Originally posted by: weirdichi
I was expecting a gunslinging action flick, but instead got a dramatic tale of cowboys and their gritty lives. Maybe that's where it went wrong, but I still just found this movie "meh" and not "Wow!"
I thoroughly enjoyed Tombstone, but this movie just wasn't there for me. It gave a different perspective on the cowboy life and how you can never escape it, but still left me unsatisfied. Anybody wanna turn my "meh" into a "Wow!"?
Also, there was no mention of Ned as being black at all in the film. Was he supposed to portray a white man, or did everybody in the whole movie just not notice that he was black?
It's called creative license. You know, the whole idea of not focusing on some of the stupid things we've done in the past? Besides, the movie wasn't about Ned being black.
Here's a nice little summary I found online:
"One striking thing is the implicit irony that the characters, as ostensibly depicted, are to a one exactly opposite of their true nature, or of how they themselves want to be. The Schofield Kid, blustering braggadocio notwithstanding, is no killer. "I ain't like you Will," a chastened Kid says as he departs. And Little Bill Daggett remonstratively represents law, order, and justice, the supposed peace officer keeping the peace, is in truth corrupt and sadistically violent, unable to rise above his own vicious lawlessness. English Bob, the erstwhile cosmopolitan gunslinger, is a fraud and a coward to boot. And William Munney keeps saying he's a changed man, that he "ain't like that anymore." But, oh yeah, he is. The only honest character, the only compassionate character, is Ned Logan. He's the only one who kills no one, because of all of them, he really isn't like that, and yet he is the only one of the hired killers to get killed and to suffer the consequences of being a supposed killer.
To tell this story that plumbs the depths of human depravity, telling it convincingly, exploring various relative degrees of the human character, holding the requisite feet to the fire, and doing it all tightly in 131 minutes, Clint assembled great cast to work with: Morgan Freeman, Gene Hackman, and Richard Harris. All are marvelous. The film is a masterpiece."
Watch it again in its entirety. Then report back.