
Before the film began, some of the concepts regarding revisionist westerns both in cinema and overall ideology were brought to our attention. As professor McRae was giving us this information, I found it interesting because earlier that same day in my Cormac McCarthy class professor Parsons was talking about the same ideas relating to McCarthy’s novel Blood Meridian. Not only were the ideas similar but I quickly found that the imagery of the film matched the imagery of the novel. I had my book down on my desk when the opening image of High Plains Drifter came on and was shocked to see that the cover of Blood Meridian was so similar it could have been taken from that screenshot (the horizontal lines of the sky along with the rocky ground on the bottom).
From that point on, I was fascinated by this connection not only between the two classes but between both the novel Blood Meridian and the film High Plains Drifter. Blood Meridian is a western novel that takes place in the mid 1800’s. The story is about a group of men (mixed races but mostly white) that travel across the country scalping both Indians and Mexicans, destroying towns as they go. As Barcley Owens claims, Blood Meridian can be read as in some sense a reaction to the Vietnam War, a time that divides history, making people aware that the heroism of the frontier was a myth. This subject is exactly what High Plains Drifter deals with. In a much less violent and bloody way (I’m actually now interested in seeing Soldier Blue because that seems a lot like Meridian), Clint Eastwood’s character The Stranger is perfectly representative of the members of Glanton’s gang in Blood Meridian. The first scene of High Plains Drifter, we see The Stranger enter a town, eventually killing men and raping a woman. This is almost exactly what happens throughout Blood Meridian and clearly reflects what people were seeing in their own lives. Vietnam allowed people to see the brutal and inhuman actions of American soldiers, leading people to believe that the nationalism and heroism was always only a myth. Blood Meridian and High Plains Drifter are also interestingly connected by their protagonists. They both share an ambiguity about them, clearly represented in the names that each character has. The Stranger is the main character in High Plains Drifter while The Kid is the main character of Blood Meridian.
Moving away from Blood Meridian, we can specifically look at High Plains Drifter for its connections to the Vietnam War and how these connections clashed with John Wayne’s interpretation of the west. Like I said before, when we watched Stagecoach, I didn’t like John Wayne. There was something about him that just screamed fake to me. Not only that, I didn’t find Wayne likeable. I actually found Clint Eastwood’s character more appealing because he seemed like a “real” and original character. There was something about the way Clint Eastwood looked in that movie that screamed not “fake” but “badass”.


I couldn’t believe how much control he had over the townspeople. One of the most memorable scenes of the film for me was when he had the townspeople pain all of their buildings red as he changes their sign from “Lago” to “Hell”. The fact that the film’s setting is renamed “Hell” could very well be connected to our new perception of what American conquest actually is as a result of us being in the Vietnam War. Rather than us seeing a classic and nostalgic western setting that we would see in a John Wayne film, we are seeing a corrupt and “evil” town. When The Stranger first steps into Lago, one could see this as Eastwood’s interpretation of Americans entering Vietnam, eventually killing innocent people and “painting the towns red”.


One thing that I really admire about Clint Eastwood is his ability to still be able to make these films even though he is pushing 80 years old. In the article it mentioned that as John Wayne got older, he was no longer able to fulfill his role. John Wayne’s image and iconic character began to suffer and die out with age. Clint Eastwood, now 78, hasn’t lost his edge as he points rifles at kids saying in that everlasting raspy voice, “Get off my lawn.”

Some great connections here--especially with Blood Meridian. I hadn't made that connection at all, but you should probably mention that to Professor Parsons. He'd be really pleased, as he loves westerns, and riffs on that genre.
ReplyDeleteI don't think that Wayne is any more fake than Eastwood--they're both studio products. He plays a very, very different sort of hero though--much more boyish and innocent. I think we're more used to badass heroes now, because we've gotten so used to violent entertainment since the 70s, we've more or less come to require it.
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ReplyDeleteGreat post here! I just wanted to ask you, as Clint Eastwood gets older do you think his man without a name (I know in Torino his name is Walt but it's essentially the same character) continues to reflect American society? In 1992 the same character from High Plains Drifter returns to the big screen in Unforgiven, around the same time the United States was helping out in the first Iraq war. He seemed to redeem himself in the film as the American image was starting to shine once again. Just an observation...
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