historical narrative and subjectivity in clint eastwood's "unforgiven"
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E,kST VRAF TKnight ---- - •Hollywood Genre Film
Alan Mitchell27 March 1995
Historical Narrative and Subjectivity in Eastwood's Unforgiven
In dime novels, the western tale becomes increasingly
extravagant and fantastic, although it was fed by actual events.
Actual people became the basis of heroes of dime novel sagas in a
constant process of romanticizing actuality in the service of
sentimental fiction and the adventure story.
-Douglas Pye
Did that really happen? I mean, the way they say it happened?
-Schofield Kid in Unforgiven
In his film Unforgiven, Clint Eastwood explores the subjectivity with which historians,
mythmakers, and anonymous cowboys approach the narrative reconstruction of the past.
Throughout the film, he debunks the lingering notion of the Old West as being replete with
heroic figures who could do no wrong and incorrigible villains who, over time, became mere car-
icatures of themselves. Rumor, bombast, invective, and dime novels all operate in the world of
Unforgiven to create a past built more of words and imagined deeds than of real men and verifi-
able actions. Several characters erase the myths surrounding others, either supplanting them
with new ones or creating some about themselves, and at least one character (Eastwood's
William Munny), in an attempt to build a new identity, tries to dispel nearly all stories about
himself. The film conveys a disbelief in the remembered past through certain figures whose
faith in historical narrative is so strong as to be laughable and through others who are com-
pelled to contribute a more subdued story. It also highlights the problem of subjectivity by for-
mally engaging in the subjectivity it purports to condemn. For example, subtle yet deliberate
point-of-view shots which provide the audience's perspective through a character work in
conjunction with these characters' actions to indicate that what we see is an almost wholly
subjective vision of what really occurs, just as historical events mutate in the minds of their ini-
tial participants and recorders. The formal aspects of the film give insight into the characters
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who play in it, but they also build a meta-narrative which takes on the issue of narrative it-
self, and which informs other components, such as plot, dialogue, and character development.
This is especially true in the film's treatment of William Munny, the near-decrepit
gun-slinging protagonist who tries to build a new identity for himself free of the years of stories
and legends that have enveloped him. The dialogue does much to reveal what Munny thinks of
himself and what others think of him, but formal elements-in particular the opening and clos-
ing titles and the point-of-view shots-help compose the parallel themes of history and iden-
tity. The extreme long shot which opens the film shows a man, apparently somewhere on the
frontier, digging a hole at sunset, just a few yards from his home. The titles, or foreword, reveal
what has happened and who was involved, but as the movie progresses, both the titles and the
C>:I~/Shot seem increasingly removed to the plot. A woman's dying of small pox and the attitude of
her mother toward an outlaw ostensibly have little to do with bringing a slasher and a corrupt
sheriff to justice. But taken in the context of a man struggling with two sides of his personality,
two sides separated by 11 years, the foreword shedsligh~on a once vicious, now familial, man
trying to escape his past. The first line of the foreword seems to describe the two women respon-
sible for Munny's behavior, either over the last dozen years or in the time that we see him.
"She was a comely young woman, and not without prospects" could be a phrase aimed at either
Claudia, Munny's deceased wife, or Delilah, the slashed prostitute whom Munny seeks to
> ~ avenge. The next line suggedeeply tensional relationship between the woman's mother and
Munny, but it is a tension never realized in the course of the filIJiKnowledge of Mrs Feathers
and nearly all knowledge of Claudia is restricted. Curio
us more information about the Feathers women than .the rest of the film, which revolves around
(YIOVl Munny, Little Bill Daggett, Ned Logan, and the srofield Kid, all of whom are outlaws, and
~ all of whom are iconic representations of the west.&e scroll reads, "It was heartbreaking to
her mother that she would enter into marriage with Will Munny, a known thief and a mur-
derer, a man of notoriously vicious and intemperate diSPOSition:::}
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J-/ This is a fact unspoken by any character in ~stories about Will, but through
/" Will's continual references to Claudia, we might infer that i~;disturbed him. In
light of Will's repeated insistence that he "ain't like that any more," and his efforts to deny or
erase stories about his violent past, the audience could conclude that this story-the story of
Will and his relationship with his wife-is what Will thinks of, or wants to think of, when
he imagines his own identity. Tales of his killing deputies, women, and children do not reflect
~~"'-' suJ(-who he considers himself to be: he is "just another fella, now." The final sentence, "That was
1878~dicates the separation so important to Will between past and present. The foreword,
then, can be understood as Will's own spin on the events of Unforgiven, a way of introducing the
story without glorifying himself or the violence it contains. That the shot is Will burying his
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.'"Q wife, and not Will burying Ned or shooting someowpoints to the importance this event has in
Will's life and self-conception.
