Mad
Dog Poffy

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The Rise
and Recant of a Western Iconography.
by
Jon Dunmore © 22 Apr 2006. "You
better bury Ned right! You better not cut up nor otherwise harm no whores! Or
I'll come back and kill every one of you sons of bitches!" With
those words, Clint Eastwood as William Munny, west-worn killer of men, women
and children in UNFORGIVEN, rides slowly, deliberately into the storming
night, fading into the blackness - taking with him a cultural icon that he himself
was responsible for creating.
And,
as if a curtain had been drawn on "The Man With No Name"; as if an era
had come to a climactic close; as if Eastwood's recant of The Stranger was a tacit
prohibition to all who would emulate or plagiarize the icon, the cinema has not
seen this character since
Such
is the power of Eastwood's ad hoc ownership of The Man With No Name. Arguably
outgunning even John Wayne as the archetypal cowboy, Clint Eastwood (who made
an art form of an acting coach's directive: "Don't just do something - stand
there!") indisputably reigns as the alpha and omega of The Stranger icon
The
Rise...
In
1964, Eastwood strode onto movie screens in the Sergio Leone "spaghetti western," FISTFUL OF DOLLARS. Though his character was named Joe, U.S. marketers
dubbed him The Man With No Name (aka The Stranger), capturing the loner's rootlessness
and lack of identity, unwittingly striking the perfect isolationist chord.
The
Man With No Name was not a new invention, though: Leone based his American West
on the "American East," borrowing FISTFUL from Akira Kurosawa's
1961 YOJIMBO ("The Bodyguard" - heavily influenced by the American
Western genre), featuring the mighty Toshiro Mifune as a nameless wandering samurai
(who smart-alecks his name as "Mulberry Field" when asked, because it
was the first thing he saw; a device which became so common that even Jan Brady
would one day see a glass of water and name her mythical boyfriend George Glass
- but I digress in a white-fro Brady swoon
).
YOJIMBO's
"bodyguard" was in turn a ronin incarnation of Dashiell Hammett's
"Continental Operative" character - arguably the first Man With No Name
- featured in a 1929 gangster novel, Red Harvest, a template for YOJIMBO.
Eastwood's
accidental genius was in concretizing the generic Man With No Name icon as a cowboy,
in Leone's "Dollar" trilogy - a nihilistic avenger in loose poncho and
tight trousers - further extemporized in his own successive westerns, HIGH PLAINS DRIFTER, THE OUTLAW JOSEY WALES, PALE RIDER, et al.
In
the cinematic history of Man With No Name characters, Eastwood's appearance (in FISTFUL) stands mythically at almost exactly the midpoint: about 30 years
before FISTFUL was Hammett's character, about 30 years after FISTFUL
is UNFORGIVEN.
The
Recant...
And
I looked, and behold a pale horse; and his name that sat on him was Death, and
Hell followed with him. - Revelation, 6:8.
Is
it coincidence that William Munny rides a pale horse? And that "Death"
is the death of the Man With No Name iconography?
When
we first meet the hero of UNFORGIVEN - William Munny, mud-covered and tripping
over his own feet in a pig-pen - we are thinking exactly what his unexpected visitor,
the Schofield Kid, articulates not one minute later, "You don't look like
no rootin', tootin' son of a bitchin' cold-blooded assassin."
Indeed,
he ain't. Not any more, at least.
In UNFORGIVEN, the Stranger character has been rewrought by director/star
Eastwood (and writer David Webb Peoples) from a nihilist into a pacifist. Munny,
incessantly maintaining that his dear, departed wife "cured him of evil"
(whilst seemingly trying to convince himself of it), is not so much a departure
from the Man With No Name (the laconic loner with the steely confidence and steady
gunhand), as an in-depth examination of what has become of him.
