Contemporaneous reviews of Texas, it was filmed in
Monument Valley in
Utah. Upon the film's release,
Bosley Crowther of
The New York Times called it a "ripsnorting Western" (in spite of the "excessive language in its ads"); he credits Ford's "familiar corps of actors, writers, etc., [who help] to give the gusto to this film. From Frank S. Nugent, whose screenplay from the novel of Alan LeMay is a pungent thing, right on through the cast and technicians, it is the honest achievement of a well-knit team." Crowther noted "two faults of minor moment": The
New York Herald Tribune termed the movie "distinguished";
Newsweek deemed it "remarkable".
Look described
The Searchers as a "Homeric odyssey".
The New York Times praised Wayne's performance as "uncommonly commanding". The film earned rentals of $4.8 million in the US and Canada during its first year of release. The film helped revive the career of Jeffrey Hunter.
Later assessments In 2001, critic
Roger Ebert found Wayne's character, Ethan Edwards, "one of the most compelling characters Ford and Wayne ever created". Ebert writes: "
The Searchers indeed seems to be two films. The Ethan Edwards story is stark and lonely, a portrait of obsession, and in it we can see
Schrader's inspiration for Travis Bickle of
Taxi Driver. [...] The film within this film involves the silly romantic subplot and characters hauled in for comic relief, including the Swedish neighbor Lars Jorgensen (John Qualen), who uses a vaudeville accent, and Mose Harper (Hank Worden), a half-wit treated like a mascot. [...] This second strand is without interest, and those who value
The Searchers filter it out, patiently waiting for a return to the main story line."In 1963, he ranked
The Searchers as the fourth-greatest American movie of the sound era, after
Scarface (1932),
The Great Dictator (1940), and
Vertigo (1958). The 1998
American Film Institute 100 greatest American films list ranked
The Searchers in 96th place, and the 2007 iteration of the list ranked it in 12th place. In 1998,
TV Guide ranked it 18th. In 2008, the American Film Institute named
The Searchers as the greatest Western of all time. In 2010,
Richard Corliss noted the film was "now widely regarded as the greatest Western of the 1950s, the genre's greatest decade" and characterized it as a "darkly profound study of obsession, racism, and heroic solitude". The film currently maintains an 87% rating on the
review aggregate website
Rotten Tomatoes based on 98 reviews, with an average rating of 9.1/10. The site's critics' consensus reads: "
The Searchers is an epic John Wayne Western that introduces dark ambivalence to the genre that remains fashionable today." On
Metacritic, the film has a score of 94 out of 100 based on reviews from 15 critics, indicating "universal acclaim". The film has been recognized multiple times by the
American Film Institute: •
AFI's 100 Years...100 Movies – #96 •
AFI's 100 Years...100 Movies (10th Anniversary Edition) – #12 •
AFI's 10 Top 10 – #1 Western Film On "They Shoot Pictures Don't They", a site which numerically calculates critical reception for any given film,
The Searchers has been recognized as the ninth-most acclaimed movie ever made. Members of the
Western Writers of America chose its title song as one of the top 100 Western songs of all time. Scott McGee stated in 2002, "... more than just making a social statement like other Westerns of the period were apt to do, Ford instills in
The Searchers a visual poetry and a sense of melancholy that is rare in American films and rarer still to Westerns."
Glenn Frankel's 2013 study of the film calls it "the greatest Hollywood film that few people have seen". == Critical interpretations ==