Revisionist Western Essays

  • Characteristics of a Typical Western

    506 Words  | 2 Pages

    A typical Western would usually be set in the late 19th century in the mid-west of America in a remote town. The town is usually small, lonely and unwelcoming. Typically a western set looks like it is in the middle of a desert with sand, cacti and tumbleweed which gives a desert look, there are usually never any lakes or rivers around these features make the place look really hot and deserted. The buildings are generally timber board houses with swinging doors and outside the buildings are places

  • The Western Movie Genre

    1395 Words  | 3 Pages

    Westerns are the most important genre of the American film industry, a reflective tribute to the early days of the grand, wild American frontier. They are one of the oldest, most prevailing and versatile genres and one of the classically American genres in their mythic origins. The popularity of westerns has changed over time. Their most productive period was in the 1930s to the 1960s, and most lately in the 90s, there was a restoration of the genre. This original American art form concentrates

  • Western Movies Since 1960

    2808 Words  | 6 Pages

    number of quality Westerns being made . . . and since there seems to be a ten-year cycle in Western movie making, I'd say we'll see more in about 1982." 1 In 1982 only two Westerns were released, and neither was exactly a major success. Barbarosa, starring Willie Nelson, drew some respectable reviews–and some very damaging ones–but nobody went to see the film. The Ballad of Gregorio Cortez appeared first on PBS television, then later went into general release. Today the Western seems to be deader

  • Analysis Of The Revisionist Western Film Geronimo: An American Legend

    865 Words  | 2 Pages

    A nation formed from the blood of an entire culture. The Revisionist Western Film, Geronimo: An American Legend, (1993) directed by Walter Hill, sheds light on the events that transpired as the Whites migrated and expanded towards the West. The theme of this movie revolves around the oppression and injustices committed on the “inferior” Apache race by the “superior” Whites, and the conflicts that ensued from it. In the face of oppression and injustice, one will go to great lengths to protect and

  • Hollywood Westerns Essay

    1320 Words  | 3 Pages

    Hollywood Westerns essentially focus on the concept of bringing the law to the lawless and for movie goers, it has been said, that the best Westerns were the movies that moved, not only from a physical action standpoint, but also in terms of moving an audience emotionally. It was this engaging combination that garnered the most satisfaction and praise from movie-going audiences. Most film scholars believe the first Western to be ‘Cripple Creek Bar Room’ (W. Dickson’s 1898 tableau). To understand

  • Lemonade Stand Essay

    775 Words  | 2 Pages

    LEMONADE STAND LEMONADE STAND – A SHORT FILM: Lemonade stand is a short film directed by Alethea jones. Its year of publication was 2012, and it went on to win the tropfest 2012 short films festival. Benny and his grandad are best friends. Benny explained that his grandad had worn the same pair of socks every day since he was a kid because the shopkeeper said that “they have magic powers”. They live in a nice small house on 47 Kimbledon street. The rest of their family used to live there, but

  • Review of the Film Django Unchained

    1088 Words  | 3 Pages

    Django Unchained, directed by Quentin Tarantino’s is what you would call a spaghetti western. The name ‘spaghetti western’ originally was a term used to reduce the value of something. American westerns were considered to be on a higher scale than spaghetti westerns. Django Unchained is set in the American South, two years before the civil war, telling the story of the freed slave Django who goes on a killing spree in the name of revenge to rescue his wife Brunhilda from the cruel plantation master

  • How the Western Film Genre Has Developed over the Past Century

    2041 Words  | 5 Pages

    The Western film genre is typically set in a secluded village in the middle of the desert, normally in the American West. The setting includes wooden buildings, tumble weed, cacti, trains, horses and carriages. The storyline for western films is usually the same, namely, a hero travels to a remote village, usually on a horse, and brings peace to the warring villagers. In a traditional Western film the clothing for the hero is usually a white hat, (this is to show purity). The hero would also

  • William Munnny Unforgiven

    735 Words  | 2 Pages

    typical character roles from traditional Westerns and uses the image of whiskey in William Munny’s life to show his malign past. William Munny is portrayed as the vengeful anti-hero. Little Bill’s role is the evil, loathful anti-villain as the corrupt sheriff. Eastwood comments of the reality of classic Westerns through alcohol and how Munny uses it to cope with his dastardly past and how the West truly was a cruel society. The characters in a non-revisionist Western comprise of a strong male cowboy,

  • Unforgiven Film Analysis

    1934 Words  | 4 Pages

    Eastwood’s film Unforgiven is often called a “new” or “revisionist” Western because it is part of a group of films that revitalized the Western genre in the early nineties and because it provides a narrative about the Western within its storyline. Previou s Western films focused on the story of the lone outlaw while he seeks revenge for the wrongs done to him and for his version of the American Dream. They fall right into the stereotype of the Western in many ways: fantastic gun skills, revenge quests

