Michael Scott
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As I mentioned in my The Outlaw Josey Wales review, the 1980s was pretty much the death rattle for the blockbuster western. The 1970s acted as the very last of the “greats”, with the mid 80s and early 90s finishing things off with a few good ones. Sadly, like all things in life, the western was fading from the public eye and audiences wanted something different. We were in the era of Science fiction and action movies (and action movies were going gangbusters in the 80s) but Clint Eastwood decided to take another stab at the genre. Ironically, The Outlaw Josey Wales had been his last effort roughly a decade prior, so it was a big thing for Eastwood fans in the day as they saw him returning to his roots, so to speak. While Pale Rider had some notorious budget problems, and definitely ran on cruise control vs. some of Eastwood’s prior films, but still had enough old fashioned western spark to keep things interesting.
While not really being a supernatural film, Pale Rider kind of winks and nods at the camera, as the mysterious “Preacher” (played by Eastwood himself) seems to miraculously appear on the doorstep of a poor gold miner’s claim by the prayer of a young girl named Megan Wheeler (Sydney Penny). It seems that an entire mining camp filled with everyday panhandlers is under attack from a rich land baron named Coy Lahood (Richard Dysart) who wants their claims for his own strip mining plans. Just as the poor folks are ready to pack up and let their claim go to Lahood, the tall, dark and handsome Preacher walks into town, beats up a couple of Lahood’s goons, and then takes the panhandlers under his proverbial wing.
Furious at what’s going on, Lahood decides to call on his ace in the hole. A corrupt federal Marshall named Stockburn (the legendary John Russell) and his hired guns who will “enforce the law” for whomever pays them the most. Now it’s up to the Preacher to shed the remnants of his holy calling, and go back to a time when he was just as bad as Stockburn and Lahood rolled together. Even if it means losing his eternal soul in the process.
For all of those faults, Pale Rider is still a fun movie with a lot of good going for it. Eastwood does a great job playing with the obvious trope that the Preacher is something more than he’s made out to be in the beginning. It’s almost a “we know that the audience knows, that they know, that we know, that they knew the entire time” type of scenario as the prolific director leads us all by the nose to the ending battle where the nameless Preacher has to face his own demons (which turn out to be some of the miner’s demons as well).
The casting is a mixed back, with people like Michael Moriarty, Carrie Snodgress and Sydney Penning feeling out of place, while others like John Russell are pure western magic. I did get a chuckle out of 19 year old Chris Penn (Sean Penn’s younger brother) playing the douche bag son of Lahood. But at the end of the day, the film manages to be a high point in the 1980s western world (only to be eclipsed by his 1992 film Unforgiven, which is tied with The Outlaw Josey Wales as the best western of the latter end of the 20th century).
Rating:
Rated R by the MPAA
4K Video:

Audio:

Extras:

• NEW! Painting the Preacher: The Cinematography of Pale Rider
• KINDA NEW! Reinventing Westerns
• Eastwood Directs: The Untold Story
• The Eastwood Factor
Final Score:

Pale Rider isn’t perfect, but it’s still a fun 1980s western with Clint Eastwood having a ball playing the mysterious tough as nails preacher. And it doesn’t hurt that Warner Bro’s 4K UHD disc is very impressive in both the audio and video front. Extras are a tad thinner than The Outlaw Josey Wales, but enough new material is in there to have fun digging through it all. It may not be a “buy it you fools!” recommendation, but it’s still worth a watch if you’re an Eastwood fan.
Technical Specifications:
Starring: Clint Eastwood, Michael Moriarty, Carrie Snodgress, Sydney Penny, Chris Penn, John Russell
Directed by: Clint Eastwood
Written by: Michael Butler, Dennis Shryack
Aspect Ratio: 2.39:1 HEVC
Audio: English: Dolby Atmos (Dolby TrueHD 7.1 Core), English DTS-HD MA 2.0 (Original Audio), French, Spanish DD 2.0
Subtitles: French, Spanish, English SDH
Studio: Warner Bros
Rated: R
Runtime: 115 Minutes
Blu-ray Release Date: April 29th, 2025
Recommendation: Solid Watch