The Western Genre Is Having A Hollywood Renaissance

6 days ago 12
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Published May 2, 2026, 5:30 PM EDT

Shawn S. Lealos is an entertainment writer who is a voting member of the Oklahoma Film Critics Circle. He has written for Screen Rant,  CBR, ComicBook, The Direct, The Sportster, Chud, 411mania, Renegade Cinema, Yahoo Movies, and many more.
 

Shawn has a bachelor's degree in professional writing and a minor in film studies from the University of Oklahoma. He also has won numerous awards, including several Columbia Gold Circle Awards and an SPJ honor.

He also wrote Dollar Deal: The Story of the Stephen King Dollar Baby Filmmakers, the first official book about the Dollar Baby film program. Shawn is also currently writing his first fiction novel under a pen name, based in the fantasy genre.

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The Western genre was one of the biggest in Hollywood for decades in the Golden Era, but it fell out of popularity when the 1980s began. Over the last four decades, it has been declared dead multiple times, but the last year proved that it was far from finished. Both 2025 and 2026 have had more quality Westerns released than any year in recent memory, both with theatrical releases and streaming. It is streaming that helped usher Westerns back into the spotlight.

This genre revival isn't a fluke, nor is it nostalgia. It reflects something about contemporary movie themes, offering stories set in a world with consequences and moral clarity. These movies and TV shows offer up stories with real stakes, where the characters' decisions matter. These stories are a hallmark of what Westerns brought to the entertainment world. They also advance ideas John Wayne offered in his heyday. These films also feature women as protagonists as well as diverse casts, and they helped the Western genre find its way to a 21st-century renaissance.

Hollywood Released Several Quality Western Movies In 2025

Alec Baldwin's Harland and Patrick Scott McDermott's Lucas lying on the ground looking at something in Rust

Westerns have been out of style at the movie theater for decades. There are some outliers, such as the Coen Brothers' True Grit remake from 2010 and No Country for Old Men from 2007. In 2025, the fact that there were three theatrical releases that all remain quality entertainment shows how much has changed over the last year. Trail of Vengeance is the best, with Rumer Willis starring as Katherine Atherton, a woman whose husband is killed, setting her off on a trail of vengeance.

That Western was a female-led story, something that has become more popular in the genre in the 21st century. This is a huge change from the classic John Wayne Westerns, which focused on the rough and tough men in the Wild West. Willis joins names like Natalie Portman (Jane Got a Gun), Cate Blanchett (The Missing), and Michelle Williams (Meek's Cutoff) as powerful Western women heroes since 2000.

The Last Rodeo starred Neal McDonough as a retired champion bull rider who comes out of retirement to help his grandson. This is a classic "one last ride" storyline that delivers an emotional story. While Trail of Vengeance had a limited release in theaters, The Last Rodeo got a regular release and grossed $15.2 million worldwide. The Last Rodeo was also a big hit, with a 94% Popcornmeter audience score on Rotten Tomatoes.

The Westerns that came out in 2025 make it easy to trace a lineage back to Taylor Sheridan's movie Hell or High Water from 2016, a neo-Western that helped start the mainstream interest in titles like Trail of Vengeance and The Last Rodeo. Sheridan is also directly responsible for the rise in streaming Westerns as well.

Streaming Platforms Have Been A Huge Turning Point For Westerns

Dane DeHaan as Jacob Pratt and Joe Tippett as James Wolsey in Episode 2 of American Primeval

Streaming has been great for many genres that often struggle at the theater. The rise of Netflix, Prime Video, Hulu, Apple TV, Paramount+, and more has helped horror, epic fantasy, and Westerns to find an audience that those genres had lost theatrically in the 21st century. This includes Western movies as well as streaming series that can tell big stories across six to eight episodes rather than just compressing them into two-hour films.

American Primeval was a perfect example of this new Western format in 2025. This was a six-part miniseries set during the 1857 Utah War, and it brought in a massive audience of over 234 million hours watched and 46.5 million views in just its first six months on Netflix. That made it the most-watched Netflix Western in 2025, and it shows that streaming is the perfect home for the resurrected genre.

Ransom Canyon hit a few months later and was very different from American Primeval. While American Primeval was a violent, complex story set on the frontier, Ransom Canyon was a Western romance that found its own audience. It picked up a 74% Rotten Tomatoes audience score, and Netflix renewed it for a second season.

Taylor Sheridan also continued his dominance on Paramount+, although he will leave that streaming service in 2029. In 2026, he released Marshals, starring Luke Grimes from Yellowstone, and The Madison, which had a star-studded cast including Kurt Russell, Michelle Pfeiffer, and Helen Mirren. With several episodes to tell his stories, Sheridan has helped deliver more in-depth stories that movies can't tell. From brutal historical dramas and romantic stories to the Sheridan soap opera entertainment, Westerns have come into their own in the 21st century.

Modern-Day Westerns Are Rewriting The Genre For A New Generation

Josh Duhamel looking down at something in his hand in Ransom Canyon

The notable thing about the Western Renaissance in the 21st century is that they are not the movies of yesteryear. This isn't about resurrecting a dead genre. It is about changing what the Western fundamentally is and reimagining what it is allowed to say. The John Wayne Westerns celebrated Manifest Destiny and masculinity. The Westerns of 2025 and 2026 question both of those themes.

The biggest change when looking at recent Western releases is the better inclusion of Native American perspectives. Some of these movies and streaming series are set on Indigenous territory, and those that aren't still look at things from multiple sides, refusing to demonize anyone based on their ethnicity. There are also more female heroes, proving it is no longer a male-dominated genre. This is especially true for Taylor Sheridan, who not only brings women to the forefront but also explores Native American sovereignty.

The look of Westerns has also changed, with streaming budgets allowing filmmakers greater freedom to shoot landscapes that compare well with classics, something that was lacking in many of the genre's movies made after 1980. The new releases look like a John Ford Western, but their themes are set securely in the 21st century. The Western genre is not only back, but it is more ambitious than it has ever been.

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