One the foreword's other functions related to narrative is its similarity not only to the
openings scrolls of much earlier Westerns, but to the dime novels that mytholigized certain fig-
ures of the West. The presence of W W Beauchamp, an author of such novels, evokes connota-
tions associated with that genre of fact-turned-fiction. The film's suspicion of such genres turns
back upon itself with the inclusion of a foreword, a sign that even this retelling of the way
things were is not to be entirely believed. Implicit in the foreword is an admission that it en-
gages the frontier with the same subjectivity of Beauchamp, and merely transmutes its tale into
a different medium. Beauchamp's books and Eastwood's film both are artistic, and therefore
subjective visions of a lost time. It is fair to view Unforgiven as a whole and its various embed-
ded narratives through the filter of Douglas Pye's assessment of the dime novel. Munny is the
victim of precisely this process, whereby his identity is supplanted by storytellers and rumors
t~ed in service of "fiction and the adventure story" (Grant, 148).
I"As the scene with Will burying fades out, and BigWhiskey fadesji, the image and the
subtitle suggest we are in a different time and in many ways, a different world. The
reader/viewer jumps from "That was 1878" to "BigWhiskey Wyoming 1880," a label which in-
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dicates the separation between the old and the new, temperate Will. Later in the film, it is as
though Will has moved back in time, from 1878to the 1860s,when he participated in the kinds
of conflicts which define his behavior in Big Whiskey. The title in some ways misleads the
viewer, in that BigWhiskey makes Will regress into who he was a dozen years earlier, before
-'. vJDf~> &,.{( ~~~ cJ~Ghe knew Claudia. The next~e see~iagetic, and).t'roo~omewhat deceptive. A sign out-
J side Greeley's reads, "Billiards Upstairs." We learn ~om English Bob's barber that
o "Billiards" is a code word in the town for whoringyAnother instance of words not matching re-
ality is the sign hung on Ned's corpse which reads falsely, "This is what happens to assassins
( \C\ \ St \ "1.1'A around here" blasm<kchas Ned was not technically an assassin, and a similar fate does not be-
fall Will)These clues prepare us for the notion that there is a disjunction in Big Whiskey be-
fl0~5 WofO ,(1':\\~D" .Y7 J~e v.J~ f)j J::.vJ t J tween what people say and w~s. Ned, Little Bill, and Will all mask reality ~
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~~ithin Greeley's, and this creates problems for Will.
