WithYellowstonebeing picked up by CBS, the sixth-generation homesteader and Montana power broker John Dutton’s story, along with the machinations ofthe dynamic Dutton ranching family, will be getting a fresh start for those who didn’t catch its run on Paramount+.And with starKevin Costneropting out of the fifth and final season over contract issues, if you want to see the Costner that took the airwaves by storm over five years ago, you can begin the long journey with the character very soon. The veteran actor is obviously no stranger to the Western genre, having delivered Oscar-winning efforts inDances With Wolvesand other noteworthy entries likeOpen RangeandWyatt Earp, but there is one film from 1985 that you may want to check out in preparation for the return ofYellowstone. There weren’t a lot of very memorable Westerns from the decade of the ’80s, but there was one epic “saddle-up and ride” entry that is head and shoulders above the rest, and that film would be the offering of the “two Kevins” offering (Kevin Costner andKevin Kline) calledSilveradowhich hit theaters in July 1985.

‘Silverado’ Shines First With Its Awesome Cast

Before we get into what madeSilveradothe best Western of the ’80s, it’s important to note that had the 1989 adaptation ofLarry McMurtry’sepic novelLonesome DovestarringRobert DuvallandTommy Lee Jonesbeen a theatrical release instead of a television miniseries, then it would have oustedSilveradofor the honor. But alas, it wasn’t, so here we are. Make no mistake, it’s not like we are settling forSilverado, it has all the elements of a spectacular Western and is more than worthy on its own merits. First, the ensemble cast is stellar. With proven players like Kline, Costner,Scott Glenn,Brian Dennehy,Danny Glover,Jeff Goldblum,Rosanna Arquette, andJohn Cleeseall participating and on top of their game, the acting inSilveradois as good as it gets. So if we’re looking to “check all the boxes” on what makes for a terrific film, we can go ahead and put a check in the “top-notch cast” space.

A Riveting Storyline and a Young Kevin Costner Highlight the Film

We’re introduced to our main players one by one during the film’s first 20 minutes. Emmett (Glenn) is a drifter who comes across Paden (Kline), who has been robbed of his clothes and horse and left to die in the middle of nowhere. Emmett nurtures him back with water and the two ride into the nearby town of Turley. There, they come across the wonderfully wicked Cobb (Dennehy) who does some of his very best work as the villainous gambler who will later maneuver his way into the position of sheriff in Silverado. After running into Cobb, Emmett is reunited with his younger brother Jake (Costner). Costner makes his first feature Western debut and is a perfect fit as Jake, an energetic and brash young gunslinger who is in jail and to be hung the following day.

It is good fun to see a childlike Kevin Costner before he became a household name in films likeThe Untouchables,Bull Durham, andField of Dreams. TheYellowstonestar had appeared in a handful of films, but seeing him just beginning to carve out a permanent niche in a long and storied career in Hollywood with such youthful exuberance is pretty damn satisfying. And Costner as Jake is the most memorable drifter of the morally squared away good guy bunch inSilverado. Kasdan does a masterful job of building his band of misfit antiheroes early in the film and by the time they break Jake out of jail and recruit sharpshooting rifleman Mal (Glover) into the gang, you’re completely calf-roped into the story.

Kevin Costner as Jake in ‘Silverado’

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‘Silverado’ Has Everything a Western Needs To Be Great

Every great Western has three essential plot devices and at least one established trope. InSilverado, we get a likable “white hat” good guy, a dastardly and immoral “black hat,” and the right thing worth fighting for.Silveradoemphatically checks all the plot device boxes. In fact, there are four white hats in the film and Dennehy is so freaking good as the proverbial black hat, that you really don’t need anything else. Aside from a nice turn fromJeff Faheyas Cobb’s right-hand man, the rest of the black hats are just scumbags with guns and a lot of facial hair. So, what exactly is our unlikely cowboy posse fighting for that is worth risking their lives? Enter Hannah (Arquette) as the attractive young pioneering woman and her friends who have been robbed of a chest full of money and their innate moral compass that flies in the face of Cobb’s unquenchable thirst for lawless control of the town is good enough for the smitten Emmett, a once conflicted Paden, and the rest of the white hats.

The fact that Emmett’s son, Augie, is kidnapped by Cobb’s men is just the cherry on top of what we knew was coming. The must-have tropes are cool stunts and gunplay galore. The great horse wrangling and shooting inSilveradocomes in waves and just keeps on coming. Between Paden, Jake, Mal, Emmett, Cobb, and his outlaw posse, the bullets are flying around like mosquitoes on a warm Texas night, and a looming showdown between Paden and his star-crossed cowboys and Cobb’s lackeys for the future of Silverado will force everyone to choose a side in good versus evil.

Kevin Costner, Kevin Kline, Danny Glover, and Scott Glenn in Silverado

‘Silverado’ Ends With a Gunslingin' Finale

The calm before the storm accompanies an out-of-control stampede; two more prized elements in the best Westerns ever made. Silverado is quiet as Emmett, Paden, Mal, and Jake make their way in for the final showdown. But they unleash a herd of cattle as cover to facilitate their approach. Once our white hat posse is firmly ensconced within the town, the rest is just about who is the better gunfighter. And we’ve already covered just how good our quick-draw heroes are with pistols and a rifle.

The scene where Jake exits the saloon and draws on two unsuspecting men on either side of the building, killing them both, is one of thebest sequences in the history of Western cinema, regardless of the decade. And what does every great Western end with? Well, a face-to-face showdown on the dusty main strip, of course. And when push comes to shove, it’s Paden who is quicker on the trigger than Cobb. Good triumphs over evil, Paden becomes the new sheriff of Silverado, and the residents are safe. The audience also gets to walk away with a rewarding 2 hours and 12 minutes of Western filmmaking at its finest.

Kevin Costner, Kevin Kline, Danny Glover, and Scott Glenn in Silverado