by Christopher Barr
"It's a helluva thing, killin' a man. Take away all he's got, and all he's ever gonna have."
What is it about the Wild West that we
love so much? It could be that it’s the last pre-industrialized era in
American history. Which may make it the most relatable; Unforgiven (1992) is my favorite film of
this genre. Tombstone is up
there as one of my favorites as well. But Clint Eastwood’s now classic is
a film about redemption and then retribution, it’s about a man that can’t
outrun his past.
Open Range (2003)
is a film by Kevin Costner that is my opinion is underrated. This film is
the only western since Unforgiven
that could stand safely beside it. Both films explore age old historical
notions of man vs. nature, but both these films aside from their place in time
are about man vs. himself.
That’s the real question; no matter
what time you are in, what is it to be yourself? How does one live with
not only what they did but if placed, what they will do? These films are
about a man within a man, often a stranger, a shadow that surfaces when
survival is all that lies between them and, oddly enough living with their
memories of what that stranger inside executed. Because of the prevalence
of surface thought, people generally don’t consider what’s inside a person
screaming to get out. What is the struggle people go through to just live
as themselves? Plato said “Be kind
for everyone is fighting a battle”, that is what people fight. Conflicts are often internalized ones that
become external, shifting the blame from oneself to an external force to relieve
one’s own guilt.
William Munny was an old pig farmer
with a couple of kids and a wife that passed away a few years prior. He
was brought into an assassination plot to avenge the mutilation of a
prostitute. Reluctantly he agrees and then enlists his old partner Ned to
join in. This film explores a journey into the darkness but yet a redux,
being the man outlived the calamity only to be drawn back in. The great
thing about this film and Open Range
is they are after thoughts of men that lived villainous lives and sought
redemption.
Eastwood’s film is colored and scored
like the wanted paper the younger William Munny’s bounty was printed on.
The film was brown and windy and dusty. Everything about this film wasn’t
modern and that’s where its poetry flourished. The film was about a man that
was drunk through most of the heinous crimes but met a woman that helped him
change his ways. Only after her death he’s brought back into this world
of gun fighting and murder.
"You better bury Ned right; and don't go cuttin' up... nor otherwise harm
no whores, or I'll come back and kill every one of you sons-a-bitches."
What I love about Unforgiven, when pressed after Ned’s murder, was William Munny
showing the devil, the shadow, he worked so hard to keep at bay, at the end of
the film, killing Little Bill and anyone else involved. The film was
about a man that couldn’t escape his past, and I think that’s what philosophy
is about. It’s about recognizing where you come from and what you can
change and what you cannot change. In William Munny’s case he tried but
who he was is who he became. That’s the real tragedy of the film.
Not all the shooting and killing but the reality of who you are, naked, with
all the scares and blood to follow.
Little Bill was a killer who counted on
his killer instinct because in his case he enjoyed the power it brought.
He received fame and fortune for being good at killing people. An author
came to him and offered to write a book about his infamous kills, sort of
glamorizing murder. Bill got so use to it that he didn’t even see it as a
bad thing.
Which is the golden nugget of the film,
what is it to be bad? What is it to be regretful for past acts of
violence? Can a person be responsible for a horrible crime and later
actually learn their lesson? Where does redemption lie?
Open Range
was about a man that simply didn’t want to get involved anymore. So
moving cattle from place to place seemed to be the lesser of two evils.
But when violence caught up to Kevin Costner’s character Charley Waite, he
acted. He is a man with a violent past but like in the case of William
Munny, that violence in the world, crossed their respective paths. Then
shootouts ensued, guns a blazing and bad guys dying with both men leaving with
their lives.
“You may not
know this but….. there’s things that gnaw at a man worse than dyin.”
What I love about westerns is they
erase all the modern bullshit and look at a man in his most naked form.
People shroud themselves in their things and their careers these days,
complicating a simple way of looking at the world. We are responsible for
our actions and redemption doesn’t lie in God or the bible but in ourselves.
As hard as it is to except, we are responsible for all the other versions of
ourselves that live within us. Those immature
and misguided times in our past that at the time we acted as we thought we
should, for our own benefit. Therein
lies the redemption, you are responsible for your actions but you are more
responsible for realization. I think
people are born good and it’s the world and the influence surrounding it, that
changes people and it often takes many years of living, before a person realizes
they must make a change within themselves, some don’t ever.
William Munny left us in Unforgiven as a villain, a righteous one,
but never the less, a bad man. Charlie
Waite of Open Range left us as a man
with hope, a man that doesn’t have to be the sum of all his parts, but a man
with the right woman can hang up his guns and live a fulfilling life and build
a family. Hopefully, Charlie Waite isn’t
a William Munny in the making only to later be Unforgiven.
“Told you I
was wantin’ out of the cattle business.
Funny thing…there’s a saloon right back there just had its owner
die. Hopin’ you’d be my partner.”
I used to saw I liked John Wick better the first time I saw it when it was called Unforgiven.
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