The next shot of Will's farm is a daylit, reverse angle take of the film's opening. This (eJc (S,,/
suggests that Delilah's stabbing has indirectly affected Munny's stability in the sad yet peace-
ful first shot. The film's first close look at Will presents a family man, a far:mer. His appear-
ance on screen is anticipated by his young daughter running to the pig corral to see him. It is an
image of tenderness, of love between a child and her father. The next two shots graphically
match each other as a pig in first shot overlays a knocked-over Will Munny in the second. Just
as the spectator might be asking, Why would Mrs Feathers consider this man a vicious and in-
temperate murderer, we hear a voice off camera declaring, "You don't look like no rootin tootin
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/\8 sonofabitch and col~ooded assassin." The statement perfectly mirrors the image before the
/l(J,.J(~(1~1'j\audience. The appearance matches the words, and the Kid has accurately assessed Will's neW ~
identity. Unfortunately, the Kid still clings to the images of Will his uncle has inculcated in
him, and he is reluctant to acknowledge that people change. Our first look at the Kid comes
from Will's point of view, and we are in the mud looking up at an antagonist on a horse. When
the Kid next addresses Will, we see the older man from the POV of the younger's gunbelt, an
angle repeated later in the film which makes the object in view look like a vulnerable target, a
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weaker agent. Will, uncomfortable with the vocalization that he should look like a cold-
blooded assassin, lies to the Kid, but protects his identity, by replying, "You must have me con-
fused with someone else." That someone else is not a pig-farming, mud-faced father, but a gun-
slinging, cold-as-snow sonofabitch. When Will's son interrupts his father with an off-camera
plaint, the camera holds on the Kid from Will's perspective, emphasizing the tension between
these two sides of Will's life and drawing a vague connection between the fatherly roles Munny
must assume for both of these boys. The connection, perhaps noticed by the Kid, though not ad-
mitted, might be reflected in his reiteration of his earlier point, "You don't look like no
meaner-than-hell, cold-blooded damn killer," meaning that Will is already beginning to look
like a father figure. The Kid, who defines Will through his uncle's stories, wants to conceive of
himself through the eyes of others. (It is there for appropriate that his own eyes are impo-
tent.) Later, when the Kid tries to shoot Will and Ned from a distance, we never get a POV
shot from his perspective. Instead, we see him in a long shot, struggling to see anything but
c- 1,1(../9/"''''empty space or tall ~ac~ The way the shot is edited (line of sight from Will and Ned), it ap-
pears as though the Kid is looking in entirely the wrong direction. When Ned and Will shoot
Davey, the Kid sees nothing as relies on Will to tell him "What's happening? What's going
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on?" His perception, based only on what people tell him about others and history, has filled
\f( him with empty conceptions of honor, bravery, and killing. Will recognizes this an~~{ls Ned,
broadly speaking, "The Kid is full of shit." On a less physical level, he has not yet accom-
plished (i.e., killed) enough to merit stories about him, so we are left with the sense that the
Kid thinks of himself from the perspective of the stories that would be told about him, were
there any. Even his name is left to his imaginary biographers. "The Schofield Kid, that's
what they call me," he boasts. The Kid spends nearly the entire film seeing Will through his
uncle's eyes, and modeling himself after that image, until the moment just before the climactic
gun battle, in which he realizes both his identity and Will's: "I ain't like you, Will.",I \\ II tn.A£l
" v\.\J) ,!\
,[ \~'J.. The tension between Will's two roles continues through the end of the~cene, as the Kid~~lli'''''I'Ll'
rides into the horizon and becomes a small speck against the sky. The shot from Will's point of
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view reflects Will's feeling that his gun-fighting days, as represented by the Kid, are moving
farther away from him. His daughter's voice from off-camera underscores this feeling, and he
turn to her and family matters. "Let's separate those hogs." When Will turns back to the hori-
zon, the Kid is barely visible, left-of-center in the frame, as though a space were empty beside
him. The following shot graphically matches the Kid to Will's daughter walking through the
pig corral. The graphic match indicates with subtlety the same sense of loss and confusion re-
vealed in the subsequent close-up ofWill, staring into the horizon.
The next scene with Will suggests his intention to abandon his family (for a short time)
and return to killing. His putting down the photograph of his wife and reaching for his gun
marks a pivotal moment, since the audience now knows that he has decided to catch up with
the Kid and hunt the cowboys. The action cues the audience to consider Will a "damn killer,"
but the images that follow are inconsistent with this inclination. Will's target practice with
the can is unsuccessful to begin with, but the POV shot from the can looking back at Will lends
the can an almost sardonic perspective of its own, and makes Will look particularly inept. The
formal components of the scene-the POV shot, the spacing between Will and the .can, etc.-
emphasize the frustration of the simple narrative element of Will shooting at a stationary ob-
ject and missing. The films reminds the audience of this scene later when the Kid shoots holes
through Ned's canteen, and Ned chides, "We ain't going to Wyoming to shoot canteens, Kid,"
suggesting that even if Will could hit the can, it would do him no good against moving, retali-
ating targets. As Will finishes firing at the can with his pistol, and moves inside to get his
shotgun, we see him from the perspective of his bewildered children, who balance on the other
side of Will's killer-versus-father scale. The shot portrays the direct conflict between the two
A\~ sides, and the audience is at once wrenched and amused by his daUgh~certainty regarding
the hidden identity of her father. Through her eyes, we can reify her epiphany and Will's po-
sition. She asks her equally dismayed brother, "Did paw used to kill folks?"
