John Wayne Was, and continues to be, one of the main icons in American Western cinema, with many fist fights and action in his films. Known for his commanding and authoritative presence, He maintained a larger-than-life persona that included playing many characters related to law enforcement, war, and the frontier environment. That he pretended for so many years. His penchant for playing good guys taking on the biggest and baddest challenges led to many scenes of action and violence and none as memorable as his iconic face fights throughout his storied filmography that defined John Wayne’s career.
His most memorable brawls highlight and elevate the stories told with his incredible physicality and intensity during the scenes. The final scene of The quiet man is celebrated as one of the best fist fights in all of cinema, raucous and, at times, comical Action that perfectly ends the film. in McLintock!His character, George Washington, instigates a struggle that ends with the entire city fighting in a mudslide, which matches the pace and frenzy of the entire film. These scenes engraved the machismo and often violent ethos that made John Wayne films endlessly rewatchable and era-defining.
10
The Alamo (1960)
Starring John Wayne and Richard Boone
In this epic historical war film about the 1836 Battle of the Alamo, John Wayne stars as Davy Crockett, a Tennessee legend who leads a band of young adventurers to battle. The film is known for its dramatized, yet realistic portrayal of the battle and expansive and stunning visuals of the combat and the surrounding landscapes. The ‘fistfight’ in the film has more to do with a unique custom involving balancing a feather on one person’s nose, with another knocking it off with a punch rather than genuine enmity between hero and villain.
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While not an integral part of the plot or a piece of action that propels the story forward, it’s a humorous stand-alone back and forth that sees John Wayne’s Davy Crockett take on and deliver two huge punches. What really makes this important is the intensity and technique in which the punches are thrown; Although it is a comic tradition designed to show toughness, it is a compelling sequence that adds a unique aspect to the film.
9
Chisum (1970)
With John Wayne and Forrest Tucker
Chisum is a classic American Western directed by Andrew V. McLaglen and starring John Wayne as the leading man and titular character, John Chisum. A good and successful cattle baron who just wants to live his life but gets embroiled in a tense plot After an amoral businessman (Lawrence Murphy) aggressively buys land and businesses in the area. leading them to bribe a corrupt sheriff to kill two of Chisum’s men and steal his property, causing Chisum to strike back.
Chisum is a tense and heart-racing tale that culminates in an epic final fight between Chisum and Murphy. The two trade blows and crash through walls on the second story of the townhouse. The action is fast-paced and relentlessWith both men going back and forth before they both come out through the balcony and land on the ground. The punches and fight look and sound realistic, and Murphy ends up impaled on a bull’s horn on the ground below.
8
Hondo (1953)
Starring John Wayne and Ward Bond
Hondo
- Release date
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November 27, 1953
The 1953 WarnerColor Western, directed by the legendary John Farrow, is based on Louis L’Amour’s short story, “The gift of Kochise“. John Wayne stars as the titular Hondo Lane, a US An army cavalryman who has been attacked by Native Americans seeks forgiveness and help from a local woman, Angie Love, who lives with her six-year-old son. Hondo, realizing the man has seemingly abandoned the familyStarts a courtship with Angie when they get involved in an Apache war.
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John Wayne was one of the first Western stars to understand the importance of fighting in films. Before, the battles and fights were often reflected with slapstick sounds and quick cuts, but Wayne thought this took away from the realism and integrity of the story and wanted to make things more realistic. You can see this in this article Hondo; It is not over-the-top, but more measured and realistic, with Wayne and the absent husband Ed Lowe, getting into a fist, physical exchange with Wayne pummeling the man who left his wife and child.
7
The Cowboys (1972)
Starring John Wayne and Roscoe Lee Brown
A 1972 western starring John Wayne, Roscoe Lee Browne and Bruce Dern, it tells the story of Wil Anderson, A veteran rancher preparing to embark on a massive cattle drive across the countryBut when his team abandons him for the gold rush, he is forced to enlist local schoolboys to help. Until then, there is a conflict, because during their long journey, a devious bandit called Long Hair is intent on killing them and stealing the herd.
