[Later this
month, the sixth
and final season of my favorite current TV show (and one of my all
time-favs as well), Longmire, drops on
Netflix. So this week, after a repeat of my first post on the show, I wanted to
AmericanStudy a handful of Longmire’s
many fascinating characters. Leading up to a special weekend post on Native
American popular culture!]
On clichés, classic
and revised, and a character who straddles the line.
However far back
you want to go to define the origin of the cultural genre known as the
Western—Owen Wister’s bestselling novel The Virginian: A
Horseman of the Plains (1902) is a popular choice, but you
could go further back to the Gilded Age’s Wild
West shows or dime
novels, among other possibilities—one central feature has been a very
particular type for its protagonist: the strong, stoic, stubborn cowboy-lawman,
good with a gun and horses, true to his word, a noble and mythic frontier
archetype. By the early 20th century moment of Wister’s novel that
type was already largely a relic of an earlier era (if it had ever existed at
all—as many Western
historians have noted, neither frontier lawmen nor cowboys
were much like the myths), and thus quickly became more of a cliché than
anything else, a shorthand way to signal a specific kind of hero and
storytelling. But few American cultural clichés have had more resonance or
staying power, as illustrated by one of the 20th century’s most
iconic and influential actors: John Wayne,
that identity itself a persona or construction of Marion Morrison’s.
While that type
has found its way into various late 20th and early 21st
century cultural texts as well—Timothy
Olyphant’s Marshal Seth Bullock on Deadwood,
as well as his modernized
version of the same character on Justified,
come to mind—many of our recent Westerns have offered complicatedly revisionist
depictions instead. These revisions don’t tend to undermine the Western hero
type exactly, so much as to suggest layers and contradictions while nonetheless
keeping core elements of the cliché and myth intact. I’m thinking of Clint
Eastwood’s retired gunfighter turned quasi-lawman (for hire, at least) William Munny in Unforgiven (1992), or Val Kilmer’s
dying and sarcastic gunfighter turned lawman Doc Holliday in Tombstone (1993), or Christian
Bale’s rancher turned reluctant lawman Dan Evans in 3:10 to Yuma (2007), among many
others. Sharon Stone’s gunslinger out for revenge Ellen in The Quick and the Dead (1995) and Will Smith’s smooth-talking
lawman James West in Wild Wild West (1999) offered
gendered and ethnic revisions of the archetype, but still retained many of
those core elements. Despite their many differences, all of these characters
and texts reflect a desire both to carry the Western hero forward and to look
for layers or quirks beneath the mythologizing.
Robert Taylor’s Walt(er)
Longmire, the titular sheriff protagonist of Longmire, is in many ways a classic
Western hero. All of the descriptions I employed in the opening sentence above
apply quite precisely to Walt, and in a couple moments in the show’s most
recent season (five) he was characterized directly as a man born in the wrong
time, one who would have been more comfortable in an era long past. But at the
same time, Walt features layers and contradictions beyond those most mythic
Western qualities, character traits often highlighted by his closest friends
and loved ones (his daughter Cady, his deputy and potential love interest Vic, and
his best friend Henry Standing Bear, on all of whom see future posts in this
series) but also seen in encounters with his perceived enemies (such as the ambiguous
casino developer Jacob Nighthorse, on whom ditto). Without spoiling any of the
details of that most recent Season Five, I would say that the tension between
the most heroic and the most complex sides to Walt has become a defining thread
as the show moves toward its conclusion. And while I’m generally in favor of
complexity and revision, in this particular case I won’t mind if it’s Walt the
Western hero with whom we end the wonderful story that is Longmire.
Next Longmire post tomorrow,
Ben
PS. What do you
think? Takes on Longmire, or other
shows, you’d share?
I think I particularly like the character, as well as the show itself, because like humans in the real world, Walt and friends always surprise me from by straying from the myth.
ReplyDeleteThanks, Marcy! I agree, but would also say that (like a lot of myths, especially the enduring ones) there's enough of the myth and story in him and the show to be compelling on that level too.
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