As Will looks through his window at his wife's grave, last seen in the film's opening,
we see it this time from his perspective, an effect which wordlessly locates her and her death
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as the center of his solitary thoughts. This and subsequent shots begin to establish a formal an-
tagonism between two competing viewpoints of Will, that is between those who see him as a
vicious killer and others who think of him as familial and benevolent. The shot in its placid-
vlL- ~JA5ity contrasts markedly with its predecessor, which f~~ Will destroying the can with a
shotgun. The soundtrack also calls to mind the opening scene, as the score features the same mu-
sic, formally hinting that Will looks at the grave is thinks backs to 1~8 when he buried her.
This shot and the next several offer another look at Will as loving and kind, as though his
shooting the can were a mere deviation on a general path of domesticity and good will. That
possibility is most poignantly expressed in a POV shot of Will from the grave which frames
him perhaps as his wife saw him-gentle and compassionate, once you get the gun out of his
hands and the liquor out of his body. The POV shot is important because it does not allow the
Pt~"(.audience to look at him from the cold removQtt"ofan unrestricted perspective. Instead, we see
him from the viewpoint of the woman who saw the beneficent side of Will more than anyoneV
else. The subjectivity of perspective, in this case, portrays Will without any of the connotations
of "thief" and "murderer" present in the viewpoints of people like Sally Two Trees or Little
Bill, who dress their vision of him in the trappings of death and mayhem. The narrative ten-
sion between Will's embattled identity, then, develops on a formal level as points-of-view
from Claudia's grave and the children compete against the perspectives of gunmen, writers, and
(one at least one occasion) Ned Logan. The closing part of the scene, in which Will leaves his
children, cements this tension, as the children witness their father trying to resume the role of
gunman. Will makes narrative reference to his past and the way it has caught up with him,
telling his "little ones" that "This horse and those hogs ... are getting even with me for the cru-
elty I inflicted on them... in my youth before I met your dear departed Ma." Formally, this sen-
timent is expressed when the camera looks up at him from his children's viewpoint until he
crashes to the ground, their seeing his past colliding with his present. Uttering a few words of
parting advice, he rides out past his outhouse, an object that will both the first and penulti-
mate sign of his association with Big Whiskey.
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If in the previous scene the conflict in perspective was between the Schofield Kid and
Will's children and deceased wife, the next scene involving Will presents the disparate out-
looks of Ned Logan and his wife, Sally Two Trees. We see Sally look up in almost alarmed an-
ticipation of Will even before we see him splashing through a stream on his way to the farm.
The conflict is established as soon as we get a reaction shot from Ned who, unlike Sally, is sur-
prised and happy to see his old friend. As Will and Ned mover1intothe house, the camera.,e fir«.
g~ lingers on Sally as she approaches Will's horse and sees th@lung in the saddle. We see
what she sees, and sense her alarm that history is revisiting her family, just as it did Will's.
The stress she expresses facially comes across in Ned's dialogue, as he advises his friend,
"Will, we ain't bad men no more. We're farmers." In other words, they are not who they once
were. They are not the villain-heroes of the Kid's story; they bear no responsibility to avenge
misdeeds or participate in misdeeds themselves. Ned wants to think of himself as a farmer, to
see himself as we first see him from Sally's point-of-view, working in his shed. Perhaps ac-
knowledging that he is no longer who he was or is rumored to be, Will uses a story to convince
Ned to take up his gun and horse again. He tells Ned about Delilah, exaggerating even the.hy-
perbolized story the Kid shared with him earlier. "They cut up a woman, cut her eyes out, her
face, cut her fingers off, even her tits," he says, revealing the discontinuity between what we
witnessed from the point-of-view of both the attacker and the attacked in the film's early
moments. That his story unintentionally distorts reality speaks to the manner in which Will's
own character and history have been distorted through the stories told about him. As Will
tells Ned of slashing, his referent is, in part, a reality constructed of the Kid's words, not of the
events the audience viewed previously. Although visibly moved, and later taken in, by Will's
story, Ned reminds Will again of his new self. "If Claudia was alive, you wouldn't being doing
this," meaning that post-Claudia Will has given up killing and adventure in favor of family
and good will.
