Unforgiven Explained

Unforgiven
Director:Clint Eastwood
Producer:Clint Eastwood
Music:Lennie Niehaus
Cinematography:Jack N. Green
Editing:Joel Cox
Studio:Malpaso Productions
Distributor:Warner Bros.
Runtime:131 minutes[1]
Country:United States
Language:English
Budget:$14.4 million[2]
Gross:$159.2 million

Unforgiven is a 1992 American Western film produced and directed by Clint Eastwood. It stars Eastwood himself, as William Munny, an aging outlaw and killer who takes on one more job, years after he had turned to farming. The film co-stars Gene Hackman, Morgan Freeman, and Richard Harris and was written by David Webb Peoples.

Unforgiven grossed over $159 million on a budget of $14.4 million and received widespread critical acclaim, with praise for the acting (particularly from Eastwood and Hackman), directing, editing, themes and cinematography. The film won four Academy Awards: Best Picture and Best Director for Eastwood, Best Supporting Actor for Hackman, and Best Film Editing for Joel Cox. Eastwood was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Actor for his performance, but he lost to Al Pacino for Scent of a Woman.[3] The film was the third Western to win Best Picture,[4] following Cimarron (1931) and Dances with Wolves (1990). Eastwood dedicated the film to directors and mentors Sergio Leone and Don Siegel.

In 2004, Unforgiven was selected for preservation in the United States National Film Registry by the Library of Congress as being deemed "culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant".[5] The film was remade into a 2013 Japanese film, also titled Unforgiven, which stars Ken Watanabe and changes the setting to the early Meiji era in Japan. Eastwood has long asserted that the film would be his last traditional Western, concerned that any future projects would simply rehash previous plotlines or imitate someone else's work.[6]

Plot

In 1880, in Big Whiskey, Wyoming, a cowboy named Quick Mike slashes prostitute Delilah Fitzgerald's face with a knife, permanently disfiguring her after she laughs at his small penis. As punishment, sheriff "Little Bill" Daggett orders Mike and his associate who was with him at the brothel, Davey Bunting, to turn over several of their horses to Delilah's employer, Skinny DuBois, for his loss of revenue. Outraged, the prostitutes offer a $1,000 bounty for the cowboys' deaths.

In Hodgeman County, Kansas, a boastful young man visits Will Munny's hog farm. He calls himself the "Schofield Kid" and claims to be an experienced bounty hunter looking for help pursuing the cowboys. Formerly a notorious outlaw and murderer, Will is now a repentant widower raising two children. After initially refusing to help, Will realizes that his farm is failing and his children's future is in jeopardy. He recruits his friend Ned Logan, another retired outlaw, and they catch up with the Kid, who, they discover, is severely near-sighted.

Back in Big Whiskey, British-born gunfighter "English" Bob, an old acquaintance and rival of Little Bill, seeks the bounty. He arrives in town with his biographer W. W. Beauchamp, who naively believes Bob's tall tales. Enforcing the town's anti-gun law, Little Bill, with his deputies, disarms Bob and beats him savagely to discourage others from attempting to claim the bounty. Bob, humiliated, is banished from town the next morning, but Beauchamp stays out of a fascination with the Sheriff, who debunks many of the romantic notions Beauchamp has about the Wild West. Little Bill explains to Beauchamp that the best attribute for a gunslinger is to be cool-headed under fire rather than to have the quickest draw, and to always kill the best shooter first.

Will, Ned, and the Kid arrive in town during a rainstorm and enter Skinny's saloon. While Ned and the Kid meet with the prostitutes upstairs, Little Bill confronts a feverish Will. Not realizing Will's identity but correctly guessing that he wants the bounty, Bill confiscates his pistol and beats him. Ned and the Kid escape through a back window and take Will to an unoccupied barn outside of town, where they and the prostitutes nurse him back to health. A few days later, the trio ambush Davey. After missing Davey and shooting his horse, Ned falters and Will shoots Davey instead. Ned decides to quit and return to Kansas.

Ned is later captured and flogged to death by Little Bill to learn the whereabouts of Will and the Kid. Will takes the Kid with him to the cowboys' ranch, directing him to ambush Quick Mike in the outhouse and shoot him. After they escape, a distraught Kid drunkenly confesses he had never killed anyone before and is overcome with remorse. A prostitute arrives with the reward and tells them about Ned's fate. Shocked by the news, Will begins drinking and demands the Kid's revolver. The Kid hands it over, saying that he no longer wants to be a killer, and Will sends him back to Kansas to distribute the reward.

