Summary
- Western movie quotes have stood the test of time, resonating in pop culture and offering memorable lines that define the genre.
- From classic hero vs. villain stories to more complex and challenging narratives, Western movies have evolved but retained iconic quotes.
- Legendary stars like John Wayne and Clint Eastwood have brought unforgettable characters to life, delivering some of the best Western movie quotes.
They might not be among the most popular movies today, but Western movie quotes from the genre's most iconic entries continue to resonate in pop culture. The genre has been a part of Hollywood since its earliest days, making over a century's worth of Western movie quotes to look back on. Whether it's from one of the classic and most influential Westerns of the distant past or a modern work of revisionist cinema or parody, these movies have given the world many iconic lines of dialogue. Some of these lines might not even be realized as originating from a Western.
Great Western movies have gone through many iterations over the years, some providing simple stories of good guys versus bad guys, others seeking to reimagine the genre with more challenging stories and complicated characters, and other Westerns have been used to examine America in general. With iconic stars of the genre like John Wayne and Clint Eastwood, there have also been some unforgettable characters who have delivered some of the best Western movie quotes of all time.

9 Western Movies You Need To Watch
The coming months promise to offer a multitude of exciting additions to the Western genre. Here's 10 Western movies worth waiting for in 2024.
30 "We Deal In Lead, Friend"
Vin (Steve McQueen) - The Magnificent Seven (1960)
The Magnificent Seven is a rare Western movie to receive sequels and it is not hard to see why this was turned into a franchise. A remake of Akira Kurosawa's Seven Samurai, the movie follows a group of gunslingers who are hired by desperate villagers to protect them from a gang of bandits led by Calvera (Eli Wallach). This memorable line comes when Calvera rides into town with his men and meets the Seven for the first time.
With the heroes explaining that he is not allowed any of the villagers' food that he threatened to take, Calvera questions where they are meant to get the food from. Yul Brynner's Chris tells him they aren't in the business of solving problems, to which Steve McQueen's Vin adds that they "deal in lead." It is a stirring moment with the sleazy villain coming up against some people who will not be pushed around by him and are not there to negotiate.
29 "Deliver My Soul From The Sword. My Darling From The Power Of The Dog."
Peter (Kodi Smit-Mhee) - The Power Of The Dog (2021)
One of the few Western movies nominated for Best Picture at the Oscars, The Power of the Dog is an adaptation of Thomas Savage's novel of the same name. The movie follows a timid young man named Peter who moves to a ranch along with his widowed mother when she marries a new man. However, the pair soon find themselves tormented by Philip, Peter's new uncle.
After a lot of interesting twists in the dynamic between Peter and Philip, the film and the book both end with this same line. While it's a quotation from the Bible, its use of the verse goes further, tying up the twist ending of The Power of the Dog and highlighting just what Peter would do to ensure that his loving and kind mother was given a life of peace.
28 "I Won't Be Wronged, I Won't Be Insulted, And I Won't Be Laid A Hand On. I Don't Do These Things To Other People, And I Require The Same From Them."
JB Brooks (John Wayne) - The Shootist (1976)
One of the few movies in which John Wayne dies also happened to be his last before he ed away in real life. Given his amazing career in Western movies, The Shootist offers the perfect farewell to one of the genre's greats with a story about an old legend of the West considering his legacy and confronting his own mortality. Wayne plays JB Brooks, a sheriff turned gunslinger who seeks to mentor a young man (played by Ron Howard).
Despite the dangerous world he finds himself in, Brooks has led a long life and came up with his version of the golden rule. He won't do these things unto others as he expects them not to do unto him. In many ways, this summed up the heroic model Wayne set in his earlier Western movies. While that was going out of style in favor of more complicated heroes, it carries that type of character well.
27 "The Only Time Black Folks Are Safe Is When White Folks Is Disarmed."
Major Warren (Samuel L. Jackson) - The Hateful Eight (2015)
The Hateful Eight is Quentin Tarantino revisiting his isolated thriller style of Reservoir Dogs within the Western genre. It follows a group of deadly strangers who are forced to share a cabin during a blizzard, not knowing who to trust. Raising the tension of the situation, the movie is set in the aftermath of the Civil War with those on both sides of the fight meeting in this cabin.
One recurring thing in the movie is a letter that Major Warren (Samuel L. Jackson) carries that was from Abraham Lincoln. It charms John Ruth (Kurt Russell) only for Chris Mannix (Walton Goggins) to point out that it is obviously a fake. While Ruth is offended by the lie, Warren very reasonably explains that it works as a sort of shield he uses as a Black man traveling across an often hostile country.
26 "I Haven't Lost My Temper In 40 Years, But Pilgrim, You Caused A Lot Of Trouble This Morning, Might Have Got Somebody Killed."
