THE MUSEUM OF MODERN ART announces a film series, _UNIVERSAL WESTERNS_
[https://www.moma.org/calendar/film/5909] , FROM JUNE 5–JULY 3,
2026.When Carl Laemmle opened UNIVERSAL CITY IN MARCH 1915, the first
standing set he built was the Western street that survives
surprisingly intact today. The site itself—a converted ranch in the
San Fernando Valley, ringed by hills and scrub—was purpose-built for
outdoor production, and the Western was its native genre. Within two
years the young John (then Jack) Ford was directing Harry Carey in the
first of their 25 collaborations, beginning with _Straight Shooting_
(1917). These early films laid out the genre’s lasting structure:
the collection of stock characters, settings, and themes that would
inspire endless variations. Ford left for Fox in 1920, but the
B-Western factory he left behind sustained a steady output through the
1920s and ’30s, keeping Saturday matinees around the world supplied
with cowboy stars like Hoot Gibson, Tim McCoy, and Buck Jones.
In 1946, a merger with International Pictures created
UNIVERSAL-International and brought a new regime determined to create
a more prestigious product. The catalyst was _Winchester_ ’73
(1950), Anthony Mann’s collaboration with James Stewart, which
redefined the genre’s psychological possibilities and became the
studio’s second-highest grossing film of the year. The 1950s brought
a sustained flowering: Mann and Stewart, George Sherman, Budd
Boetticher, and a supporting infrastructure of Technicolor programmers
with Audie Murphy, Rory Calhoun, and Jeff Chandler made UNIVERSAL THE
DECADE’s most prolific Western studio. By the late ’60s, the
influence of the Spaghetti Western began to dominate, with Clint
Eastwood taking up residence in films like Don Siegel’s _Two Mules
for Sister Sara_ (1970). But by the 1980s, the Western was in retreat
everywhere; films like Fred Schepisi’s _Barbarosa_ (1982) and Peter
Fonda’s _The Hired Hand_ (1971) feel like elegies for the form
itself, made by filmmakers who understood they were working in the
twilight of the genre.
This series aims to capture the sweep of Universal’s Western output,
drawing on the superb restoration work of Universal’s archive.
cinema
Museum
67
Views
13/06/2026 Last update