That night, Will finds Ned's corpse displayed in a coffin outside Skinny's saloon. Inside, Little Bill and his deputies are organizing a posse. Will walks in alone, brandishing a shotgun, and kills Skinny for displaying Ned's corpse. He then aims at Little Bill, but the shotgun misfires. In the ensuing gunfight, Will shoots Little Bill and several other men with the revolver. He then orders the rest of the posse out. Beauchamp lingers briefly to ask how Will survived. Will replies that it was luck and scares him away. Little Bill tries and fails to take another shot while lying on the floor, then bemoans his fate and curses Will, who shoots him dead. Will shouts threats as he mounts his horse and rides out of town.

A closing title card states that Will's mother-in-law found his farm abandoned years later, Will having possibly moved to San Francisco with the children, and she remained at a loss to understand why her daughter married such a notorious outlaw and murderer.

Production

The film was written by David Webb Peoples, who had written the Oscar nominated film The Day After Trinity and co-written Blade Runner with Hampton Fancher. The concept for the film dated to 1976, when it was developed under the titles The Cut-Whore Killings and The William Munny Killings. The script was originally optioned by Francis Ford Coppola, who failed to the raise the money to develop the project any further.[7] [8] By Eastwood's own recollection, he was given the script in the "early 80s" although he did not immediately pursue it, because, according to him, "I thought I should do some other things first".[9] Eastwood personally phoned Harris to offer him the role of English Bob, and later said Harris was watching Eastwood's movie High Plains Drifter at the time of the phone call, leading to Harris thinking it was a prank.[10] Hackman was hesitant to play Bill Daggett, as his daughters were upset that he was starring in too many violent films; but Eastwood convinced him to do it.[11]

Filming took place between August 26, 1991, and November 12, 1991.[12] Much of the cinematography for the film was shot in Alberta in August 1991 by director of photography Jack Green. Production designer Henry Bumstead, who had worked with Eastwood on High Plains Drifter, was hired to create the "drained, wintry look" of the western. The railroad scenes were filmed on the Sierra Railroad in Tuolumne County, California.[13]

Themes

Like other Revisionist Westerns, Unforgiven is primarily concerned with deconstructing the morally black-and-white vision of the American West which was established by traditional works in the genre, as the script is saturated with unnerving reminders of the now teetotal Munny's own horrific past as a drunken murderer and gunfighter who is haunted by the lives he's taken,[14] while the film as a whole "reflects a reverse image of classical Western tropes": the protagonists, rather than avenging a God-fearing innocent, are hired to collect a bounty offered by a group of prostitutes. Men who claim to be fearless killers are variously exposed as being either cowards, weaklings, or self-promoting liars, while others find that they no longer have it in them to take yet another life. A writer with no concept of the harshness and cruelty of frontier life publishes stories which glorify common criminals as infallible men of honor. The law is represented by a pitiless and cynical former gun-slinger whose idea of justice is often swift and without mercy, and while the main protagonist initially tries to resist his own violent impulses, the murder of his old friend drives him to become the same cold-blooded killer he once was, suggesting that a Western hero is not necessarily "the good guy", but is instead "just the one who survived".[15]

Film scholar Allen Redmon describes Munny's role as an anti-hero by stating he is "a virtuous or an injured hero [who] overcomes all obstacles to see that evil is eradicated, using whatever means necessary".[16]

Literary allusions

Unforgiven shares many parallels with Homer's Iliad, in characters and themes. "In both works, the protagonists – Achilles and William Munny – are self-questioning warriors who temporarily reject the culture of violence only to return to it after the death of their closest male friend, in which they are implicated."[17] Munny and Achilles have the same dilemma between fate and counter-fate. They know that their fate is being a warrior and likely dying that way; however, they both try to reject it for at least some time. Munny continually claims he has changed and "ain't like that no more" referring to his warrior-like hitman past, whereas Achilles continually refuses to be a soldier in the Greek army since he condemns Agamemnon for stealing his captured bride as war spoil.

Neither wants to kill for causes from their past (Munny being an outlaw, Achilles being a warrior-king) since they find them unjust. Both are committed to a "higher" cause—Munny to his children and his wife's wishes, and Achilles to the injustice of women-stealing and to Briseis, who at one point he would've had to sacrifice to Agamemnon to stop the war.

