The Western is America's definitive contribution to cinema, a
bullet-spattered blueprint for the nation's image of itself and its
place in the world. To watch a western is to witness the birth of a
nation, overseen by square-jawed sheriffs and steel-nerved gunfighters,
armed with six-guns and a clear moral vision. Their victories against
outlaws and Indians were proof that might was right -- so long as it was
in the correct hands.
Renegade Westerns shows the shadowy side of this picture, where heroes
behaved like villains, where Indians were not always the savages we'd
been led to expect. From injustice in The Ox-Bow Incident to racism in
The Searchers, numerous films criticised the methods behind the myths
and the personalities behind the legends. They questioned the simple
belief that the destiny of the United States was to expand right across
the continent, regardless of other peoples' claims to the land.
The cast of characters includes cynical mercenaries and ageing cowhands,
gun-toting cattle queens and teenage outlaws. We encounter western
superstars -- John Wayne and Clint Eastwood, Gary Cooper and Robert
Mitchum -- and icons of modern film -- Brad Pitt and Samuel L. Jackson,
Johnny Depp and Michael Fassbender.
More than 100 films are dissected and discussed, from the hidden depths
of High Noon and The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance to the ferocity of The
Wild Bunch. There are skewed biopics of Billy the Kid and Jesse James,
acid westerns and Cold War parables. The book ranges over 70 years of
movie-making, right up to the biggest westerns of recent times -- The
Homesman and Slow West, and a double-barrelled blast of Tarantino:
Django Unchained and The Hateful Eight.
Complete with a foreword by western expert Edward Buscombe and
first-hand accounts by Wild Bunch stars Bo Hopkins and LQ Jones,
Renegade Westerns offers a fresh perspective on a genre that continues
to attract both large audiences and critical acclaim.