Westerns have always been a quintessential part of Hollywood history, but a 69-year-old gem represents a peak that the genre has never reached since. Stretching all the way back to the silent era, westerns have kept audiences flocking to theaters in droves. With exciting action and an idealized view of the West, the genre is always larger-than-life.
While modern westerns can still prove popular, there’s no denying that the genre hit its peak in the Golden Age of Hollywood, and is now something of a relic. Mᴀssive western stars like John Wayne and Clint Eastwood haven’t been replicated in the current era of Hollywood, and westerns have mostly been relegated to an occasional curiosity piece.
This is because westerns were perfected in the 1950s, with the themes and visual style being set in stone. Everything that has come after either subverts or pays homage to the classics, and one movie in particular closed the book on the genre forever. Plenty of excellent westerns have been made since, but they exist as mere echoes.
The Searchers Represents The Peak Of The Western Genre
Made a decade or so before the end of Hollywood’s Golden Age, John Ford’s seminal western, The Searchers, is an unofficial finale for the genre during that era. After starting as rough and gritty action flicks in the silent days, westerns blossomed into a multi-faceted cinematic experience by the time the 1950s rolled around.
Ford’s story of revenge and obsession captured everything that was great about movies at the time, and it married excellent visual storytelling with compelling narrative drama. John Wayne was in rare form as Ethan Edwards, and he was so much more than the swaggering cowboy hero that he had perfected throughout his career.
The American Film Insтιтute named The Searchers as the greatest American western of all time.
The Searchers wasn’t just a visual feast, but it offered a challenging look at heroism in a way that didn’t quite line up with the idealized view of the American West found in classic ’50s westerns. Nevertheless, it had all the romanticized imagery that typified films from its era. After The Searchers, even Hollywood westerns began to change.
The Best Westerns After The Searchers Took A Very Different Approach
Only a few years after The Searchers, the Golden Age ended and westerns found themselves deconstructed by young filmmakers who wanted to challenge the cliches and tropes of the earlier era. The anti-western dominated the late 1960s, and would continue throughout the ensuing decades. Even Italian spaghetti westerns were essentially hyperstylized send-ups to classic films from days gone by.
By the time mainstream Hollywood finally came back around to westerns in the late 1980s and early 1990s, it wasn’t quite the same as the ’50s heyday. Big hits like Unforgiven and Tombstone are brilliant films in their own right, but they owe a great debt to The Searchers by embracing some tropes and intentionally eschewing others.
There have been many strong westerns since The Searchers, but none have successfully matched the timeless energy of the John Ford gem. Changes in film technology have robbed viewers of the overtly grand colors and the sweeping landscapes as many modern movies aim for realism instead. The Searchers is one of many reasons that era is called Hollywood’s Golden Age.