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In Reply to: RE: The danger of violent death from Indians, roving posted by tinear on January 30, 2010 at 07:54:15
I still have no idea why and for what end.
You seem to be saying that the particular period in some country's history, being a difficult one, automatically means one can only depict it in primitive cliche ways. I see no logic in that statement.
Mankind history has seen MANY periods of incredible struggle, suffering, upheaval. All of those have been depicted in various works of art in both good and bad ways. There is absolutely no reason why one could not tell a Wild West story in a serious, and artistic way, the fact it was not done (to my memory) is just the reflection of tradition and smart mass-marketing.
Follow Ups:
main characters portrayed in "The Searchers" by John Wayne and Monty Clift were such? How about Eastwood's in "Forgiven"? Or Alan Ladd's in "Shane?" Or the Randolph Scott character I describe above in the Budd Boetticher film?
Sure, only a tiny percentage of Westerns are very good but that holds for all types of film, certainly.
My point about corporate America is that it necessarily is no more complex than the Western "world"--- and certainly no more interesting, excepting the familiarity.
Perhaps you can expand upon your assertion?
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