The
world at large, seeing Clint in Western garb, thought it obvious we would be viewing
a character branded like cattle-iron into our psyches. Instead, as critic Richard
Corliss notes, "UNFORGIVEN took its time in letting you watch Clint
turn into Clint." (Though Clint has been physically beaten on film before
- FISTFUL, FOR A FEW DOLLARS MORE, HANG 'EM HIGH, DIRTY HARRY, EVERY WHICH WAY, et al - the sight of him in UNFORGIVEN, crawling out of a saloon
on his belly like a cur, under the heel of a vicious sheriff, was more humiliating
than any previous drubbing, as his trampled character offered no hint of retribution.
In a Clint Movie - that's just not on!)
Shockingly
- yet sublimely - here was a character who did not ride high in the saddle, so
much as fall out of it; with a gunhand only made steady by inner demons rather
than natural talent; with a petered-out bravado attributed not to principle, pugnaciousness
or patriotism, but to simply being "young and fulla beans." When
we see Munny target practicing, with each round going wildly astray, we think
to ourselves, "Is this the Clint we know, who used to take out four guys
with three shots, without even aiming?" We wonder why it is so hard to "see"
the character we have grown up idolizing, until we realize that we are
being shown that character - as a has-been. We realize that Monco and the High
Plains Drifter and The Preacher were ALL this character, but at the top of their
game. Here was a bold new envisioning - not even a reworking of the character,
for we are told in retrospect that Munny was that same sociopathic killer in his
youth - with a plausible reality appended. What did happen to those anti-heroes
who rode into the heat-wavering desert? This. The
Movie...
UNFORGIVEN opens with a text crawl:
It is 1880; two years after the smallpox death of Claudia Feathers, wife of William
Munny, "a man of notoriously vicious and intemperate disposition." The
mystery of why a "comely young woman" like Claudia would take up with
Munny, "a known thief and murderer," is quickly put aside in our minds,
as the film sweeps to Big Whiskey, Wyoming, where a hardened sheriff, "Little"
Bill Daggett (Gene Hackman) is adjudicating between some rowdy cowboys and the
whores they molested.
The
whores, dissatisfied with Little Bill's penance to the cowboys, place a thousand
dollar bounty on the cowboys' heads. The Schofield Kid (Jaimz Woolvett) is one
of the bounty hunters who sets his eye on the cash. But his eye, literally, is
poor, so he enlists the aid of veteran killers - Munny and Munny's longtime partner,
Ned Logan (Morgan Freeman). It
is during their ride to Big Whiskey that we deduce that Eastwood is, in fact,
presenting us with the autumn years of the death-dealing Stranger. Ned and Munny
reminisce grimly over their halcyon looting and killing days, playing it down
for Schofield, who is enamored with the attendant "glamour"; even this
bounty hunt is a reluctant mission, rationalized by Munny "to get a new start
for them youngsters," his two kids. While
Munny and Ned downplay their violent past, in Big Whiskey, "English"
Bob (Richard Harris), a mercenary gunman who relishes and flaunts his violent
present, rolls into town with his vicarious, vacillating biographer, W.W. Beauchamp
(Saul Rubinek), and is beaten sadistically by Little Bill for transgressing the
ordinance of not surrendering his firearms. The
Mayhem...
Thus the four main violent characters
in the play are introduced to us: the cut-whore cowboys, English Bob, Little Bill
and William Munny. To fully appreciate the astounding arcs of these characters,
envision each of them as a fader (a slider, or a volume knob) on a mixing console. When we are introduced
to each of these characters, their violence levels are as follows: cowboys - 10 (we meet
them attacking whores), English Bob - 8 (boasting of his lethality, backing it
up with firepower); Little Bill - 3 (a seeming pacifist when he opts not to bullwhip
his detainees); and Munny - 1 (a spent man, an ex-alcoholic, poverty-ridden pig
farmer, sullen and heartsick over his wife's death two years prior).
By
movie's end, these roles are completely reversed: the cowboys - 1 (they have been
dispatched by Munny and Schofield); English Bob - 3 (beaten, chastened by Little
Bill and sent packing; in his dishabille, his cultivated English accent
replaced by impotent cockney insults); Little Bill - 8 (his experience and sadism
revealed, including gratuitous torture and murder of Ned); Munny - 10 (in a scene
reminiscent of any given Man With No Name film, mows down Little Bill and his
full complement of deputies; the only thing separating this act with the hundreds
of other executions Eastwood's Strangers have performed being the character studies
and known motivations of each of the slain men). The
Man...
