¶ … Western films, "Shane," made in 1953 and directed by George Stevens, and "Unforgiven," made in 1992 and directed by Clint Eastwood. Specifically, it will analyze the two films, and discuss their importance in the genre of Western films. Today, the classic Western is a film gone out of style, but these two films live on as classics, generally because they deviate from the classic Western model, by showing the characters three dimensionally, and the violence as real and devastating.
TWO WESTERN FILMS
"Shane" does not rely on elaborate sets and costuming to get its message across to viewers. One reviewer called the sets "spartan" and the language of the film "laconic." The characters of this Western make the film the classic that it has become. Shane is a man of few words, but much action, and he firmly stands behind his beliefs. From the opening scene, when he rides down into a valley with a huge chain of mountains behind him, the viewer understands that his character is larger than life, and it is right that he came down from the "mountaintops" to save the struggling family in the valley. He is larger than life to the small son (Brandon de Wilde), and he is larger than life to the settlers he is trying to protect. This makes him the ultimate hero, and the ultimate "good guy" of the Western.
The plot of the film is straight good vs. evil. The settlers are battling the evil ranchers, who want to run them off the land so they can graze their cattle. Shane helps the settlers stand up to the ranchers, and hold on to their land, the only thing they have of any value. Director Stevens later said he hoped to show the extreme violence in the film for what it was, and hoped people would stop glorifying it. "And it was a time, I remember, when kids had gone very...
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