When we see Ned through Will's eyes just before the latter is about to leave, we notice
that Will still thinks of Ned as his gunfighting partner. Ned is framed with his rifle centered
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above his head, and the camera looks up slightly at Ned, although still apparently from
Will's position. This indicates Will's lasting admiration of and trust in his partner's abilities.
When Will looks at Ned, he sees Ned and his gun. "I see you still got that Spencer rifle," he
says. The power of that association, which we gather from both the formal elements of the
shot and Will's dialogue, bolster Ned and he commits to the job. His response to Will's state-
ment at last gives the audience a glimpse of what the pair used to be capable of. Perhaps as a
complement to Will's brash and frustrated use of the shotgun to take out the tin can, Ned
replies elegantly and confidently, "I can still knock the eye off a bird flying, too." The camera's
7' framing together of Ned and his rifle prepares the audience to believe Jp!fuat kind of claim.
The moment shares something with the Kid's boast of "That's what they call me," in that
Ned's statement seems to be borrowed from the mouth of a storyteller describing him, and yet it
seems more credible than the Kid's self-description, perhaps because when the Kid speaks, the
camera either looks down or across at him, whereas Ned, at this moment, is captured approxi-
mately from Will's chest level. (Ned, by contrast, is reluctant to give up his adaptive view of
Will as a farmer. This is most evident when the pair first enter Greeh~ld Ned, obviously.
~ .- C~recognizing that his partner is out of his element and ill)~s, Will," ~You look like
shit.") As Will and Ned prepare to leave, we again see Will struggling to mount his horse, this
time not fc/Z~his children's perspective, but from Sally's, who looks on disapprovingly, wor-
ried that her husband is traveling backwards in time, back to his meaner and deadlier self.
When the two ride off, we see their backs from Sally's point-of-view, and can make the as-
sumption that she feels Ned has literally and figuratively turned his back on her, just as Will
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had with his own family. The shot is stationary and somehow removed, hardly appearing like
t;I\J~ta POV shot, but it conv~ us her mood through her eyes. The camera tracks in on Sally, and
we move from seeing through the coldness of her eyes to looking directly at her icy expression.
After a montage of riding shots and almost pastoral music that serves to distance both
the two gunmen/farmers and the audience from Hodgeman County, we hear from Will the im-
portance of subjective viewpoint, how it has affected his notion of identity. Will discusses
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(~':6 ~~~"ti wnat the audience already gleaned from two silent shots, one POV and one objective, which is,
in Will's words, "She doesn't like it, you riding off with me. She gave me the evil eye." Will
suggests that the "evil eye," or personal subjectivity, obfuscates a person's true and dynamic
identity. "She knew what a no good sonofabitch I was, but she don't realize I ain't like that no
more... .! ain't the same as I was." As Will and Ned discuss this point, we see them both from a
third-person viewpoint, scarcely lit by the campfire, with little or no fill light. Will reveals
that what he has seen, how he plays back the events of his life, have had a deep enough im-
pact on his life and character, that he does not need other people to tell him how bad he was to
know how bad he was. "'Member that drover I shot through the mouth? Teeth came out
through the back of his head? He didn't do anything to deserve getting shot, 'least no~ any-
c.1..."'1<!"w'" \.. thing I could see after I sobered up." These words tell how recurring images have ~ill,~r/.... and they also relate to the wayan obscured viewpoint can have drastic, irrational effects on a
man's life, the way that man is perceived by others. When the Kid starts crying after killing
one of the cowboys, he cannot deal with the vision (which we witnessed from his POV) of
shooting the man, and Will advises him to "take a drink, Kid" to wear down the memory, sug-
gesting that the reason all these gunmen were drunks is because they could not cope with the
memories of killing each other. Alcohol interfered with Will's ability to determine what the
drover was innocent or guilty of, and caused him to act on that misperception. Similarly, Sally
Two Trees' conception of Will does not match his recent behavior.! Will's final attack on subjec-
tivity comes with his assessment of his old partner Quincy, who "used to just watch all the
time, scared." In that sense, Quincy is not unlike the character of Beauchamp who, like a para-
site, feeds off aging figures of the Old West, like English Bob, Little Bill, and Will Munny.