However, when their best friends are killed—Achilles' Patroclus and Munny's Ned—they allow their rage and desire for vengeance to make them return to their warrior-prescribed fate. Achilles rages against the Trojans and kills many. He gets vengeance by killing Hector and desecrating his corpse, dragging it around the town. Munny rages against Little Bill and his crew. He gets vengeance by killing them and Little Bill, threatening to kill anyone who opposes him.

There are however relevant differences in Homer's epic and Eastwood's film, namely that Achilles is fated to die in battle, whereas Munny moves to California at the end of the film to become a businessman to provide for his kids. Whether Munny has successfully countered his warrior-fate is unclear, as is whether a life in dry goods redeems him as his love for his wife had done.

Reception

Box office

The film debuted at the top position in its opening weekend.[18] [19] Its earnings of $15 million ($7,252 average from 2,071 theaters) in its opening weekend was the best-ever opening for a Clint Eastwood film at that time. This was also the highest August opening weekend, holding that record until it was surpassed a year later by The Fugitive.[20] It spent a total of three weeks as the No. 1 film in North America. In its 35th weekend (April 2–4, 1993), capitalizing on its Oscar wins, the film returned to the Top 10 (spending another three weeks total there), ranking at No. 8 with a gross of $2.5 million ($2,969 average from 855 theaters), an improvement of 197 percent over the weekend before where it made $855,188 ($1,767 average from 484 theaters). The film closed on July 15, 1993, having spent nearly a full year in theaters (343 days / 49 weeks), having earned $101.2 million in North America, and another $58 million internationally for a total of $159.2 million worldwide.

Critical response

Review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes reports an approval rating of 96% based on 109 reviews, and an average rating of 8.80/10. The website's critical consensus states: "As both director and star, Clint Eastwood strips away decades of Hollywood varnish applied to the Wild West, and emerges with a series of harshly eloquent statements about the nature of violence."[21] Metacritic gave the film a score of 85 out of 100 based on 34 critics, indicating "universal acclaim".[22] Audiences polled by CinemaScore gave the film an average grade of "B+" on an A+ to F scale.[23]

Jack Methews of the Los Angeles Times described Unforgiven as "the finest classical western to come along since perhaps John Ford's 1956 The Searchers." Richard Corliss in Time wrote that the film was "Eastwood's meditation on age, repute, courage, heroism—on all those burdens he has been carrying with such grace for decades." Gene Siskel and Roger Ebert criticized the work, though the latter gave it a positive vote, for being too long and having too many superfluous characters (such as Harris' English Bob, who enters and leaves without meeting the protagonists). Despite his initial reservations, Ebert eventually included the film in his "The Great Movies" list.[24]

Unforgiven was named one of the ten best films of the year on 76 critics' lists, according to a poll of the nation's top 106 film critics.[25]

