Movies Similar to High Plains Drifter (1973)

High Plains Drifter (1973)
Play Trailer and Clips
Member Rating:  
"Who are you?" the dwarf Mordecai (Billy Curtis) asks Clint Eastwood's Stranger at the end of Eastwood's 1973 western High Plains Drifter. "You know," he replies, before vanishing into the desert heat waves near California's Mono Lake. Adapting the amorally enigmatic and violent Man With No Name persona from his films with Sergio Leone, Eastwood's second film as director begins as his drifter emerges from that heat haze and rides into the odd lakefront settlement of Lago. Lago's residents are not particularly friendly, but once the Stranger shows his skills as a gunfighter, they beg him to defend them against a group of outlaws (led by Eastwood regular Geoffrey Lewis) who have a score to settle with the town. He agrees to train them in self-defense, but Mordecai and innkeeper's wife Sarah Belding (Verna Bloom) soon suspect that the Stranger has another, more personal agenda. By the time the Stranger makes the corrupt community paint their town red and re-name it "Hell," it is clear that he is not just another gunslinger. With its fragmented flashbacks and bizarre, austere locations, High Plains Drifter's stylistic eccentricity lends an air of unsettling eeriness to its revenge story, adding an uncanny slant to Eastwood's antiheroic westerner. Seminal western hero John Wayne was so offended by Eastwood's harshly revisionist view of a frontier town that he wrote to Eastwood, objecting that this was not what the spirit of the West was all about. Eastwood's audience, however, was not so put off, and an exhibitors' poll named Eastwood a top box-office draw for 1973. ~ Lucia Bozzola, Rovi

 Read More


Starring:
Clint EastwoodVerna Bloom, (more)
Director(s):
Clint Eastwood
Theatrical MPAA Rating:
R
Format(s):
DVD  | Digital SD & HD
View All Versions to rent and buy
 

BY MAIL

Monthly Subscription
NEW! 7 - Day Rental
No subscription required. Usually ships in 24 hours.
 
Buy New  $10.99
 

IN-STORE

 

ON DEMAND


Available to:  Watch on 3 devices.
See system requirements.
 

What's Your Take?

Add to FavoritesIn Favorites  |  Share:     Email to a friendShare on FacebookShare on Twitter
    YOUR REVIEW
    WRITE A REVIEW
     
    1000 
     
    Member Reviews
     
    Xochitl D.

    Not as good as the Sergio Leone trilogy of 'spagetti Westerns', this film relies on some heavy-handed mysticism not present in other westerns. Eastwood's 'man with no name' character in the earlier films simply never had a name; it wasn't an important element; in this film, it's a plot-point. There's also an undertone of misogyny present that may have been fine in '73, but hasn't aged at all well. In many ways, it seems that this film mis-identified the elements that made the prior films so effective, and over-emphasizes themes of corruption, complicity, and vengance. The film stands on Eastwood's performance, as the script has no other characters with any depth or meaning. The film's strengths are in the cinemetography & direction, not in the script.

    Yes   |   No

     
    Edward F.

    This movie is a classic. It is truly a dark film that has some great ideas regarding the failure of good men to act. Dark, desolate, and brutal. They should make kids watch this in school.

    Yes   |   No

     
    Pamela H.

    This movie was great. Starting to watch all the Eastwood films. This one is a classic

    Yes   |   No

     
    Read All 20 Reviews