The Best Cowboy Movies of All Time

Pull out the popcorn! We’ve rounded up the 10 best cowboy movies of all time.

A film frame of a cowboy riding into the sunset.

Peter Adams, Nataliia – stock.adobe.com

RFD-TV loves to salute these gun-slinging, saddle-riding American heroes as a classic representation of the American spirit. So unfasten your belt buckle and pull out the popcorn. . . . Here is our list of the best cowboy movies of all time:

10. The Wild Bunch (1969)

In 1913, with the Old West largely tamed and their existences seemingly destined for oblivion, an aging outlaw gang resolves to go out in a final blaze of vicious glory. The film was controversial at the time for its seemingly nihilistic portrayal of violence, and it marked a watershed in the genre, its release coinciding with a subsequent steep drop-off in the production of major Western films.

9. True Grit (2010)

Despite the Coen brothers’ formidable reputation, many initially scoffed at their intent to remake the classic 1969 film, starring John Wayne and Glen Campbell, as a hubristic fool’s errand. But typically ingenious direction by the Coens and a truly epic performance by Jeff Bridges in the lead role won almost everyone over – even though the film was ultimately awarded not a single one of the ten Academy Awards for which it was nominated.

8. Unforgiven (1992)

Winner of several awards, including Best Picture and three additional Oscars, “Unforgiven” marks the pinnacle of Clint Eastwood’s career as both actor and director. In a star-studded cast, Eastwood portrays an outlaw-turned-farmer whose violent past overtakes him – and pretty much everyone around him – with a vengeance when he is hired to deal out retribution on a ruffian who slashed a prostitute’s face and on the ornery sheriff (Gene Hackman) who had repaid the savage crime with a slap on the wrist.

7. Shane (1953)

Based on the 1949 novel of the same name by Jack Shaefer, “Shane” features Alan Ladd in the title role as a gunfighter who tries in vain to leave his past behind in favor of settling down as a homesteader in an idyllic Wyoming valley. Jack Palance also turns in a memorable performance as the villainous hired gun, Jack Wilson, whom Shane must face down in the climactic confrontation.

6. The Good, the Bad and the Ugly (1966)

Perhaps the most well-known and best-regarded of the “Spaghetti Westerns,” this production, directed by Sergio Leone and starring Clint Eastwood, follows a group of scoundrels searching for Confederate gold in the midst of the New Mexico Campaign of 1862. The film can uniquely boast an iconic score – in particular, the whistling motif of its main theme, which has insinuated itself into innumerable pop-cultural references to the Western genre – as well as a title that has entered the English vernacular as an idiomatic expression.

5. Stagecoach (1939)

This film, directed by John Ford and starring John Wayne, not only established John Wayne as a bona fide movie star but also set the standard for the Western film genre as a whole. Shot on location in Utah’s Monument Valley, the plot involves a group of motley characters as much in conflict with themselves and their own pasts as with the Apache Indians who threaten their journey through the Arizona Territory.

4. The Magnificent Seven (1960)

With a star-studded cast featuring (among other notables) Yul Brynner and Steve McQueen, this iconic tale of seven gunslingers hired by Mexican peasants to defend their village against savage bandits is an adaptation of the 1954 film “Seven Samurai,” by legendary Japanese director Akira Kurosawa. The instantly recognizable score (by Elmer Bernstein) is also used as the theme music for RFD-TV’s “Ride Smart with Craig Cameron.”

3. High Noon (1952)

Gary Cooper (who won an Academy Award for Best Actor for the role) portrays marshall Will Kane, who stubbornly refuses to abandon his principles and resolves to stand alone against his old nemesis, Frank Miller, though all the townsfolk – including his newlywed bride (played by Grace Kelly) – refuse to support him. The film was a thinly-veiled allegorical protestation against McCarthyism; screenwriter Carl Foreman had in fact been called before the House Un-American Activities Committee in 1947, while he was working on the screenplay.

2. Lonesome Dove (1989)

Though technically a made-for-TV miniseries and not a feature film, “Lonesome Dove” ranks nonetheless among the very best depictions of cowboy life to be viewed on the screen. Adapted from the novel of the same name by Larry McMurtry, the production features Tommy Lee Jones as Captain Woodrow F. Call and Robert Duvall in the role of Captain Augustus “Gus” McCrae, two former Texas Rangers who decide to bid farewell to their sleepy Rio Grande village, driving their herd all the way to Montana to establish a new ranch there. Their fateful misadventures are based, in part, on the real-life escapades of trailblazing cowboys Charles Goodnight (a distant relative of RFD-TV’s own Julie Goodnight) and Oliver Loving.

1. The Searchers (1956)

Widely regarded as the masterpiece of both John Ford’s career as a director and John Wayne’s career as an actor, “The Searchers” features Wayne in the role of Confederate veteran Ethan Edwards, who spends years obsessively and vengefully tracking down a Comanche chief who massacred his brother and family on their Texas ranch, taking the youngest daughter as a captive. Like its predecessor, “Stagecoach,” the film features breathtaking vistas of Monument Valley, Utah – in color this time, and never mind that the story is set in Texas.

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