Film Review
It was a long wait (almost four decades) but Clint Eastwood finally won
his first Oscar, not as an actor, but as the director of what is now
considered one of the greatest Westerns of all time.
Eastwood reputedly put off making
Unforgiven
for sixteen years, waiting until he was old enough for the part he
intended to play in the film. By the time the film went into
production, the Western was a genre that had had its day. The
myth of the Old West had been almost virtually dispelled by directors
such as Don Siegel and Sam Peckinpah, whilst mainstream audiences
had moved on and sought escapism in other, more sensationalist genres.
Eastwood's great Western is more elegiac than
revisionist, resurrecting the old stereotypes and presenting them in a
more realist light. The film is both a homage to the classic
Western and a dark exploration of human frailty (encompassing greed,
guilt and vindictiveness), centred on a man who, like Eastwood himself,
is fated never to outrun his own legend.
Unforgiven is not only
Eastwood's best directorial effort to date, it also offers what is
quite possibly his best performance. As the veteran gunslinger
Bill Munny, Eastwood delivers a mesmeric and nuanced portrayal of a man
who is in a moral quagmire, torn between his desire to do the best
thing by his children and a need to distance himself from a past of
which he is clearly ashamed. The film's title has less to do with
the vendetta of a disfigured prostitute and far more to do with Munny's
inability to reconcile himself with his past. This inner
conflict is resolved, ironically, by the simplistic morality of the
classic western, which is succinctly summed up in the phrase:
A man's gotta do what a man's gotta do.
Munny's apparent abhorrence for killing proves that he is a better man
now than he once was, but it is only by taking a stand against
injustice and fulfilling the role of the avenging angel that he finally
manages to redeem himself. A man has to be what he is, to quote
Alan Ladd in
Shane.
Of course, by this stage in his career, Clint Eastwood no longer has to
play the star and the film benefits from him being part of an ensemble
of equally capable actors which includes Gene Hackman, Morgan Freeman
and Richard Harris (all excellent beyond words). The performances
are, without exception, as well-judged and polished as Eastwood's
direction and both do justice to David Webb Peoples' superlative
screenplay, which goes way beyond the familiar Western clichés
and for once portrays both heroes and villains in an exceptionally
realistic vein. Driven more by character than by plot (always the
mark of a good film),
Unforgiven
contains a number of intimate sequences which are unbelievably moving
and which give the film an emotional realism which is often lacking in
the Western genre. Of course we all remember the O.K.
Corral-style shoot-out at the end of the film, but just as memorable is
the scene in which the Schofield Kid breaks down after killing the
second cowboy and the one in which Munny awkwardly refuses an "advance
payment" from the disfigured prostitute. It is hard to recall
another Western where so many of the protagonists are explored with as
much depth and sensitivity.
Unforgiven is a major
achievement, without doubt the pinnacle of Clint Eastwood's remarkable
career. A critical and commercial success, it was nominated for
nine Oscars, winning awards in four categories: Best Picture, Best
Director, Best Supporting Actor (Gene Hackman) and Best Film
Editing. Not only is this film the best tribute Eastwood could
have offered to the genre that first brought him fame, it is also a
powerful study in aging and heroism, exploring themes that have a
universal significance with sublime delicacy and truth.
© James Travers 2011
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Film Synopsis
Wyoming, circa 1880. When a prostitute in the town of Big Whiskey
is savagely disfigured by two cowboys, her co-workers club together to
offer a thousand dollar reward to anyone who shoots dead the
attackers. Tempted by the bounty, an aspiring young gunslinger,
the Schofield Kid, tries to persuade aging pig farmer William Munny to
help him hunt down the cowboys. Before he settled down to raise a
family, Munny was a notorious, cold-blooded killer, but he is reluctant
to return to his old habits. To safeguard his children's future,
Munny finally agrees to join the Kid, on condition that they team up
with Ned Logan, another once renowned gunfighter. Arriving in Big
Whiskey, the bounty hunters face a cool reception from the sheriff
Little Bill Daggett, who has a zero-tolerance approach when it comes to
assassins...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.