When Sergio Leone's Dollars trilogy proving he was the biggest Western star of his era. However, no one could have known what they would see in High Plains Drifter.
On the surface, High Plains Drifter looked a lot like Eastwood's most famous Western roles. Just like in A Fistful of Dollars, a mysterious stranger rides into town and ends up dealing with dangerous cowboys and rustlers who threaten the peace of the small town. The stranger then does everything in his power to end the threat, leaving countless dead bodies in his wake. However, when the stranger finishes in High Plains Drifter, he hints that he is not a simple mortal man, which is also hinted at throughout the film.
Clint Eastwood Added Supernatural Aspects To High Plains Drifter
The Stranger Might Have Returned From The Grave
High Plains Drifter started like no other Western movie before it. A mysterious man arriving in a town in need was not new. However, when Clint Eastwood's The Stranger arrived in town, he did things that seemed shocking for a Western at the time. The Stranger showed up in town and killed the men who the townspeople hired to protect them. He then came across a woman named Callie and raped her while the townspeople stood by idly. High Plains Drifter shows that this man is not a hero from the start.

Where High Plains Drifter Was Filmed
Clint Eastwood's infamously spooky Western film High Plains Drifter features several iconic locations, but here's where the movie was actually filmed.
Things got dark when The Stranger had a nightmare about a U.S. Marshal named Jim Duncan. An outlaw who had the town in fear whipped the marshal to death, and the townspeople did nothing to help him. It was clear why The Stranger had no care for many of the people in the town, but he was here for a different reason. He targeted the outlaws, and no one got out of this alive.
The Stranger killed every outlaw one by one, like any other slasher killer.
Clint Eastwood directed this like a horror movie but in the form of a Western. There was a scene where the outlaws were in a saloon, and The Stranger whipped a man to death in the streets, with every lash of the whip intercutting with the shocked expression on someone's face. With the town burning as a backdrop, The Stranger killed every outlaw one by one, like any other slasher killer that would follow in the next two decades. It all ended up even more shocking in the final scene.
High Plains Drifter's Supernatural Elements Made Clint Eastwood's Character More Intriguing
Eastwood Also Brought The Character Back In Pale Rider
High Plains Drifter ends with The Stranger leaving the town after killing all the outlaws. On his way out of town, he rides his horse past Mordecai, the downtrodden dwarf that The Stranger named the sheriff and mayor of the town. When Mordecai looks at The Stranger, he says he never knew the man's name. However, that is when The Stranger cryptically says, "Yes, you do." Mordecai seems to realize the truth. The sheriff stands beside a tombstone that says, "Marshal Jim Duncan, Rest in Peace."

This Clint Eastwood Western Loosely Remade A 1950s Classic (But With A Ghostly Twist)
The only Western Clint Eastwood made in the 1980s is also his most underrated, and secretly remade a classic from the genre with a supernatural edge.
The Stranger rides into the desert and disappears into the heat waves, making it look like he isn't a human but the returning Jim Duncan seeking revenge from the grave. However, High Plains Drifter allowed viewers to decide for themselves if he was supernatural or not. Interestingly, in 1985, Eastwood directed another Western called Pale Rider with another mysterious man, and this time, he itted that this character was a ghost, stripping away much of the mystery that High Plains Drifter offered.

High Plains Drifter
- Release Date
- April 6, 1973
- Runtime
- 105 Minutes
- Director
- Clint Eastwood
Cast
- Verna Bloom
High Plains Drifter, directed by Clint Eastwood, follows a mysterious stranger who rides into the small town of Lago and is hired to protect it from outlaws. As he assumes control, his presence reveals the town's dark secrets. Eastwood stars in this Western that explores themes of vengeance and morality. The film blends traditional Western elements with a haunting atmosphere and complex character dynamics.
- Writers
- Ernest Tidyman
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