  • Jim Jarmusch’s Film Deadman, as a Manipulated Western

    549 Words  | 2 Pages

    Deadman, as a Manipulated Western Director Jim Jarmusch’s film Deadman displays many of the accepted conventions for Western genre films, but manipulated in such a way as to create a revisionist, rather than a classical, western. The most obvious example of this manipulation are the characterizations of the hero, William Blake, and his Native American partner, Nobody. Blake is an awkward easterner who travels westward unaware of the different rules governing western life, instead of the rugged

  • Jim Jarmusch’s Unique Western Film, Deadman

    570 Words  | 2 Pages

    Jarmusch’s Unique Western Film, Deadman In Jim Jarmusch’s Dead Man, he pays homage to the classic style of western films while taking his own eccentric take that puts the film in a league of its own. With a combination of elements related to the western genre and a genre Jarmusch creates all on his own, the viewer can begin to explore and appreciate the unique film, Dead Man. Although the scenery of isolated towns, mystic rivers, and endless forests is consistent with the western genre, the philosophical

  • Traditional Western and Disney Ideals as Seen in Mulan

    2958 Words  | 6 Pages

    Traditional Western and Disney Ideals as Seen in Mulan Fairy tales have been a long tradition in almost all cultures, starting as oral traditions to and gradually evolving into written texts intended for future generations to enjoy. Today, a common medium for relaying these ancient stories is through animation. The Walt Disney Company is probably the most well known for its animated portrayals of many classic fairy tales. These fairy tales are considered, by fairy tale researcher Justyna Deszcz

  • Book III in Wang Shifu's The Story of the Western Wing

    3237 Words  | 7 Pages

    the Western Wing One of China’s most popular love comedies, The Story of the Western Wing (Xixiang Ji) by Wang Shifu (1250-1300) dramatizes a scholar-and-beauty romance. Zhang Sheng, a promising student, and Cui Yingying, a beautiful maiden, meet in a temple, fall in love at first sight and after a series of thwarted attempts, they end up happily marrying each other, after the student has passed the civil exam as the top one, of course. Among the five books of The Story of the Western Wing

  • Bound Feet And Western Dress

    904 Words  | 2 Pages

    Traditions in Chinese culture are long-rooted and are taken very seriously from generation to generation. However, there must always be room for modern change in order for society to grow and strive across the globe. In Bound Feet and Western Dress the conflict between Chinese traditions and modern change arises. With this conflict it is important to discuss the different meanings of liberation for men and women and they way in which Chang Yu-I was able to obtain liberation throughout her life

  • The Good The Bad And The Ugly

    1767 Words  | 4 Pages

    The Good, The Bad and The Ugly Western films are the major defining genre of the American film industry, a eulogy to the early days of the expansive American frontier. They are one of the oldest, most enduring and flexible genres and one of the most characteristically American genres in their mythic origins - they focus on the West - in North America. Western films have also been called the horse opera, the oater (quickly-made, short western films which became as common place as oats for horses)

  • The Dark Side of Clint Eastwood

    1151 Words  | 3 Pages

    Spaghetti Westerns in the 1960’s. Eastwood iconic Man with No Name in the “Dollar Trilogies” made him an international star, and it is only fitting that he would resurrect his career in a film of this genre. “Unforgiven” was directed, produced, and stared in by Clint Eastwood and received an Oscar for Best Supporting Actor, Best Director, Best Film Editing, and Best Picture in 1993. It is often credited as the best western made in the last twenty years, and for reinvigorating the western genre. Clint

  • Similarities, Differences and Connections between two Western Movies: Rio Bravo and El Dorado

    1525 Words  | 4 Pages

    America’s Wild West history as depicted in the movies, Rio Bravo and El Dorado. Most Western movies had fairly simple but very similar plots, including personal conflicts, land rights, crimes and of course, failed romances that typically led to drinking more alcoholic beverages than could respectfully be consumed by any one person, as they attempted to drown their sorrows away. The 1958 Rio Bravo and 1967 El Dorado Western movies directed by Howard Hawks, and starring John Wayne have a similar theme and

  • The Western Subjectivity Thought

    4250 Words  | 9 Pages

    The Western Subjectivity Thought Since modern times subjectivity thought has been one of the fundamental contents and the significant achievements of western philosophy. It is faced with many difficulties in its development process and has been declared to "have died", but I think that it indeed still has bright prospects of development. 1. Historical Development of Western Subjectivity Thought The word "subject" comes from the Latin word " subjectum ", which means something in front,

  • Cowboys in Kilts: The Failure of the Scenic in Rob Roy & Braveheart

    2775 Words  | 6 Pages

    of the western landscape in which their narratives unfold.All of these three traits are present in the figures of Rob Roy and William Wallace--especially their insistence on conducting themselves according to a purely personal definition of honor--which would seem to suggest that the films built around them and their exploits could be read as transplanted westerns.However, the transplantation is the problem for, while the protagonists of these films want to be figures from a classic western, the landscape