As the prominent faces of the Western genre and idealist representations of traditional leading men, it’s easy to compareJohn WayneandClint Eastwoodto each other. Playing heroic archetypes of cowboys, law enforcement officers, and combat soldiers, Wayne and Eastwood defined a vision of American masculinity for multiple generations. Their artistic sensibilities put them in conversation with each other. Still, the two movie stars differed in more ways than one, especially concerning their self-consciousness evoking a pristine image as heroes. Wayne portrayed dignified Western sheriffs with a proud sense of nobility, while Eastwood’s postmodern take on the outlawpresented an uglier and nefarious underbelly of the Old West.The divide between the two stars is exemplified byWayne’s refusal to shoot someone behind the back, but Eastwood is always quick with the trigger, even if his enemy combatant is caught off guard.

The Shootist

A dying gunfighter spends his last days looking for a way to die with a minimum of pain and a maximum of dignity.

John Wayne and Clint Eastwood Played Very Different Western Heroes

An American icon from the Old West to the Vietnam War, John Wayne was alarger-than-life figure.His films, notably with his prolific collaborator,John Ford,ostensibly represented American culture and history.While Ford’s greatest achievements as director, includingThe SearchersandThe Man Who Shot Liberty Valance, poetically deconstructed Western heroes as creations of mythmaking, Wayne separated art from himself in his personal life. Unlike his contemporaries,he chose not to serve in World War II, and following this controversial decision, he adopted staunch conservative principles. Hecooperated with the House of Un-American Activities(HUAC) during the 1950s to blackball alleged communists working in Hollywood, and he was quick to label films as “un-American.” His gate-keeping of proper American values on the big screen evolved into pure bigotry, as evidenced by hisinfamous 1971Playboyinterview.

Clint Eastwood, beginning with his breakout into the mainstream withSergio Leone’s Dollars trilogy, deployed the best qualities of Wayne’s screen presence and matured his onscreen sentiments. Wayne, whose dramatic chops were often dismissed,excelled as a dramatic actorwhen stripped of his affectation of being the consummate All-American. In his roles as Ethan Edwards inThe SearchersandThomas Dunson inHoward Hawks’Red River, Wayne showed a more cynical side to his heroism, as these characters fulfilled selfish desires involving years' worth of pent-up bigotry and capital gains, respectively. With The Man With No Name, the titular lone ranger inThe Outlaw Josey Wales, and William Munny inUnforgiven,Eastwood codified a character archetypefound across multiple genres:the rogue outlaw, a killer with a suppressed heart of gold, and a clinical professional who talks sparsely.Westerns, in the wake of Eastwood’s revolutionary genre deconstruction,Unforgiven, were expected to follow anti-heroes with haunted souls.

The Shootist 1976 Film Poster

It Took Clint Eastwood Over 30 Years To Make This Neo-Western

Eastwood went back in the saddle one last time.

“When you have to shoot, shoot, don’t talk!” This astute Western logic offered by Tuco (Eli Wallach) inLeone’sThe Good, The Bad, and The Uglyserved as the backbone to Eastwood’s Western characters.He seldom talked and fired his gun on instinct.InspectorHarry Callahan of theDirty Harryseriesadopted a vigilante approach to due process:shoot first and ask questions later.The quick trigger of these characters saw no boundaries, even within the unwritten rules of the Western genre. Not only did Eastwood’s outlaws shoot people unsuspectingly,he didn’t care if his opponent was drawing their gun. Due to their ominous names (such as the nameless “Preacher” inPale Rider) and limited amount of dialogue, Eastwood carried an inscrutable screen presence. His conniving ways cast a dark shadow on characters glorified as noble vigilantes. In Eastwood’s darkest films, includingHigh Plains Drifter, his cowboys embody a satanic spirit cursed on society, and true evil sneaks up on you while unguarded.

Unlike John Wayne, Clint Eastwood Would Shoot People Behind Their Back

The stark contrast between John Wayne and Clint Eastwood is exemplified by an anecdote orated by Eastwood as aguest onInside the Actor’s Studio. HostJames Liptonnoted that Leone’s Dollars trilogy shattered the black-and-white/good versus evil conventions of the Western genre, evident by Eastwood’s nameless outlaw refusing to wait for his enemy combatant to draw their gun before shooting. When describing the rationale behind shooting first, Eastwood wryly asked,“It doesn’t make sense, why would you wait for somebody?“which drew a big laugh from theActor’s Studioaudience. Despite being the face of the modern Western, Eastwood analyzes the genre like a stand-up comic performing a routine mocking its illogical components.

Eastwood then recalled a story he heard fromDon Siegel, director ofDirty Harryand a handful of Eastwood films, who also served as amentor for the actor’s foray into directing.In 1976, Siegel directed John Wayne inThe Shootist,The Duke’s final movie, which tracks a dying gunfighter as Wayne’s health was deteriorating in real life. When filming a scene where Wayne sneaks up behind an enemy gunfighter, Siegel told him to shoot him. “‘You mean, I shoot him in the back?'” Eastwood recalled Wayne’s comments."‘I don’t shoot anyone in the back,'“Wayne told Siegel. The director, as Eastwood put it, “made a terrible error,” byinforming his star that Eastwood would have shot this person in the back.Needless to say, Wayne, a man of sanctimonious pride, was livid over this comment. Eastwood, speaking in a broad impression of Wayne, said, “‘I don’t care what that kid would have done. I won’t shoot him in the back!'”

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The Drastic Differences Between John Wayne and Clint Eastwood Sparked a Feud

Despite their physical similarities, tall stature, intense gaze, and imposing body language, Wayne and Eastwood’s artistic sensibilities differed. It’s not just that Wayne disagreed with Eastwood’s interpretation of the American frontier, he found his worldview an affront to his country. In the ’70s, the two movie cowboysengaged in a duel of their ownafterWayne turned down a chance to work with Eastwood. Vehemently opposed to Eastwood’s vision, the Duke sent him ascathing letter critiquingHigh Plains Drifter.Eastwood cited the film, about a violent gunfighter hired to protect a town in peril, as a cautionary fable, butWayne decried it as a treasonous text.Perhaps the film hit too close to home for Wayne, as Eastwood’s nameless outlawunflinchingly presented Western myth as a curse on society.In the film, the boundaries between a noble vigilante and a ruthless savage are broken, as Eastwood’s character serves justice through violence, but the town loses all of its morality. Wayne, who built his career off upholding patriotic values in the Western genre, could feasibly recognize the sobering reality that his roles represented.

Western outlaws and gunfighters are designed to kill beyond the parameters of the law. Either way, whether they do it to their face or behind their back, murder is their calling card. While John Wayne opted to sanitize the depiction of cowboys,Clint Eastwood presented the raw truth of American folklore.His knack for portraying unfettered darkness in his charactersmade him the ultimate revisionist director— paying tribute to Wayne’s iconography while expanding upon his messages for the modern era.

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The Shootistis available to stream on Paramount+ in the U.S.

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Clint Eastwood in ‘Cry Macho’