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#10 – Open Range

Released in 2003, Produced and directed by Kevin Costner, starring Kevin Costner, Robert Duvall, Annette Benning, and Michael Jeter (who passed away before the movie was released).

Open Range is an old-fashioned Western with cowboys, cattle drives, a ruthless land baron, gunfights in the street, and a love interest for Costner’s character. The plot is simple, the characters are well developed and genuine, and the chemistry between Costner and Duvall is apparent.

The movie is based on the 1990 book, The Open Range Men, by Lauran Paine. Paine was a prolific writer who wrote under numerous pen names, publishing over 1,000 books in different genres. Only two of his books were ever made into movies and both of them were Westerns.

Costner and Duvall play two cattlemen driving a herd across the open range. They stop for supplies in a small Montana town where they discover the local land baron has laid claim to all of the open rangeland and is determined to steal the herd and kill the cattlemen. Costner’s character, Charley Waite, is tortured by his past as a Confederate sharpshooter, and all of the killings that he had done. He and Boss Spearman (Duvall) are not the kinds to stand by and watch their men and cattle be killed and taken from them.

Although there are some authenticity issues with the film (the magic six-shooter that never has to be reloaded), the inevitable shootout with the bad guys at the end is probably the best in any Western film. Open Range would have made it into my top twelve for the final shootout alone—it’s that good.

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By Michael R. Ritt

Mike is an award-winning Western author, living in central Wisconsin, who began his writing career while living and exploring the plains and mountains of Colorado and Montana. He has been married to his redheaded sweetheart, Tami, since 1989. He is a Western Fictioneers Peacemaker Award Finalist three years in a row. His debut novel is the winner of the Will Rogers Gold Medallion Award for Western fiction and was a Finalist for two separate Peacemaker Awards. His short stories have been published in numerous anthologies and magazines and are available through Amazon, Barnes and Noble, and other online retailers, as well as brick-and-mortar bookstores. His first Western novel, The Sons of Philo Gaines, was released in November 2020. It is available everywhere books are sold. Mike is a member of Western Writers of America and Western Fictioneers.

11 thoughts on “The Twelve Best Western Movies of all Time”
  1. Mike,
    It is an interesting list. I have only seen 2 of these. You make them sound pretty good. I am ready to start the popcorn and settle in for a while. 🙂 Thank you for sharing!

    1. Cami, I’m glad you enjoyed the list, and I’m especially glad that I could steer you on to some movies you weren’t familiar with. Pop a lot of popcorn; you’ve got quite a night of great Western movie watching ahead of you.

  2. Interesting list, Michael. It’s notable that only 4 of your choices are from the ‘classic’ western era, which I would define as 1939-1976. You like the post 1976 stuff better than me, and mini-series. And its obvious ROBERT DUVALL is your man!

    1. Thanks for checking out my list, Andrew, and for commenting. You’ve got me figured out. I think Duvall is the quintessential cowboy. His characterization of Gus McCrae is probably the best performance in all of movie history.

  3. 1.Unforgiven
    2.The Good the Bad and the Ugly
    3.The man who shot Liberty Valance
    4.Rio Bravo
    5.The Searchers
    6.red River
    7.Stagecoach
    8.Once Upon a Time in the West
    9.Highnoon
    10.My Darling Clementine
    11.Hell or High Water
    12.No country for Old Men

    1. You have a couple of interesting choices on there. The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance is one that I’ve watched multiple times, as is Rio Bravo. As a modern Western, No Country for Old Men would be a good choice. Maybe I should do another list for modern Westerns. Thanks for your comment.

  4. 1. Once upon a Time in the West
    2. The Searchers
    3. The Magnificent Seven ( 1960)
    4.Open Range
    5. Tombstone
    6. Red River (1948)
    7. The Man from Laramie
    8. Unforgiven
    9. How the West was won
    10. Hang ’em High

  5. 1. Unforgiven
    2. Once Upon a Time in the West
    3.good Bad and the Ugly
    4. For a few Dollars more
    5. Hang em high
    6. Tombstone
    7. Shane
    8. The Searchers
    9. Nevada Smith
    10. Outlaw Josie Wales

    1. These are all good ones, Lynn. I actually thought about expanding my list so I could include a few of these, but once I start doing that, there’ll be no end to it. Thanks for your comment.

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