George Washington 'G.W.' McLintock (John Wayne) - McLintock! (1963)
John Wayne is famous for calling people "pilgrim," as any impersonation of the actor is incomplete without that term. Yet he only says the word in two movies, The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance, where he uses it a number of times, and McLintock!, which came out a year later, where he only says it one time, in this quote. Yet even if his use of it was overstated by many, there is something in the way Wayne delivers this word that makes it sound like the most devastating insult of all time.
Wayne's title character says the line after someone else tries to act tough and barges into a situation with his gun drawn. McLintock quickly grabs the gun away from the man and talks down to him like he is a child who has been running wild. After suggesting someone should punch the man to teach him a lesson, he insists he won't hit him himself before saying "the hell I won't" and punches the man.
25 "Time Just Gets Away From Us."
40-Year-Old Mattie (Elizabeth Marvel) - True Grit (2010)
This perfect final line in the Coen brothers' remake of True Grit comes from the original novel by Charles Portis, and it was absent from the 1969 film version. Though the John Wayne version is a beloved Western, the Coens' more faithful adaptation ends up being the better movie with Jeff Bridges stepping into the role of US Marshal Rooster Cogburn and Hailee Steinfeld as young Mattie Ross.
The movie opens and closes with narration from older Mattie looking back on the adventure of her youth alongside Rooster. The movie ends with Mattie's plans to meet up with Rooster dashed with the news of his death. While she takes the news stoically, Mattie's narration is a rational yet mournful reflection on the ing of time. It makes for a fitting assessment of the Old West period in general as it faded in time and the figures of the period did as well.
24 "One Hell Of A Time To Tell Me"
The Sundance Kid (Robert Redford) - Butch Cassidy And The Sundance Kid (1969)
Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid is not like most Westerns. It's a lighter and more uplifting adventure with two likable outlaws as the main characters. Paul Newman and Robert Redford make for an iconic duo as the titular partners in crime who pull off many jobs and avoid the law together only for it all to catch up with them in the end during the famous final shootout.
Though the Oscar-nominated Western is known for its somber final shot, but even leading up to that moment still captures the fun and humor of the movie. As Butch and Sundance find themselves surrounded by an entire army, they realize their only hope is to shoot their way out. Butch decides to confess that he has never actually shot anyone before followed by Sundance blankly staring at him before suggesting it wasn't the best time to bring that up.
23 "When You Have To Shoot, Shoot, Don't Talk"
Tuco (Eli Wallach) - The Good, The Bad And The Ugly (1966)
So many movie villains would do well to heed this advice from Eli Wallach's Tuco, which is one of the best quotes from The Good, the Bad and the Ugly. Tuco is the "ugly" one in the title, and though he is often outsmarted by Clint Eastwood's Blondie, he proves that there is a reason he has managed to survive so long in the Old West. He is always prepared for a fight and never misses an opportunity to come out on top.
At one point during Sergio Leone's classic Spaghetti Western, the character is in the bath when a foe approaches and explains what he's doing there and how he's finally going to kill Tuco. However, while the would-be killer is still blabbing, Tuco fires his gun from beneath his bubbles and finishes the guy off with a one-line offering a too-late tip.
22 "Shane! Shane! Come Back!"
Joey (Brandon De Wilde) - Shane (1953)
This filme is a terrific and heartbreaking Western featuring the titular hero played by Alan Ladd. The movie follows the weary gunfighter who attempts to embrace a quieter way of life. He becomes close to an innocent family of ranchers and becomes something of an idol to young Joey (Brandon deWilde). However, when even gunmen threaten their way of life, Shane is forced to pick up his guns again.
The final line from the movie is actually "Bye, Shane," but it's faint enough that most viewers this shouted line just before it as being the last words of young Joey and the film. After saving the day, Shane rides off into the distance with the young boy desperately, heartbreakingly calling after him. What makes the line so iconic is that the debate still stages on whether Shane was simply riding off to a new life or if he was dying from his injuries.
21 "Well, It's Not How You're Buried. It's How You're ed."
Wil Andersen (John Wayne) - The Cowboys (1972)
Westerns are all about myths and legends, the stories told about gunslingers that keep their memory alive forever. It is a fitting sentiment to keep in mind throughout John Wayne's Western The Cowboys. Wayne stars as Wil Andersen, a tough rancher who is forced to take on a collection of young boys as his hired helpers. As Wil teaches the boys about being ranchers, he also teaches them some important lessons of life.
When one of the boys remarks on how a man is buried poorly in a small grave, Wil reminds him that the way a person leaves the world is a lot less important than the memories they leave behind. It's a line that means even more at the end of the film when Wil is dead and his exact grave location is unknown. However, the boys carry on his legacy and the lessons he taught them over the years.