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Post by lune7000 on Jul 16, 2021 19:42:35 GMT
I'm watching 1950's movies and have run across two Westerns where cowboys with seemingly superhero abilities perform amazing feats:
Winchester '73 starts with a shooting contest where two cowboys both shoot tons of coins out of the air without ever missing- in fact, the shots are so clean that the coins come down with perfectly centered holes in them.
Forty Guns ends with a cowboy shooting from the hip at a distance of at least 30 feet and the bullet hits a woman's body that is used as a human shield. The body goes down exposing the bad guy for more shots. Later it is explained that the cowboy knew exactly where to put the bullet into the woman's body so as to miss any important organs or parts and she recovers (all this while shooting a pistol from the hip at a distance of at least 30 feet!)
Does anything else in classic Western cinema come close to this, in terms of improbability?
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Post by mikef6 on Jul 16, 2021 21:15:59 GMT
Glenn Ford does the coin shooting bit in "The Fastest Gun Alive" (1956).
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Post by mattgarth on Jul 16, 2021 23:31:13 GMT
And Glenn also does the poker chip and shot glass trick in THE SHEEPMAN.
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Post by Doghouse6 on Jul 17, 2021 0:39:08 GMT
I'm watching 1950's movies and have run across two Westerns where cowboys with seemingly superhero abilities perform amazing feats: Winchester '73 starts with a shooting contest where two cowboys both shoot tons of coins out of the air without ever missing- in fact, the shots are so clean that the coins come down with perfectly centered holes in them. It's just such tropes that yield moments of delicious satire, where they're best appreciated. And aren't examples like this the very reason for the popularity of a genre such as westerns? Movies in which only the ordinary occurs are at a disadvantage being dramatically compelling. Drama thrives on the unlikely and improbable. It only has to be possible.
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Post by bravomailer on Jul 17, 2021 3:13:13 GMT
"Fanning" is pretty ridiculous, if any kind of accuracy is expected.
When I took basic training many moons ago, part of marksmanship training involved one guy tossing a coin in the air, a very large one, about three-inches across, and the other guy trying to hit it with a pellet gun. No, they didn't want .223 rounds flying around and coming down somewhere.
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Post by bravomailer on Jul 17, 2021 17:04:33 GMT
Shooting accurately while riding a horse is pretty challenging.
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Post by Isapop on Jul 17, 2021 17:46:24 GMT
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