So this is a thing now? I remember when ``Western'' implied a time period

so this is a thing now? I remember when ``Western'' implied a time period

Western is actually a direction.

thanks for showing me this OP, hyped

I don't know what you're implying. He's a cavalryman isn't he, which seems western enough to me

He means the use of "period" is redundant

I dunno. I feel like a film can be considered a Western without also being a period piece.

I'll tell you what's a thing now, moustaches. I mean just look at that beautiful hairy thing. They're all over the place in movies nowadays.

Kill Bill Vol 2

Hell or High Water, Sicario, and Wind River have been called neo-westerns

literally one site decided to use a choice of words that some fucker just thought up - what point are you trying to make?

>go west
>to reach the east
bravo

damn Christopher Columbus looks like *that*?!

>this title is colloquially redundant but draws a viable technical distinction lmao

Spoony?

...

this
plus you get shit like cowboys vs aliens

And No Country.

Genuinely enjoyed him (along with everyone else) in the 3:10 to Yuma remake.

Just realized I need 3:10 to Yuma webms.

Yes. Most people will (justifiably) assume an approximate time and place when thinking of a "western", but a movie can be set anywhere and still satisfy the genre's requirements. Several good examples have already been posted in this thread.

This is a really dumb thing to quibble about, it's not even a question pedantics.

>This is a really dumb thing to quibble about, it's not even a question pedantics.

First day here?

Another Goddamn flat-earther.