In many of Eastwood's "Stranger"
films, the lead character defies convention and remains stoic throughout the story
whilst all other characters around him arc towards redemption or damnation. As
he defied character convention with his Strangers - who never rode off into the
sunset, but almost always faded into a landscape that was responsible for spawning
them and then re-assimilating them unto its bosom when their mission was accomplished
- in UNFORGIVEN, Eastwood turns convention on its ear once more, by offering
a lead character whose redemption was at the beginning of the tale, who
arcs to the condemned state that The Stranger character personified.
Further,
there is no redemption for anyone. From the cowboys (who are killed mercilessly)
to the cut whore, Delilah (whom Munny tells a soul-shattering lie), to Ned (remorseful
of his part in the bounty killing, yet never gaining the opportunity for repentance
before his own untimely death), to Skinny, the saloon owner (whom Munny takes
unwarranted revenge upon), to Schofield (who finds not glamour, but horror in
his chosen profession), every character attains an unabsolved, "unforgiven"
state. When Munny, Ned and Schofield are involved in the shooting of the first
cowboy, though Ned is minimally involved, though Munny fires the death-dealing
shot, though Schofield has had nothing to do with it, when Schofield asks, "Did
we kill him?" Munny remorsefully replies, whilst looking at the shell-shocked
Ned, "Yeh, we killed him," the "we" implicating all of them
equally in the guilt. Never
has so much ugliness been such a thing of beauty.
As
Leone imbued a gritty "realism" to his westerns (in the process ironically
creating a new romanticism in the form of the amoral, rogue Stranger), UNFORGIVEN not only pays homage to Leone in its "realism" (characters
drawn from the insecurities, idiosyncrasies and impurities of human nature), but
serves simultaneously as a recant of the nouveau-romantic iconography that the
spaghettis - and later, Eastwood himself - were responsible for perpetuating.
No more sending the thematic message that the "anti-hero" is something
to aspire to, or that the laconic, lone gunman was heroic in any way. In UNFORGIVEN, the almost mystical lone gunman - the main character as a youth - was simply an
irresponsible, drunk sociopath; in this movie, each death has a resonance inwards
- with each character - and outwards, to the surrounding protagonists; as Eastwood
himself put it, "no nameless bodies fall from rooftops."
No
one is hero or anti-hero. Each character simply seeks equilibrium, some
way to live their life without the demons that haunt their savage past and indefinite
present, each harboring some form of sin. As Little Bill asks whore Alice (Frances
Fisher) when she accuses him of beating an innocent man, "Innocent of what?"
The
Myth...
Hidden in plain view in UNFORGIVEN,
amongst the subplots, is one of the elements responsible for romanticizing the
Western - writer W.W. Beauchamp, who enters the movie having penned a veritable
mythological biography on "The Duke of Death" - English Bob - filling
his book with fanciful, uncorroborated vignettes, related by Bob himself, his
work flowered with "a certain poetry to the language which he couldn't resist,"
thereby creating the western myths out of which John Wayne's and Clint's very
characters of the past decades were spawned.
To
Beauchamp, as with all mythos-creating media, "reality" was not a consideration
for the marketplace. As Carleton Young tells James Stewart in THE MAN WHO SHOT LIBERTY VALANCE, "This is the west, sir. When the legend becomes fact,
print the legend."
Beauchamp's
eyes are opened to a harsher realism when he encounters Little Bill Daggett, abandoning
Bob to begin documenting Little Bill's philosophies on violence and "bad
men." Ultimately, Beauchamp comes upon William Munny, who personified the
ideal that Little Bill spoke of, and for whom the legendary tales spoke truth
(the cool-headed gunman who could overcome superior odds; the truly "bad
man," "cold as the snow with no weak nerve nor fear"). In Munny,
Beauchamp at last witnesses the Real West, far more brutal and unclassifiable
than he dared realize.
