “Rio Bravo” was made into a movie in 1959. Rio Bravo was then remade in 1966 as El Dorado, and again in 1970 as Rio Lobo. Suffice it to say, by 1970 the Western genre was running out of steam.

 Wikimedia Commons

17. Spaghetti Westerns

While Westerns were falling out of fashion stateside, a generation of Italian directors began experimenting with the Western genre. These Spaghetti Westerns, as they've come to be called, borrowed imagery and plot points from American films, ratcheted up the violence, and became hugely popular.

 Wikipedia

16. For a Few Dollars More

The Spaghetti Westerns also provided work for washed-up or unknown American actors. The most successful of these was Clint Eastwood, but Burt Lancaster, Burt Reynolds, Henry Fonda and scores of others appeared in Spaghetti Westerns in the late 60s and 70s.

 Wikipedia

15. Sergio Leone

Director Sergio Leone is synonymous with the Spaghetti Western. Leone is best known for the "Dollars Trilogy." The three films—A Fistful of Dollars, For A Few Dollars More, and The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly—starred Clint Eastwood, and have earned nearly $55 million since the trilogy’s completion in 1966.

 Flickr

14. Ennio Morricone

The iconic music of Leone’s Spaghetti Westerns was composed by Italian composer Ennio Morricone. The main theme, "The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly" actually made it to number four on the Billboard pop charts in 1968.

 Wikipedia

13. Red Westerns

“Red Westerns,” made in the Soviet Union, depicted noble Native Americans defending their land against intruding white settlers. The Westerns made by studios like DEFA were some of Joseph Stalin’s favorite films.

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12. The Chief

Among the biggest stars of the Red Westerns was Gojko Mitić, a Serbian actor who was often cast as a heroic Native American chief. While visiting the United States in the 1990s, he was made an honorary Sioux Chief in recognition of his positive portrayals of Native Americans.

 Flickr

11. John Wayne’s Last Ride

John Wayne’s 50-year career came to an end in 1976. In his final film, The Shootist, he plays an ageing gunfighter dying of cancer. Wayne himself succumbed to the disease three years later.

 Getty Images

10. Genre Explosion

While the classic Western fell out of favor in the 1960s and 70s, directors still turned to the Western as a genre exercise. This led to an explosion of Western subgenres, like the Space Western (think Star Wars) and the Acid Western, a surreal, psychedelic take on Spaghetti Westerns.

 Flickr

9. Westerns Ride Again

While the Westerns’ heyday ended in the early 1960s, filmmakers continued to revisit the genre over the next few decades. In the last decade, Hollywood has produced remakes of 3:10 to Yuma, True Grit and The Magnificent 7, to name a few.

 Getty Images

8. No Thanks to the Academy

Despite the enduring popularity of Westerns—and the sheer number of Westerns made—only four Westerns have ever won the Oscar for Best Picture. Three of them were made after 1990.

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7. What Goes Around, Comes Around

Seeing the success of films like Once Upon a Time in the West, American films began borrowing from the Spaghetti Westerns. Hang ‘Em High and High Plains Drifter, two films starring and produced by Clint Eastwood, both took major cues from the Dollars Trilogy.

 Getty Images

6. Generation Gap

John Wayne was offered the lead role in High Plains Drifter but turned it down. He detested the moral ambivalence of the film, and wrote a letter scolding Eastwood which read “That isn’t what the West was about.”

 Flickr

5. The Singin’ Cowboys

The most popular early Westerns were “Singing Cowboy” movies, featuring the likes of Gene Autry and Roy Rogers. They’d round up cattle rustlers, then sing a song about it. In some of John Wayne's earlier roles even he appeared as "Singin’ Sandy Saunders;" Wayne had a terrible voice, and his songs were dubbed in by the director’s son.

 Wikimedia Commons

4. Number One With a Bullet

John Wayne’s character in The Searchers has a catchphrase: “That’ll be the day.” In 1956, an aspiring songwriter named Buddy Holly saw the movie. “That’ll Be the Day” became his first hit, reaching number one on the Billboard charts.

 Wikimedia Commons

3. Cowboys and Samurais

Americans did not shy away from foreign influence when it came to their Westerns either. Not only were Spaghetti Westerns popular, but films by Japanese director Akira Kurosawa also provided new material. The Magnificent 7, for one example, was based on Kurosawa’s Seven Samurai, while A Fistful of Dollars openly plagiarized the film Yojimbo.

 Flickr

2. Going to California

It wasn’t until 1910, when pioneer filmmaker DW Griffiths directed In Old California, that a Western movie was made in anything approximating an actual Western setting. It was the first film ever shot in the little, unknown town of Hollywood, California.

 Getty Images

1. No Laughing Matter

The highest-grossing Western of the 1970s was Mel Brooks's Western parody Blazing Saddles.

 Blazing Saddles, Warner Bros.

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