Accolades

AwardCategoryNominee(s)Result
20/20 AwardsBest PictureClint Eastwood
Best Director
Best Actor
Best Supporting ActorGene Hackman
Best Original ScreenplayDavid Webb Peoples
Best Art DirectionHenry Bumstead
Best CinematographyJack N. Green
Best Film EditingJoel Cox
Best Sound Design
Academy Awards[26] Best PictureClint Eastwood
Best Director
Best Actor
Best Supporting ActorGene Hackman
Best Screenplay – Written Directly for the ScreenDavid Webb Peoples
Best Art DirectionArt Direction: Henry Bumstead;
Set Decoration: Janice Blackie-Goodine
Best CinematographyJack N. Green
Best Film EditingJoel Cox
Best SoundLes Fresholtz, Vern Poore, Dick Alexander and Rob Young
American Cinema Editors AwardsBest Edited Feature FilmJoel Cox
ASECAN AwardsBest Foreign FilmClint Eastwood
Awards Circuit Community AwardsBest Motion Picture
Best Director
Best Actor in a Leading Role
Best Actor in a Supporting RoleGene Hackman
Best Original ScreenplayDavid Webb Peoples
Best CinematographyJack N. Green
Best Costume DesignGlenn Wright, Valerie T. O'Brien, Joanne Hansen and Carla Hetland
Best Film EditingJoel Cox
Best Original ScoreLennie Niehaus
Best Production DesignHenry Bumstead and Janice Blackie-Goodine
Best SoundLes Fresholtz, Vern Poore, Rick Alexander, Rob Young, Alan Robert Murray and Walter Newman
Best Cast Ensemble
BMI Film & TV AwardsFilm Music AwardLennie Niehaus
Boston Society of Film Critics Awards[27] Best Film
Best Supporting ActorGene Hackman
Best CinematographyJack N. Green
British Academy Film Awards[28] Best FilmClint Eastwood
Best Direction
Best Actor in a Supporting RoleGene Hackman
Best Original ScreenplayDavid Webb Peoples
Best CinematographyJohn N. Green
Best SoundAlan Robert Murray, Walter Newman, Rob Young, Les Fresholtz, Vern Poore and Dick Alexander
Cahiers du CinémaBest FilmClint Eastwood
Chicago Film Critics Association Awards[29] Best Film
Best DirectorClint Eastwood
Best Actor
Best Supporting ActorGene Hackman
Best ScreenplayDavid Webb Peoples
Dallas–Fort Worth Film Critics Association AwardsBest Film
Best DirectorClint Eastwood
Best Supporting ActorGene Hackman
Best ScreenplayDavid Webb Peoples
Best CinematographyJack N. Green
Directors Guild of America Awards[30] Outstanding Directorial Achievement in Motion PicturesClint Eastwood
Edgar Allan Poe Awards[31] Best Motion PictureDavid Webb Peoples
Fotogramas de PlataBest Foreign FilmClint Eastwood
Golden Globe Awards[32] Best Motion Picture – Drama
Best Supporting Actor – Motion PictureGene Hackman
Best Director – Motion PictureClint Eastwood
Best Screenplay – Motion PictureDavid Webb Peoples
Hochi Film AwardsBest Foreign Language FilmClint Eastwood
Japan Academy Film PrizeOutstanding Foreign Language Film
Kansas City Film Critics Circle Awards[33] Best Film
Best DirectorClint Eastwood
Best Supporting ActorGene Hackman
Kinema Junpo AwardsBest Foreign Language FilmClint Eastwood
London Film Critics Circle AwardsFilm of the Year
Los Angeles Film Critics Association Awards[34] Best Film
Best DirectorClint Eastwood
Best Actor
Best Supporting ActorGene Hackman
Best ScreenplayDavid Webb Peoples
Best Supporting ActorJack N. Green
Mainichi Film AwardsBest Foreign Language FilmClint Eastwood
Nastro d'ArgentoBest Foreign Director
National Board of Review Awards[35] Top Ten Films
National Film Preservation BoardNational Film Registry
National Society of Film Critics Awards[36] Best Film
Best DirectorClint Eastwood
Best Actor
Best Supporting ActorGene Hackman
Best ScreenplayDavid Webb Peoples
Best CinematographyJack N. Green
New York Film Critics Circle Awards[37] Best Film
Best DirectorClint Eastwood
Best Supporting ActorGene Hackman
Best ScreenplayDavid Webb Peoples
Nikkan Sports Film AwardsBest Foreign Film
Online Film & Television Association Awards[38] Hall of Fame – Motion Picture
Producers Guild of America Awards[39] Outstanding Producer of Theatrical Motion PicturesClint Eastwood
Sant Jordi AwardsBest Foreign Film
Turkish Film Critics Association AwardsBest Foreign Film
Western Heritage Awards[40] Theatrical Motion Pictures
Western Writers of America Awards[41] Best Movie ScriptDavid Webb Peoples
Writers Guild of America Awards[42] Best Screenplay – Written Directly for the Screen

American Film Institute recognition

In June 2008, Unforgiven was listed as the fourth best American film in the Western genre (behind The Searchers, High Noon, and Shane) in the American Film Institute's "AFI's 10 Top 10" list.[43] [44]

Legacy

The music for the Unforgiven film trailer, which appeared in theatres and on some of the DVDs, was composed by Randy J. Shams and Tim Stithem in 1992. The main theme song, "Claudia's Theme", was composed by Clint Eastwood.[45]

The film was planned to be used as the theme for Six Flags Great Adventure's then-upcoming roller coaster, but market research showed that people found it to be too dark of a theme, so the ride's name was changed to Viper.[46]

In 2004, Unforgiven was deemed "culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant" by the Library of Congress and was selected for preservation in the United States National Film Registry.

In 2013, the Writers Guild of America ranked Peoples' script for Unforgiven as the 30th greatest ever written.[47]

Several story elements of the film are paralleled in "The Noblest of Men, and a Woman", a side-quest in the 2018 video game Red Dead Redemption 2, including an English Bob-like former gunfighter having his biography written by a naive journalist, the player having to visit an aging outlaw who runs a pig farm, the gunfighter revealing himself to be a complete fraud, a final shootout where the player kills him, and the journalist deciding to write a fictional account of the gunfighter's death that completely ignores the truth of what really happened.