The
attraction to Clint's characters is towards their penchant for righting wrongs
directly and judiciously. In UNFORGIVEN and in Clint's previous movie,
the much-panned THE ROOKIE, he shoots a man directly in the face; in ABSOLUTE POWER, he injects a lethal substance into an assassin who attempts to kill
his daughter (when the assassin pleads mercy, Clint's reply, "I'm fresh out");
Dirty Harry's credo was also full frontal assault - Clint's characters have never
had any compunction over justice without honor (false or perceived).
This
was an aspect of his characters that John Wayne found hard to stomach, once writing
to Clint and lambasting the hypocritical, greedy, apathetic townspeople in HIGH PLAINS DRIFTER, whom he felt did not represent the true spirit of the American
pioneer. Wayne, being a product of an earlier era - the romanticized west - also
objected to "that kid's" (referring to Clint) modus operandi
of shooting unarmed men or shooting men in the back.
I
suppose this is what makes an "anti-hero" - someone who metes out justice
via their own rules, not society's. The end result is the same. The world is a
better place. But society loves to play its games of duplicity, diplomacy (a euphemism
for lies) and fair play only afforded those who can afford it.
Clint's
characters do not "stand up for the little man" but for the wronged
man. Wrongdoing must be dealt with - immediately, fiercely and without remorse,
which is what his characters have always brought to the screen. It is what William
Munny brings, which is why he assumes the mantle of the heroic character in UNFORGIVEN, even though the movie itself is an indictment against "anti-heroes";
descending into a personal hell to set things right, his regression is regarded
as a grand sacrifice he is willing to make to remain righteous.
UNFORGIVEN opens and closes with long shots of Munny on his farm, firstly digging a grave
(for his dead wife), and in the film's final shot, visiting it for the last time
(and thence fading into the landscape like so many of his avengers), while the
closing text-crawl simultaneously bookends the film and brings it full circle.
But now this mirror image of the opening text-crawl hits us with palpable impact
after the exhaustive character study we have just witnessed - for though her mother
and locals never understood why, we the viewers now know how Claudia Feathers
could have married this man of "such notoriously vicious and intemperate
disposition."
Dedicating UNFORGIVEN to Sergio [Leone] and Don [Siegel], two of his seminal influences
and mentors, Eastwood commented, at the time of the film's release, "The
movie summarized everything I feel about the Western." In turn, critic Carlo
Cabaña summarizes Eastwood: "In his best work, he turns the clichés
back into the archetypes from which they sprang."
The
Magnificent Stranger...
Who would've guessed that
the original title to FISTFUL OF DOLLARS - IL MAGNIFICO STRAGNERO ("The
Magnificent Stranger") - would ultimately find more congruence than the final
title, in the embodiment of Eastwood's characters?
As
that film spawned a new era in Westerns and violent films (Leone's and Eastwood's
successive films included), the early
'90s saw another mini-revolution in what critics would call "revisionist
westerns" - DANCES WITH WOLVES, LAST OF THE MOHICANS - "revisionist"
being an arty euphemism for a more balanced portrayal of the frontier than the
bulk of bigoted White-Eyes' media, like the singing cowboys and one-dimensional,
whooping Indians of John Ford's and John Wayne's day.
Maybe
synergy would have
inevitably conjured a tale like UNFORGIVEN - indeed, David Webb Peoples
wrote the script in 1976, so the movie could have been anyone's for the making,
Francis Ford Coppolla owning the rights until 1983. We might have seen it coming.
As Roger Ebert opines, regarding the Western milieu, "It was time for an
elegy."
What
we did not see coming was that the Man With No Name who sweated blood and bullets
giving birth to The Stranger iconography - Clint Eastwood - would himself be responsible
for its world-shaking, elegiac swansong.
END
DVD SPECIAL FEATURES: 2-DISC EDITION:
Commentary by Richard Schickel - Interactive Menus - Eastwood film highlights - Awards List - trailer - All on Accounta Pullin' a Trigger - Eastwood & Co: Making Unforgiven - Eastwood...A Star - Career Profile: Eastwood on Eastwood - Maverick episode: Duel at Sundown.
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