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The Rough Guide to Westerns

by Paul Simpson

(London: Rough Guides/Penguin, 2006)
312 pages. Illustrated.
ISBN: 1843536498.
Rough Guides Reference Series.
Paperback. $14.99

Review by Dr. Kirk Bane

March 3, 2020
"The Good, the Bad and the Ugly could have been completely different. Luckily, James Coburn and Charles Bronson rejected the $15,000 Italian director Sergio Leone could pay a lead for his first Western, so he chose Rawhide hunk Clint Eastwood, who, dubious but ambitious, accepted. The two embarked on a stylish, innovative adventure, Eastwood contributing and paring down his own spare dialogue, Ennio Morricone composing the florid, anthemic music and Leone patenting a genre known as the spaghetti Western." So contends Paul Simpson in this superb reference book. Filled with perceptive insights and laden with absorbing film facts, The Rough Guide to Westerns belongs in the library of every serious Western fan.

Sections in this generously illustrated volume include "The Trail: The History of the Western," "The Canon: 50 Classic Westerns," "The Stock Company: Western Archetypes," "Western Country: Iconic Locations," and "Way out West: Westerns Around the World." Readers may take issue with Simpson's Western Canon, in which he discusses his most important oaters. "With over 8000 Westerns to choose from," he asserts, "selecting 50 that are essential to the genre is an arduous task, doomed to provoke incredulity and debate about inclusions and omissions." The following movies comprise Simpson's Top Ten list: "Shane," "One Upon a Time in the West," "The Searchers," "Pat Garrett and Billy the Kid," "Johnny Guitar," "Warlock," "The Outlaw Josey Wales," "Red River," "Bad Day at Black Rock," and "The Tall T."

Consider four passages from Simpson's opinionated, observant, and well-written publication.

On Randolph Scott: "Tall, light and handsome, with piercing blue eyes, Scott always seemed most at home in Westerns. By the 1950s, though physically still in prime condition, his face had acquired a weary weatherbeaten quality which brought gravitas to the laconic, fatalistic, self-reliant persona which was central to the seven movies he made with [director] Budd Boetticher…Only an actor with Scott's sure sense of his range and skills could have so convincingly portrayed Boetticher's slightly archaic hero in these bittersweet Westerns…Scott, who read the Wall Street Journal between takes, was a multi-millionaire and, after the brilliant farewell of Ride the High Country (1962), hung up his spurs. Yet his image lives on."

On The Magnificent Seven (1960): "In the face of stiff competition from a TV schedule bursting with rootin'-tootin' Westerns, The Magnificent Seven represents Hollywood playing its trump card, offering-count'em-seven gunfighters in one film!...[Director John] Sturges had a flair for choreographing action sequences, composing scenes and handling actors. The armed truce on set between Steve McQueen and Yul Brynner never quite erupted into open conflict-Brynner's threat to remove McQueen's hat if he kept trying to steal scenes settled the issue-but the tension works well on screen…The movie benefits from the genius of Elmer Bernstein, whose iconic hummable theme tune, later used to advertise Marlboro cigarettes, was the highlight of a memorable Oscar-nominated score."

On Robert Ryan: "He had obvious physical assets as a villain. His lanky physique could seem surprisingly threatening, his distinctive rasping voice gave his dialogue a bitter authority and he could be more menacing with a look than other actors with a gun. Yet he infused his best bad guys with a sense of secret hurt and intense bitter emotion that made him all the more watchable…his career revived in the late 1960s, with three Westerns: Richard Brooks' The Professionals (1966), Hour of the Gun (1967) and the glorious farewell that was his turn as Thornton in The Wild Bunch (1969). He was ill by then but his tall, gaunt, grey presence perfectly captured his character's spiritual depletion."

On Little Big Man (1970): "[Director] Arthur Penn's picaresque revisionist Western-drawing stunningly obvious parallels between the US Army's massacre of Native Americans and the slaughter of Vietnamese civilians at My Lai-is one of the biggest-grossing Westerns of all time…The movie is based on Thomas Berger's novel of the same name. Dustin Hoffman is Jack Crabb, aka Little Big Man, an allegedly 121-year-old white man who was raised by Cheyenne. In flashback, he selectively recalls his life, drawing on memories of Western 'heroes' (such as Custer and Wild Bill Hickok), massacres and last stands…Penn's film is epic, funny, intelligent, neatly constructed…and ambitious…Little Big Man is an audacious Western, worth watching for a tone and scenes unlike almost any other film in the genre and for what it says about the time it was made."

Entertaining and informative, The Rough Guide to Westerns, with its eye-catching cover of Jimmy Stewart, will undoubtedly appeal to cinema enthusiasts, particularly those with a fondness for oaters.
Dr. Kirk Bane,
Book Review Editor,
Central Texas Historical Association


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