MovieChat Forums > Jeremiah Johnson (1972) Discussion > Similar Films? (westerns in the mountain...

Similar Films? (westerns in the mountains/snow)


great movie.....does anyone know of any westerns that have similar settings?...

reply

The Great Silence (Sergio Corbucci, 1968), McCabe & Mrs. Miller (Robert Altman, 1971), and Pale Rider (Clint Eastwood, 1985).

reply

lol....always there to answer my question joekidd...thanks....I had the great silence in mind....is it any good?

reply

lol....always there to answer my question joekidd...thanks....I had the great silence in mind....is it any good?


You know, I've yet to see it myself, but it has a reputation as a cult-classic and the viewer reviews on this site are highly enthusiastic. I'd love to see it at some point.

reply

I've been meaning to see it...but I've been kinda scared to because I thought django was pretty rough....it's no fistful that's for sure....

reply

[deleted]

I've been meaning to see it...but I've been kinda scared to because I thought django was pretty rough....it's no fistful that's for sure....


Well, I have now viewed The Great Silence (Sergio Corbucci, 1968), and it's certainly the best non-Leone "spaghetti" Western that I've ever seen. The stark elegance of the visual compositions, with deathly dark figures framed by the eerie whiteness ot the winter environs, is truly unforgettable. Add an eclectic, trance-like, tenuously compulsive score from Ennio Morricone and a sense of individual rebellion against social exploitation, and the film is both an audio-visual visceral experience and an intellectual one. The acting is crude in places (to be expected), but Corbucci's direction is chilling, moody, and atmospheric, again aided by his locations, Morricone's music, and Silvano Ippoliti's haunting cinematography. I'd even go so far as to say that along with Eastwood's High Plains Drifter (1973) and Unforgiven (1992), The Great Silence is one of the best Westerns at conveying the spatial harshness and spookily isolating remoteness of life in the Old West. The Great Silence also provides a fiercer, rawer complement to Sergio Leone's magisterial masterpiece Once Upon a Time in the West (also from 1968), with both films speaking to the pathos accompanying wildly wielded economic exploitation in the Italian-interpreted American West.

reply

What about Death Hunt or The White Buffalo - both starring Charles Bronson

reply

I believe 'Never Cry Wolf' has a similar setting.

reply

The Mountain Men starring Charlton Heston is similar

reply

>>>What about Death Hunt or The White Buffalo - both starring Charles Bronson<<<

Yeah, both well-done ones by THE MAN, definitly to be seen. :-)

reply

A Man Called Horse and Man In The Wilderness both starring Richard Harris are in the same category.

reply

I'm surprised that no one else mentioned Man In The Wilderness. I saw JJ and MITW as a double feature in the fall of 1972 at a drive-in, although MITW was probably released about a year earlier. 2 fantastic movies.

reply

I concur with inspectormusso about those two. Both in my top five of the Western genre.

Seems the only thing the lone White man and the Indians had in common was the same foe, the force of nature itself that they both had to, if not conquer, but at least subdue just to survive. The Indians seemed to give respect, if only grudgingly perhaps, to the White man that could come up there and battle the elements and survive. Maybe there's a lesson in there we could all learn something from, aye??

"I've been to a town, Del"---Classic!!





"Go back to your oar, Forty One."

reply

How about Shane filmed in Jackson Hole The Rounders filmed in Sedona Az

reply

Track of the Cat, starring Robert Mitchum and Directed by William A. Wellman. It's supposed to be a visual masterpiece.

reply

The beginning of the miniseries "Centennial" is like that. Too bad it's not on DVD.

reply

I would second Track of the Cat. Phenomenal movie. It can be a little slow, but it was a book that must have been hard to translate to the screen as it is immensely allegorical/psychological and relies on a lot of dream sequences that were not written into the movie.

reply

i would say "black rope" a great indian movie.

reply

cannibal! the musical, anyone?

reply

[deleted]

Black Robe, you must have meant. Good movie, but not exactly a western.

reply

The Mountain Men

reply

There is a movie called Guardian of the Wilderness which I would consider to be of the same nature, the lone mountain man.

I wish I could find a copy because it hasn't been shown in years

reply

"Windwalker" (1980) was notable for being a Western that dealt with intertribal warfare between pre-Columbian Native Americans. Even if most of the cast were Caucasian!

And, "Winterhawk" (1975) dealt with a Blackfoot chief kidnapping a white brother and sister in retaliation for the ambush of his fur-trading party (who had hoped to swap their pelts for smallpox vaccine).*

*The sister was played by a post-GILLIGAN'S ISLAND Dawn Wells!

reply

The Searchers with John Wayne has a similar feel. Great movie about conflict and racism.

reply

"Last of the Dogman" is not about mountain men but it has a decent storline and some great scenery. In addition, I'd also say that "Sacred Ground" and "Windwalker" are highly recommended ones as well.

reply