What is the best Western made after 1990?

What is the best Western made after 1990?

Other urls found in this thread:

youtube.com/watch?v=XYmogdTvZXE
twitter.com/SFWRedditVideos

true grit or no country for old men

the one you choose says a lot about you; for example if you say "there will be blood" its clear you're a retard

Jesse James.
>no country for old men
Not a real Western, although it's a good film.

Unforgiven and theres no doubt about that

Tombstone

you already posted it m8

Unforgiven. How is anybody doubting that!?

Slow West
Bone Tomahawk
Sicario
Blue Ruin

This. Best western of all time in my opinion.

hi clint

...

The Last Kino.

Can someone rec me some Westerns? I liked everything by Leone but didn’t really like The Searchers. True Grit was alright. El Topo was fun too.

Absolutely Unforgiven

True Grit and Tombstone are up there as well. 3:10 to Yuma remake is honorable mention.

Would you say it lead to the rise of 'All Western Kurt Russell'?

cunt

Well he can grow a cool cowboy moustache in like 2 days. I'm sure he's typecast considering he acts the same in all his western roles. When he's in a western he's just acting how he did with Wyatt Earp.

I'm not mad though. He should do more and become the next Clint Eastwood.

the great silence
ulzana's raid
white sun of the desert

Thank you friendo

These and maybe Open Range.

...

The Three Burials of Melquiades Estrada

the Best Western near me is decent

I'm going to throw out a wild card and say shanghai noon.

Open Range had some of the most god tier gunfight sounds. The mic work was excellent that double-barrel to the painting in bar scene fucking A+

GOD FUCKING DAMNIT
this is fucking under rated lol

THE PROPOSITION

Westworld

Its Unforgiven by a thousand miles.

good bad weird is the most entertaining.

This

The Assassination of Jesse James

hell or high water

I honestly can't get into that movie.

not really a western

Breaking Bad

true but it's about a huge figure in western folklore, that makes it count imo

...

If you like Leone, check out Sergio Cornucci.

Unforgiven
Tombstone
True Grit (remake)
3:10 (remake)
The Assassination of Jesse James

>Sicario
>western

I guess Traffic (2000) is a western too by that standard

the feels man, the feels. Casey is a legend

youtube.com/watch?v=XYmogdTvZXE

>This is my town! If you niggers live to see the dawn, it's because I allow it. I'm in charge of everything! I decide who lives or who dies!

Jesus christ, Raimi.

...

so underrated

>not liking the searchers
Pleb detected. If you like spaghetti westerns there is the Great Silence.

Just to piss off Sup Forums.

Young Guns 2.

Open Range is fucking superb.

Watch it if you have insomnia trust me, you will be cured

How far west do they have to be for you to consider it a western?

3:10 to Yuma, obviously.

Open Range has restraint, but two hours of restraint is a bit much. The final gunfight is pretty great, but its too short and not really close enough to warrant almost two hours of slow build up. Fantastic acting though.

I'm assuming we mean other than Unforgiven, in which case it is probably the Trump Western.

Is Slow West good? That is the one with Fassbinder, yes?

Tombstone is the most Kino western there is. Unforgiven is good but it has flaws. Mainly the pacing and editing give it a slight 90s cringey vibe. I don't know how they fuck they did it but Tombstone is timeless, I watched it on blu-ray with my girlfriend a few weeks ago and her mind was blown. It was the first time she ever saw it.

this. tombstone is like the platonic ideal of westerns.

This is an awful movie. Sharon Stone is way out of her element because her coocoo isn’t part of the script. And that stupid ass ending where you can literally see “daylight” through the guy offends me as firearm owner. It’s about as “western” as Will Smith & Kevin Kline.

...

I agree. I strongly disliked that movie, many much better Westerns.

Meh, it falls way outside your range (1976), but it’s interesting. “The Shootist “ was John Wayne’s last movie about an aging gunfighter with cancer. Doesn’t follow the usual “Wayne formula westerns”. The cast is deep, good director, worth a watch.

Lauren Bacall, John Wayne, Ron Howard. Where are we?

>Tombstone
>not Wyatt Earp
What's it like to be a pleb? Were you all born this way or did you get your head hit?

>The Great Silence
Underrated as fuck

Death Rides a Horse is a good spaget if you haven't heard of it

+1 for the Great Silence, great fucking movie
Tombstone is a much better movie what are you talking about

Django Unchained

this isn't even good bait user

I enjoyed it very much. It's a bit slow moving by modern standards but it has good cinematography which is extremely important for a genre such reliant on environment.

Hateful Eight

This and Wild Bill make a great double feature.

Dead Man

Snow westerns>desert westerns

Absolutely unforgiven

Any other answer is pure pleb

The question should be best western after 1992

I gotta check out Wild Bill and Last Man Standing. I loved everything I've watched by Walter Hill so far

underrated

He's fucking kino. Southern Comfort is my personal favourite of his.

>Southern Comfort is my personal favourite
my man, mine too. If you haven't you should check out Extreme Prejudice

Add The Driver and you got my top 3

>Not a real Western
Basically the poster child for the Neo-Western - which I'm okay with. I really liked hell or high water too, certified Texas-as-fuck.
>3:10 to Yuma remake is honorable mention.
I feel like everyone always forgets about that one.

Jeremiah Johnson. Its max comfy and badass.

> Tombstone
> Unforgiven
> Open Range
> Bone Tomahawk takes the cake for best western and cannibal kino

True Grit.

No Country for Old Men if you count neo-western.

Hell or High Water is good too.

>This is an awful movie
This is an awful opinion. I can't hate anything that has hackman hamming it up as hard as he can, especially not if it's a sam rami movie.

Seraphim Falls is underrated

is that building behind them from the wild west?

The Long Riders tells the whole story, and does a better job.

Ironically Django Unchained

3:10 to Yuma

Most westerns made after the 70s feel too Hollywood plastic to me. They just lack a certain authencity and just repeat what has been done before, both thematically and aesthetically. Unforgiven is the rare exception. Can't really blame them, can't really innovate after hundreds paved the way. But even a small 50s western has more grit and charm than a major 90s or 2000s western.