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    • High Plains Drifter (1973) The first of his much touted “revisionist westerns”(though, as said, the merit of that moniker is debatable), “High Plains Drifter” demonstrates that even from very early on, Eastwood had a keen understanding of his own cinematic persona – and the intelligence to see the ways he could weaponize and subvert that iconic image to explore the darker facets of the western as a whole.
    • Pale Rider (1985) The four straight westerns Eastwood directed are usually all classified under the same umbrella of “revisionism,” but that’s not exactly accurate.
    • Two Mules For Sister Sara (1970) Throughout their collaboration, Eastwood and Don Siegel made a few movies adjacent to the western while never quite fitting into it.
    • Hang ‘Em High (1968) Eastwood began his career playing supporting roles in B-westerns before breaking big with “Rawhide,” one of the quintessential western TV shows that were so popular in the ‘50s and ‘60s and from which many a star made their name, including Steve McQueen (the type of show Tarantino wonderfully homaged in his latest film).
    • Kayla Turner
    • The Man With No Name. The Dollars Trilogy (1964-1966) A Fistful of Dollars. pg-13. Release Date. January 18, 1964. Director. Sergio Leone , Monte Hellman. Cast.
    • Josey Wales. The Outlaw Josey Wales (1976) As the titular character in The Outlaw Josey Wales, Clint Eastwood delivers one of his most remarkable Western portrayals.
    • William Munny. Unforgiven (1992) Unforgiven. R. Release Date. August 7, 1992. Director. Clint Eastwood. Cast. Richard Harris , Clint Eastwood , Jaimz Woolvett , Gene Hackman , Morgan Freeman.
    • Preacher. Pale Rider (1985) Shrouded in mystery as the avenging gunslinger known only as Preacher, Eastwood cuts an iconic figure in Pale Rider. After saving a humble village from corporate thugs, Preacher becomes an unlikely guardian angel against the returning menace.
    • 17 Star in The Dust
    • 16 The First Traveling Saleslady
    • 15 Paint Your Wagon
    • 14 Two Mules For Sister Sara
    • 13 Ambush at Cimarron Pass
    • 12 Joe Kidd
    • 11 Cry Macho
    • 10 Hang 'Em High
    • 9 For A Few Dollars More
    • 8 Honkytonk Man

    Star in the Dustis a Western from 1956 in which Clint Eastwood played a very small role, and it’s one of his first appearances in a Hollywood film. The movie tells the story of a Sheriff in the western town of Gunlock who has to battle with farmers and ranchers over the intended hanging of a hired killer.

    Much akin to Star In The Dust, The First Traveling Salesladyis a Western comedy in which Clint Eastwood featured again in a small on-screen role. The story follows a businesswoman named Rose Gillray (Ginger Rogers), whose corset company goes bust, and she ends up having to repay several debts. She subsequently heads west along with her companion Mo...

    What is perhaps Eastwood's strangest film, Paint Your Wagon,is an oddball musical Western that turns the genre's tight-lipped stoicism on its head. If a person ever wanted to see Eastwood in a lighthearted take on the lawlessness of the American Old West, this is the movie for them. He stars opposite Lee Marvin and Jean Seberg as Sylvester "Pardner...

    Two Mules for Sister Sara isn’t the most well-known Clint Eastwood movie, but it still managed to captivate many fans of the genre. Set directly after the American Civil War, Eastwood stars opposite Shirley MacClaine as a soldier whose unlikely sidekick, a nun, isn’t what she seems to be. Together, the mismatched duo takes on the French invading ar...

    Clint Eastwood plays Keith Williams, a swashbuckling ex-Confederate in Ambush At Cimarron Pass, a film directed by Jodie Copelan. Although the film was underwhelming at the box office, it’s widely regarded as his big break in Hollywood in a somewhat major role. The plot centers around an Army patrol unit who have to team up with a band of former Co...

    Directed by John Sturges, Joe Kiddis about a former bounty hunter named Joe Kidd(Clint Eastwood) who owns a ranch in New Mexico and then proceeds to help a notorious wealthy landowner, Frank Harlan(Robert Duvall), track down a Mexican revolutionary after he learns that the group roughed up one of the workers on his ranch.

    Clint Eastwood saddles up for his first Western since 1992's Unforgiven. Based on Richard Nash's 1975 novel of the same name, Cry Macho may not be the typical Clint Eastwood film, but it is a modern-day Western with much in common with similar films released in the late 2010s like Hell or Highwater and Logan. When a former rodeo star and washed-up ...

    Fresh off his time in the Dollars Trilogy, Eastwood picked up this role to play an innocent man who is almost lynched at the film's beginning. A glimpse into a period in American history where it was dangerous to be a marshal, Hang ‘Em High is a classic revenge story. This revisionist Western is in the vein of the Italian Westerns Eastwood previous...

    For a Few Dollars, More is the second part of the Dollars Trilogy, the popular trilogy that launched Eastwood's career globally. Reliant on the tropes that have appeared in Western movies since the genre was created, it does run into clichés at times. However, the villain of the film is absolutely wicked, a force that The Man With No Name must conf...

    Clint Eastwood is the complete package. While best known for his traditional films, Eastwood has been in quite a few musicals, too. In Honkytonk Man, he plays a singer dying of tuberculosis, traveling to Nashville with his nephew. His dream is to become a famous singer, but with the Great Depression ravaging the nation, it seems almost impossible.

    • Unforgiven (1992) The western to end all westerns. If “The Good, the Bad and the Ugly” is the apotheosis of the western golden age, then “Unforgiven” is the epitome of the revisionist western, which began roughly in the ‘70s when a new generation of filmmakers’ simultaneous adoration of the genre, aligned with their understanding of its questionable moral underpinnings, gave birth to some of the most rewarding, unique masterpieces of American cinema, such as “McCabe and Mrs. Miller” or “Heaven’s Gate.”
    • The Good, the Bad and the Ugly (1966) Many critics and scholars have argued that “For a Few Dollars More” is the superior movie in the Dollars Trilogy: it has all the indelible imagery and sublime music that makes all of the movies classics, plus a tighter focus and little grace notes that are lacking in the other two.
    • For a Few Dollars More (1965) There are many considerable leaps in quality from the first movie in the Dollars Trilogy to this one, “For a Few Dollars More”: Leone’s mastery of composition, pacing, and movement within the frame seems to have been supernaturally enhanced in the single year between this and his western debut (or, more likely, the higher budget allowed him to execute the visual brilliance he was always capable of).
    • A Fistful of Dollars (1964) As Andre Bazin said in one of his seminal essays, the inception of the western as a genre dates back to the very creation of cinema itself: one immediately follows the other.
  1. 3 days ago · A Fistful of Dollars is a spaghetti Western film from director Sergio Leone starring Clint Eastwood. A Fistful of Dollars is notable for being Clint Eastwood's big break in Hollywood and also for being the beginning of the "Dollars Trilogy." The film was followed by For a Few Dollars More in 1965 and The Good, The Bad and the Ugly in 1966.

  2. Jan 30, 2024 · Loosely based on the real-life singer/songwriter Jimmie Rodgers, this 1982 Western Musical from Clint's direction takes audiences through the life of fictional man Red Stovall (Eastwood), a...

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  4. Jan 9, 2023 · With zero disrespect meant to John Wayne, Clint Eastwood is and has always been the ultimate screen cowboy. His films, and the characters he’s played in them, have long defined the Western genre. He brought allure and nuance to a well-trodden archetype and his imprint can still be felt today in everything from Deadwood to Logan .