Whenever I am asked “what is the best western to watch”, I almost always respond, “it’s High Noon from 1952.”
Sometimes their reply is, “why something THAT old” or “I’ve never even heard of that one”. With so many great westerns that have been made, they also say, “what makes this one so special?”
Before I attempt to answer that, let me list a few other movies that come pretty close to measuring up:
As you can see, with so many contenders, there has to be something uniquely outstanding about “High Noon” that makes me say it’s the best western movie of all time.
I know that my opinion is perhaps not held by even close to a majority.
I will attempt to make my case without revealing the story of “High Noon”. Anyone who has seen the movie will appreciate how difficult a task that will be. And, perhaps it requires a synopsis, but I hope it doesn’t. Many of the uniqueness can be addressed without revealing the substance of the plot.
The lead role was played by Gary Cooper. He was 51 years old when this movie was made.
Grace Kelly was 21 and her character was married to Gary Cooper’s character. There was no dwelling on this age difference. It is worth noting that Will (Cooper) was tough and unpolished, and Amy (Kelly) was prim and propper. The age difference accentuated that distinction.
This was also the first time Kelly had been featured in a movie.
The director, Fred Zinnemann, said that Grace Kelly at that time wasn’t equipped to do very much and she was “very wooden”. That lack of experience and almost clumsy behavior fitted the character of Amy perfectly. Amy, was a prim easterner kind of out of place in a frontier western town.
Actually, take always is more accurate.
First of all, bravery is not the absence of fear. But doing what is the right thing to do in spite of fear and the odds being against you.
Second of all, you don’t need beautiful scenery to make a story sell. Some scenes were shot in color, but the director decided that the starkness of black and white enhanced the story and therefore the color scenes had to be reshot in black and white. There were no computers and digital editing back in the “dark ages” of movie-making.
Thirdly “High Noon” was done in almost real-time. The time span that the story covered was an hour and thirty-five minutes. The running time was eighty-four minutes. Clocks were shown throughout, highlighting that time was running out. Later this became known as shooting in real-time. Another first!
And last, of all, good actors are hard to find these days.
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Ok, I got to admit. I'm definitely intrigued by this movie and will have to add it to my list of movies to watch (and find I'm guessing! ha ha ).
Thanks so much for sharing!
Thank you for your interest. You can get a copy of High Noon(1952) here: https://amzn.to/2QduX7c (This is my affiliate link and I will be paid a small commission any sales from it.)
It's also available for streaming too. I'm sure you will enjoy the experience.