1Drunkenness emerges as a sort of sub-theme when three of the major characters-English Bob,
Will, and Little Bill insult each other with charges of constant intoxication, or lack of
perceptive ability. "I heard you fell off your horse and broke your neck, drunk of course,"
English Bob says to Little Bill. When telling Beauchamp the story of Two-Gun Corcoran and
English Bob,Little Billdescribe Bob as "drunk, as usual." Will, by contrast, curses himself for
being drunk, equating it with all the evils of his older days. "My wife, she cured me of
wickedness and drink." When Little Bill first contacts Will in Greeley's, Will's immediate
response is, "I ain't drunk." Furthermore, the name of the town, "BigWhiskey" might suggest
the manner in which its inhabitants' perspectives are twisted and obscured.
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Beauchamp seems emboldened when in the presence of a character sympathetic to him like
English Bob,but cowers and flees under stress. Will seems to prefer informed action to hasty de-
cisions motivated by hearsay, or cowardice mixed with voyeurism, and does not want to think
of himself as an objectworthy of voyeurism. "I'm just a fella now. I ain't no different from any-
one else." Ned concurs with his wife that Will was "one crazy sonofabitch," but also with his
friend that "you ain't like that no more."
When Ned and Will catch up with the Kid, and immediate conflict arises between
Ned and the young gunman over the Kid's inability to see with the same clarity of vision as
\J\.;r~5'-Ned. It speaks to the Kid's character that when he confronts Ned over the l~eizing of
the rifle, the shot of Ned is from the point-of-view of the Kid's gunbelt. We have already seen
him as trigger-happy and too ready to shoot irresponsibly, and this shot leads us to believe
that his actions originate not in his head, but from his holster. The POV from the Kid's belt fo-
cuses first on Ned's midlevel, than pans up to his face and eyes. Where Will framed Ned with
a gun over his head, the Kid frames everything relative to his gun. If he cannot shoot it, he
doesn't see it. "I can shoot well enough to kill this sonofabitch in front ofme," a telling response
to Will's introducing Ned as someone who "can hit a bird in the eye aflying." Minutes later,
when Ned makes up the story of the hawk flying overhead, both the Kid and Will look up to
spot the alleged hawk, but we see only Will's point-of-view, indicating that the Kid's sight
for such a distance is not reliable enough to share with the audience, or perhaps it is not accu-
rate-real-enough to stand in for the camera. Will's POV is legitimized, and the Kid's
mocked, when Ned reveals, "You can't see for shit. There ain't no hawk."
The Kid's vision, like that of Beauchamp and Quincy, is mocked for its inadequacies.
Will's, on the other hand, is held up as the truth. He is the standard by which we judge
whether there is a hawk. He looks, sees none, therefore (for the audience) there is none.
Eventually, during the first assassination scene on the hill, the Kid accepts Will's vision as his
own. When Little Bill asks for Will's name in Greeley's, Will replies, "William Hendershot,"
an amalgamation of his name and Eagle Hendershot's, a dead partner to whom he refers ear-
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Al..t'The fundamental difference between the two iSfwhile Little Bill tries to correct the
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lier and saw in an fevered hallucination. In the hallucination, Will claimed Hendershot's
"head was broke open. You could see inside it," perhaps meaning that his head was open in the
same manner characters' heads are open when the camera positions itself within it, and we,
the audience, can see from inside it. That Hendershot's nickname is "Eagle" and not something
like "Kid" or "Blind Willie" suggests that the maturity and accuracy of his vision was supe-
rior, a vision that Will adopts for himself when dealing with Little Bill. For other charac-
ters, such perspective is unattainable. Beauchamp, who (maybe) should be recording history as
it occurs, rather than "taking certain liberties" as he says, wears glasses and is scoffed at by
Little Bill when Beauchamp reveals that though his books feature "events taken from accounts
of eyewitnesses," the eyewitnesses are usually drunken participants like English Bob, who tell
stories to glorify themselves and their roles. Little Bill further assails Beauchamp and Bob's
idea of the latter by insistently referring to the man Beauchamp calls "The Duke of Death,"
the "Duck of Death," alluding to a bird far less perceptive than the eagle. The Kid and his un-
cle are similarly put into perceptual disrepute, although the effect is to increase the conception
of Will's gunfighting prowess, when Ned .remembers that Will "put the drop on" three
deputies, "not two" as the Kid suggested. Little Bill's refutation of other's perceptions of them-
selves and the past and his ability to tell a story while still establishing historical veracity
perhaps enters him into conflict with the other man of keen vision who tries to erase faulty no-
tions of history, Will Munny. The film's narrative establishes them as antagonist and protago-
nist, but much of their conflict is played out on the formal level with POV shots instead of gun-
shots.
