Home Artists Posts Import Register

Content

'Western Week' is here! Not planned, but I'm not complaining 😁 I don't need to say anything about Firefly, you all know by now how much I love it! The Magnificent Seven is your HIT THE DECADE! poll winner before we round off the week with the final instalment of the Man With No Name/Dollars trilogy. 

Now, I need to explain. I realised there's a 148 minute and 178 minute version of The Good, the Bad and the Ugly. I did plan on doing the original version but I couldn't get it anywhere. So, with it being a 3 hour film, the YouTube edit may be in two parts (the longer the video, the more likely YouTube is to copyright claim/block it 🤦🏼‍♀️). I'll decide when I come to edit it, depending on how long it looks like it's going to be. If it's in two parts, it'll be a Saturday and Sunday upload, if it's one video it'll be uploaded on Sunday. Hope that makes sense 🤪

Files

Comments

Greg Kipp

Unforgiven and Tombstone are great westerns, but there are some amazing movies in the genre that often go ignored or unnoticed. -Jeremiah Johnson -Open Range -The Outlaw Josey Wales -Dances with Wolves -Quigley Down Under -The Sackets Those are a bit a few that come to mind. I hope you find appreciation in the genre Dawn by starting with some of the movies that laid the foundation for the modern westerns

Elliot Nesterman

Two films that work as sort of bookends are "Little Big Man" (1970) and "Dances with Wolves" (1990). Both are about white settlers who learn about the culture, etc. of the Plains Indians, "Little Big Man" stars Dustin Hoffman and "Dances" stars Kevin Costner. Both are based on novels, "Little Big Man" having won multiple publishing awards, and both are worth watching. Another film which has flown under the radar in recent years is "A Man Called Horse" (1970). It stars Richard Harris as an English aristocrat who is captured and enslaved by the Sioux.