To make his fights more realistic, John Wayne trained with legendary film stuntman Yakima Canutt (a stuntman since the mid-1920s) in order to understand how fights would play out and be fought in real life. This kind of thinking was revolutionary at the time. Anderson and Long Hair get into a brawl around the campfire, with Wayne landing some soccer punches before trading brutal blows. The fight ends after Wayne slams his enemy’s head into a tree multiple times, causing him to collapse, one of the more authentic and cruel endings to a fistfight in his filmography.
6
Legend of the Lost (1957)
Starring John Wayne and Rossano Brazzi
In this Italian-American action-adventure film directed by Henry Hathaway, John Wayne stars as Joe January, an experienced guide in Timbuktu who joins a Saharan expedition to find and confirm Paul Bonnard’s father’s (Rossano Brazzi) claim that he found a lost City and treasure in it. A woman (Sophia Loren), newly obsessed with Paul and his ambition, invites herself on the dangerous trip across the desert, and the trio becomes entangled in a love triangle that quickly goes south.
The two fight, exchanging wild overhands amid the backdrop of windswept sandy dunes. The isolation of the setting and the palpable tension that explodes in the battle make a great sequence, with perfect editing and realistic sounds, actions and emotions throughout.
The fistfight between John Wayne and Rossano Brazzi is one of the main highlights of Legend of the Lost. Tensions between the two have been brewing since the beginning, and once Sophia Loren’s, Dita, switches attractions between the two leads, sparks are bound to fly. The two fight, exchanging wild overhands amid the backdrop of windswept sandy dunes. The isolation of the setting and the palpable tension that explodes in the battle make a great sequence, with perfect editing and realistic sounds, actions and emotions throughout.
5
North to Alaska (1960)
Starring John Wayne and Stewart Granger
A little less serious than some of his other films, North to Alaska is more comedy and less drama. The film is set during the Nome Gold Rush and features John Wayne and George Pratt as two gold panners who strike a fortune of gold in Alaska. Wayne’s character travels north in order to bring back his friend’s wife (who are pen pals who have never met) but finds that she married another man while he was away, so instead, returns with a prostitute before the whole Narrative descends into further madness.
The 10 best John Wayne Fistfight films on this list: |
IMDb rating: |
---|---|
The Alamo (1960) |
6.1/10 |
Chisum (1970) |
6.8/10 |
Hondo (1953) |
7.0/10 |
The Cowboys (1972) |
7.4/10 |
Legend of the Lost (1957) |
6.1/10 |
North to Alaska (1960) |
6.9/10 |
The Spoilers (1942) |
6.7/10 |
Donovan’s Reef (1963) |
6.7/10 |
McLintock (1963) |
7.1/10 |
The Quiet Man (1952) |
7.7/10 |
The film boasts one of the more comedic face fights in John Wayne’s career, with him fighting and brutally punching multiple assailants before being knocked into a muddy patch from under a group of horses. The action goes from boxing to mud-slinging as the town comes together to help Wayne as he weaves away from danger.While Stewart Granger throws and slips between goats and wagons. The ‘slapstick’ works really well, and the townsfolk and an onlooker seal all have a great laugh about it. It elevates the film and doesn’t take itself too seriously, which makes for brilliantly choreographed action.
4
The Spoilers (1942)
Starring John Wayne and Randolph Scott
John Wayne allegedly chose to Study newsreels of then-heavyweight boxing world champion Jack Dempsey In an attempt to emulate his style and throw realistic and heavy-handed punches. in The spoilersThis pays dividends as Wayne’s character Roy Glennister, who strikes gold, tries to fight the corrupt politician Alexander McNamara (Randolph Scott), and the two square off in one hell of a fistfight.
