If You Love Clint Eastwood’s Spaghetti Westerns, Watch The 1954 Movie That Made Them Possible

Over the course of his storied career, Clint Eastwood only starred in three films belonging in the Spaghetti Western subgenre. From 1964 to 1966, Eastwood collaborated with the now-legendary director, Sergio Leone, to make Fistful of Dollars, For a Few Dollars More, and The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly.

Collectively referred to as the Dollars Trilogy, each of the three movies has developed a remarkable, long-standing reputation. For its part, The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly is frequently cited as one of the greatest Westerns of all time. And as for Fistful of Dollars and For a Few Dollars More, they’re not far behind, as both are counted as favorites by many Western fans.

While Eastwood continued his work in Westerns after completing the trilogy with Leone, that was unfortunately the end of his work in that specific area of the genre. That said, there are plenty of quality Spaghetti Westerns out there to enjoy, from the later works of Sergio Leone and Lee Van Cleef to movies that starred Franco Nero and Terence Hill.

Another movie worth pursuing for people who love Clint Eastwood and Sergio Leone’s Westerns is Vera Cruz. Although it’s purely a Hollywood film, Vera Cruz has very much the feel of a Spaghetti Western. That makes sense, considering that it helped inspire that phase of the genre – and Leone’s movies in particular.

Vera Cruz Is An Incredible 1950s Western

One of the many Westerns currently in Prime Video’s movie library is 1954’s Vera Cruz, a film with an impressive score of 93% on Rotten Tomatoes. Directed by Robert Aldrich, Vera Cruz is loaded with star power; headlining the movie are Burt Lancaster and Gary Cooper, two of the greatest actors in the history of the Western genre. Also in the cast are Charles Bronson, Ernest Borgnine, and Jack Elam, all of whom are major names when it comes to Westerns.

In the movie, Lancaster and Cooper play gunslingers who team up for a mission to escort a stagecoach carrying countess to Veracruz. But when it turns out that there’s more money to be made from this than they originally bargained for, the pair wind up at odds with other interested parties -as well as each other – along the road to Veracruz.

Vera Cruz is hardly a traditional Western adventure story, as even the main characters themselves can’t even be trusted by the audience to complete the mission as promised. The lack of heroism in its two main characters contrasts greatly with most of the Westerns made during its time, and reflects the film’s dark and often bleak depiction of Western life. Unlike so many of its contemporaries, Vera Cruz doesn’t shy away from violence or offer any sense of the idealism one might expect to see in a John Wayne or Randolph Scott Western.

The Spaghetti Western Subgenre Owes A Great Debt To Vera Cruz

Burt Lancaster in Vera Cruz

Sergio Leone was open about his affection for Vera Cruz, even listing it as one of his favorite movies and a film that had an important influence on his style as a filmmaker. Leone became the de-facto godfather of the Spaghetti Western in the 1960s when he made Fistful of Dollars, and the origins of his approach can be traced back to Vera Cruz.

Like Leone’s films (and the many Spaghetti Westerns that followed them), Vera Cruz is a story absent of any true heroes. Despite being the protagonists, the characters played by Cooper and Lancaster are deeply flawed men, more interested in pursuing their own interests than saving the day. The way in which they blur the line between good and evil, coupled with the dark world they inhabit, helped shape the formula for the Spaghetti Western that Sergio Leone crafted over a decade later.


Vera Cruz (1954) - PosTER


Release Date

December 25, 1954

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    Gary Cooper

    Benjamin Trane

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    Denise Darcel

    Countess Marie Duvarre

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    Cesar Romero

    Marquis Henri de Labordere


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