
Set in 1882 in the American west, Albert is a lowly farmer with a nice girlfriend. But when she leaves him for the more successful and handsome owner of a moustachery store, Albert returns to his lonely daily life of trying to avoid death. Then the mysterious Anna rides into town and captures Albert's interest and heart, but with her deadly husband in town, Albert is going to have to become the western gun-slinging hero he never was. It won't be easy because there are a milli... (Full plot summary below)
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Set in 1882 in the American west, Albert is a lowly farmer with a nice girlfriend. But when she leaves him for the more successful and handsome owner of a moustachery store, Albert returns to his lonely daily life of trying to avoid death. Then the mysterious Anna rides into town and captures Albert's interest and heart, but with her deadly husband in town, Albert is going to have to become the western gun-slinging hero he never was. It won't be easy because there are a million ways to die in the west.
Leave your thoughts about A Million Ways to Die in the West.
| leonardmaltin.comLeonard Maltin"A Million Ways To Die In The West" may remind MacFarlane's core audience of what they're missing by not having Westerns as part of their regular movie menu. |
| Orange County RegisterMichael SragowIn A Million Ways to Die in the West, director-star Seth MacFarlane builds an imposing, affectionate reconstruction of the American movie West, then defaces it with funny mustaches -- often literally. |
| BeliefnetNell MinowIt is too long, too dumb, and too gross. But sometimes funny. |
| Entertainment WeeklyChris NashawatyI don't know if A Million Ways to Die in the West will turn any of the MacFarlane haters into fans. But for those of us who have remained on the fence until now, his raunchy, rat-a-tat parody is proof that beneath all of the bratty immaturity lays the head and heart of an outrageous quick-draw satirist. |
| Blu-ray.comBrian OrndorfPlays directly to MacFarlane's fascination with poo-poo, pee-pee humor, without ever moving beyond the basics of sophomoric gags to transform into the raging farce it sporadically hints at becoming. |
| New York PostKyle SmithI laughed more at Seth MacFarlane’s sendup of ’60s Westerns than I did at all the other comedies I’ve seen this year, combined. |
| The Monitor (McAllen, TX)Brooke CorsoThe problem is that this story and all its supposed shock value is just plain boring. |
| Tri-City HeraldGary WolcottA better title, a million ways to laugh in the West. |
| Reason OnlineKurt LoderHere at last, Seth MacFarlane in the flesh. Unfortunately, the flesh is weak. |
| Eclipse MagazineMichelle AlexandriaAt the end of the day, no matter how poorly this may be directed, written, and acted, the only thing a good comedy needs to do is make you laugh and this one does it in spades. Funniest comedy of 2014. |