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It has been described as one of the greatest fight fights in Western history, which occurs at the climax of the film and sets the standard for future fights in similar films going forward. The battle between Wayne and Scott has all the features you expect and want from a great western brawl. Set in a pub, the two trade homemakers with both taking the upper hand at different times.. The choreography was tightly framed, so the audience feels like part of the action, and Wayne insisted on more realistic depictions, the action provides a satisfying conclusion to a brilliant film.
3
Donovan’s Reef (1963)
With John Wayne, Lee Marvin and Jack Warden
Donovan’s reef
Three World War II Navy veterans, Donovan (John Wayne), Doc Dedham (Jack Warden) and Gilhooley (Lee Marvin), gather on the French island of Haleakaloa in Polynesia to seduce Dedham’s first daughter (Elizabeth Allen).
- Director
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John Ford
- Release date
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June 12, 1963
- Figure
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John Wayne, Lee Marvin, Elizabeth Allen, Jack Warden, Cesar Romero, Dick Foran, Dorothy Lamour, Marcel Dalio.
- runtime
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109 minutes
The adventure comedy film follows three World War II Navy veterans, Donovan (John Wayne), Doc Dedham (Jack Warden), and Gilhooley (Lee Marvin), who all converge on a French Polynesian island (Haleakaloha) through various means. The three men get involved in a scheme to cheat Dedham’s daughterWho already has the last inheritance from a company that her father believes he has the rights to. Seeing fortune, the three men wreak havoc in another lighter film in Wayne’s filmography.
The fistfight itself is almost as fantastic as the reason it takes place in the first place, Marvin and Wayne’s characters both share the same birthday and so, in a 21-year tradition, celebrate it by finding each other on the day and having A vicious one. Fist fight. The premise is comedic enough, and both action scenes are excellently shot, with nice timing on all the action (one with multiple sailors); Right hooks crash home, tables go flying, and the shots all land with visceral impact. An incredible set of action sequences that really stand out in one of Wayne’s most overlooked gems.
2
McLintock! (1963)
Starring John Wayne and Patrick Wayne
in McLintock!John Wayne plays a wealthy, aging rancher named George Washington McLintock, who, as a successful businessman, encounters a variety of personal and financial issues as everyone seems to want a piece of his farmstead. Whether it’s the government, his own children, or a group of Native AmericansThe situation continues to boil and climaxes in a battle with Wayne, the townsfolk, and the invading Comanches and army.
Wayne, known as ‘The Mud Scene’, delivers the first punch, knocking his opponent down a steep hill, into a watery mud. This caused a mass brawl between bystanders, including men and women, with everyone taking their turn to be knocked down the hill and into the mud. The filming of this scene allegedly took over a week to filmAnd the choreography, with the number of men and horses, combined with the realistic punches in a relatively slapstick fashion, all perfectly timed, would definitely support those claims. There’s an incredibly intricate fistfighting sequence that really caps off the film.
1
The Quiet Man (1952)
Starring John Wayne and Victor McLaglen
A romantic comedy-drama set in the Irish countryside, The quiet man Tells the intriguing story of Sean “Trooper Thorn” Thornton (John Wayne), a retired Irish-American boxer Who returns to his homeland in search of inner peace after accidentally killing an opponent in the ring. Before John Wayne’s emergence, many action scenes were often overlooked or executed in a too censored way; Many physical actors focused on daring stunts and acrobatics rather than fist fighting that looked and felt authentic and became some of the best scenes in a John Wayne western.
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The end of The quiet man Is one of the most iconic pieces of Western cinema ever conceived, an incredible John Wayne face fight that lasts for nine minutes, for which the entire story of the film was built. Thornton and Danaher go back and forth, Through the entire village of Innisfree, involving the villagers, witty one-liners, brutal blows and authentic techniquee and physical. John Wayne Not only elevated action scenes in his own movies, but pioneered and mastered their execution and inclusion for filmmakers for decades to come. The quiet manHis final duel is spectacular on every level.