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I like old western movies. Watched them as a kid and later I practiced all the gun tricks with my own six gun. Got pretty good at it too.

Over the weekend I watched a western where one man told another one to bring money to a certain location and he had better have it there in a half hour. WTF? The time is in the 1880's and these men do not wear watches. A banker might have a pocket watch but not a cowboy. Some serious thinking goes into ideas of what might be wrong here. Do you think that the script was written in modern times by people who all are aware of time and have watches has anything to do with it? This is the only answer. πŸ™‚

DenoPenno 9 July 15
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I know what you mean. It’s annoying when a bit of continuity error or historical framing gets in the way of a good story. But then that’s is part of my pedantic nature. So irritating! It would be good to watch a film and not notice things like that!

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My favorites are "3:10 to Yuma" (both versions) and the newer version of True Grit.

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There's a trope that says "Most writers are writers". They don't know what historical times were like, but they sure know how to take the plot of a '30s gangster movie and set it in the Wild West! (Or whatever the explanation for that particular plot point.)

One of my favorites has always been "The Good, the Bad, & the Ugly", in which Sergio Leone gets history wrong (like most Westerns) by having it set in the Civil War, but featuring quite a few guns from the 1870s and 80s. Also, dynamite wasn't invented until 1867. And as for parting a hanging rope with a bullet...

But it's all worth it for hearing Eli Wallach's parting line at Eastwood as it turns into the closing theme song: "HEY BLONDIE! YOU KNOW WHAT YOU ARE?! JUST A DIRTY SON OF A" aa-AA-aa-AA-ahhhh

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I used to know a Lebanese guy, who told me he grew up watching American Westerns, with Arabic sub-titles. (Somehow, I can't imagine what Matt Dillon, or Festus would sound like in Arabic). He also said that when he came to America as a child, he expected it to be like in the Western movies and tv shows.The Western genre also became very popular in West Germany during the Cold War. In Stalin's Russia, episodes of the Three Stooges were shown in movie theaters, to illustrate what Americans were like. It is interesting how the cultural trappings we export, help to form foreigner's opinions of us. It is also scary, considering you can now watch The Simpsons, South Park, and American Dad in almost any country on the planet. We can only wonder what Extraterrestrials must think of us!

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Jeans were invented in 1873. That's the same year that Colts Firearms Company introduced the peacemaker (single action army) revolver, the Springfield Rifle was adopted by the US Army, and Winchester improved its famous lever action rifle significantly. The jeans featured a tiny pocket inside the right front pocket that was designed to hold a pocket watch.

JimG Level 8 July 15, 2019
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The classic adventure tale and in many parts, the standard "Western" format was created by James Fennimore Cooper - a man who never got farther West than upstate New York. His novels and series The Leatherstocking Tales began the Western mythos of frontiersmen and Native Americans. Since then, the myth of the cowboy arose building off what Cooper created.
To your question - people with little to no knowledge of the West write or wrote about it. (Sidenote: during the "depression" of 1872 thousands went West - keeping that time from being declared a depression - and in that group thousands of blacks as well, who were later pushed out, burned out, and whole communities destroyed. I've wondered the "what if" two marginalised groups had united).

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Why do they call them westerns? They all supposedly happened to the east of me. And Asia is to the west, yet it's called the far East instead of the near west.

And people wonder why our world makes no sense.

1of5 Level 8 July 15, 2019

My favorite term for that genre of movie is horse opera.

@JimG now that I'm using.

@NoPlanetB pretty sure Hollywood is in California. πŸ˜‰

Besides, horse operas occupy a land and time much like middle earth does.

@NoPlanetB they're fantasies about a west that didn't exist, based in places that do.

@1of5 They are romantic also...in the tradition of romanticizing our 'old' Western values of rugged individualism, good vs evil, hero worship, action-based entertainment.

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