~:rf'"past by supplanting old myths with new ones, Will merely wants to erase it. Whenever he is
asked about the past, he responds, "I don't recollect," or "I don't remember, I was too drunk," or
"I'm not like that anymore." Though we hear much about Will from other characters' stories,
we never see the past through his eyes. There are no flashbacks in the film (except possibly
the opening shot of Will burying his wife), nor does the narrative enter mental subjectivity
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when Will tells Ned of his hallucinatory visions. After Little Bill and sickness nearly over-
come Will and he thinks he might die, he asks Ned to cover up the story of his past, and
wishes to be remembered for his familial self. "Don't tell nobody ...don't tell my kids none of
the things I've done." The battle of perspectives between Little Bill and Will begins explicitly
the first time Will enters Greeley's. The first POV shot of Will in the scene comes from Ned's
perspective when he tells Will how bad he looks. (The situation repeats after the fight, when
we see Will, nearly comatose, from Ned's viewpoint.) The next one shows Will from the point-
of-view of the whiskey bottle in front of him, a shot which calls to mind the scene in which
Will shot at the can on the stump. In both cases, an inanimate object seems to augment a mood of
despair and frustration. Will's dejectedness would not be so evident in this shot were it not for
the bottle, which he finally takes back after being dry for twelve years.
Little Bill's strength relative to the fatigued Will is underscored by a POV shot of
Will from the sheriff's perspective, in which the camera looks down on a shriveled and shiv-
ering Will. A POV shot from Will's vantage point, looking up at Little Bill, matches this shot,
reflecting Will's acknowledgment that he is no condition to fight his antagonist. When Little
Bill asks for his name, and Will replies "Hendershot," referring to Eagle, we might interpret
f!::) fA'>~this~nother form of the Kid's "Schofield Kid, that's what they call me." As the Kid identi-
fied himself by his weapon, Will conceives of himself with acute perception, despite his being
ill and (perhaps) mildly drunk. Will, however, can do little more than watch and listen, and
Little Billpicks up on this ability, mocking him for the same weakness Will found disgusting in
Quincy, and later finds in Beauchamp. At the same time, he signifies the importance of words
in damaging a person's self-conception: he attacks Will using terms from Will's past. "What if
I was to say you were a no good sonofabitch and a liar, and you would shit in your pants because
of a cowardly soul. Would you shoot me dead?" Once Little Bill takes the pistol from Will, we
08 realize from the po~ew of several armed deputies that Will is surrounded and, at this
" "-moment, defeated. As the sheriff knocks Will to the ground, the camera takes the point-of-
view of Will, staring almost straight up at Little Bill, the victorious figure in this fight. The
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POV shots recall those from the scene in which Little Bill assaulted English Bob, and the cam-
era assumed Bob's perspective from the ground, and intercut it with shots of a bloodied, cringing
Bob. Crawling through the bar to reach the door, we see Little Bill, a deputy, and a voyeuristic
Beauchamp, from Will's floor-level perspective, indicating his loss and weakness, and the su-
periority (real or imagined) of these other men.
While Ned is being flogged, he attempts to resuscitate Will's image as a vengeful mur-
derer, partly out of an (unsuccessful) effort to save himself from Little Bill's torture, and partly
to let Little Bill know what awaits him. According to the whore who brings Will the money for
killing the cowboys, Ned used his last breaths to tell Little Bill stories about Will. But the
stories "didn't scare Little Bill," since the Sheriff had his own sheaf of stories, cared for by
Beauchamp and Big Whiskey's deputies. ("Little Bill worked in Texas and Kansas. He
worked in tough towns, boys.") As Will rides into town for the final confrontation with Little
Bill, he discards the bottle of whiskey, as a sign that his perception must be at its most acute,
that he wants to dispense with everything about him that the bottle represents, namely
decadence, wickedness, and unjust actions. On the cut to Greeley's we hear Little Bill promising
drinks to everyone, and then see, from Will's point-of-view, a shotgun fall into place, aiming
directly at the unaware sheriff, who eventually turns and sees the gun, looking almost through
the camera and realizing he has been caught. The soundtrack of cracking lighting and thunder
emphasize the gravity of the moment. After Will kills Skinny, Little Bill tries the same
tactic of verbal assault he used on their first encounter. "You are a cowardly sonofabitch," he
accuses. "You are a killer of women and children." He sees Will as Ned and others have
described him, the vicious murderer of "just about anything that walks or crawls." Little Bill
instructs his deputies to shoot down Will "like the mangy scoundrel he is," implying that
Little Bill conceives of his opponent as the same William Munny who murdered everyone a
decade ago, and who, like a mangy animal, crawled out of the bar beneath his eyes a short time
earlier. But this William Munny, whom Little Bill now faces, is one with a vengeance, with an
advantageous perspective (i.e., from behind the barrels of a shotgun), and with the sum total of
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his history behind him. Will accepts Little Bill's accusation, and turns it into a strength.
"That's right, and now I'm here to kill you for what you did to Ned." After a flurry of gunfire,
and gunshots and camera shots that seem to originate from everywhere, with POVs
intermingled with objective shots until the two become almost indistinguishable, of the armed
men, only Will is left standing. Everyone scatters, and Will immediately serves himself a
drink, already hoping to obscure in his mind the images of what he just did. In a similar effort,
he threatens to kill a note-taking, agape Beauchamp, as though killing him would obliterate
all record of the event, and the stories about Will and the carnage for which he is responsible,
would cease. The final exchange between Will and Little Bill is shot entirely through POVs in
which Little Bill must look up at a towering and vicious Will, just as Will had looked at Little
CD Bill when he first arrived in tow:0ust as the cowboy looked, terror-stricken, into the Kid's
(!) eyes before he pulled the trigge@nd just as Delilah looked into that same cowboy's eyes as he
slashed her. The conflict ends as a POV close-up of Will stares into Little Bill's eyes and kills
him with a bullet to the head: Will's perspective is the only one that remains.
Our last image of Will in BigWhiskey comes from the eyes of Delilah and Beauchamp
as they watch Little Bill turn his back on them and ride out of town, returning to Hodgeman
County. The afterword, a scene that matches almost perfectly the film's opening shot, depicts
Will chopping wood next to a full clothesline, an image of cleansing and beginning, not of death
and burial. The closing titles return us to the story of Mrs Feathers, who searches for the rea-
sons why her only daughter chose to marry "a known thief and murderer, a man of notoriously
vicious and intemperate disposition." If this second scroll refers to the violence Will performed
in Big Whiskey, it indicates the subjective viewpoint of those who would continue to cast
William Munny as a villain; if it refers only to decades-old violence, it comments on the inabil-
ity of people to adapt their visions of people to new information, to change. In this latter case,
it would seem that despite his recent reconstruction of identity, Will remains unforgiven. The
stories of William Munny, now, however focus not on his devastation, his viciousness or intem-
perance, but on his career in San Francisco,"where it was rumored he prospered in dry goods." If
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ter.
-
Mrs Feathers seeks an explanation, perhaps it is contained in the story that the foreword and
~\ \OJ.~c-1,(et\0 fl'.t l afterword fr~ and perhaps Will himself offers the story as a reason, as proof that he was
worthy of Mrs Feather's daughter. It is a story to overcome the uninformed, unchanging subjec-
tivity of a woman, and a populace, incapable of acknowledging the i~ charac-
I=>r~ 1.(.~{, ··D ,-
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