Home media

Unforgiven was released as premium home video, on DVD and VHS, on September 24, 2002.[48] It was released on Blu-ray Book (a Blu-ray Disc with book packaging) on February 21, 2012. Special features include an audio commentary by Clint Eastwood biographer Richard Schickel; four documentaries including "All on Accounta Pullin' a Trigger", "Eastwood & Co.: Making Unforgiven", "Eastwood...A Star", and "Eastwood on Eastwood", and more.[49] Unforgiven was released on 4K UHD Blu-ray on May 16, 2017.[50]

Remake

See main article: Unforgiven (2013 film). A Japanese adaptation of Unforgiven, directed by Lee Sang-il and starring Ken Watanabe, was released in 2013. The plot of the 2013 version is very similar to the original, but it takes place in Japan during the Meiji period, with the main character being a samurai instead of a bandit.

References

Bibliography

External links

Notes and References

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  3. News: Weinrub . Bernald . Oscar's night started at noon in Hollywood . https://web.archive.org/web/20230429231955/https://www.newspapers.com/article/the-orlando-sentinel-oscars-night-start/123764249/ . March 30, 1993 . April 29, 2023 . April 29, 2023 . 9 . The New York Times . . live.
  4. News: Canfield . David . April 16, 2015 . The 11 Best Modern Westerns . en-US . IndieWire . October 28, 2018 . July 23, 2018 . https://web.archive.org/web/20180723003659/https://www.indiewire.com/2015/04/the-11-best-modern-westerns-2-63019/ . live.
  5. Web site: Librarian of Congress Adds 25 Films to National Film Registry . February 2, 2021 . Library of Congress . April 7, 2020 . https://web.archive.org/web/20200407183706/https://www.loc.gov/item/prn-04-215/films-added-to-national-film-registry-for-2004/2004-12-28/ . live.
  6. Web site: Clint Eastwood reveals why UNFORGIVEN may be his last Western . February 25, 2018 . . March 28, 2014 . https://web.archive.org/web/20140328153744/http://www.afi.com/10top10/moviedetail.aspx?id=11&thumb=2 . dead.
  7. Web site: 'Unforgiven': Clint Eastwood's Eulogy for the Man with No Name in His Anti-Western Masterpiece • Cinephilia & Beyond . September 12, 2017 .
  8. Web site: Q&A; WITH DAVID WEBB PEOPLES : A Reluctant Hollywood Hero . . October 5, 1992 .
  9. News: Whittey . Stephen . June 13, 2014 . Clint Eastwood on 'Jersey Boys,' taking risks and a life well lived . . October 10, 2015 . December 8, 2015 . https://web.archive.org/web/20151208194123/http://www.nj.com/entertainment/index.ssf/2014/06/jersey_boys_clint_eastwood_director_four_seasons.html . live.
  10. Web site: Richard Harris was watching Eastwood film when director offered him Unforgiven role . March 17, 2015 . October 7, 2021 . Hollywood.com.
  11. Web site: Gene Hackman initially turned down Unforgiven,' which turns 25 on Thursday . . July 30, 2017 .
  12. Web site: Miscellaneous Notes . September 20, 2015 . Turner Classic Movies . A Time Warner Company . February 25, 2018 . https://web.archive.org/web/20180225205809/http://www.tcm.com/tcmdb/title/18386/Unforgiven/misc-notes.html . live.
  13. Book: Jensen, Larry . Hollywood's Railroads: Sierra Railroad . Cochetopa Press . Two. 2018 . Sequim, Washington . 2–65 . 9780692064726 .
  14. Web site: How Unforgiven laid the classic movie western to rest . October 1, 2020 . Little White Lies . en . August 12, 2020 . https://web.archive.org/web/20200812145238/https://lwlies.com/articles/unforgiven-clint-eastwood-revisionist-western/ . live.
  15. Web site: Unforgiven (1992) . October 1, 2020 . Deep Focus Review . March 11, 2012 . September 23, 2020 . https://web.archive.org/web/20200923003504/https://deepfocusreview.com/definitives/unforgiven/ . live.
  16. Mechanisms of Violence in Clint Eastwood's 'Unforgiven' and 'Mystic River' . Allen . Redmon . October 7, 2004 . The Journal of American Culture . 27 . 3 . 315–328 . 10.1111/j.1537-4726.2004.00139.x . April 18, 2021 . May 16, 2021 . https://web.archive.org/web/20210516203525/https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1111/j.1537-4726.2004.00139.x . live.
  17. Blundell . Mary Whitlock . Ormand . Kirk . 1997 . Western Values, or the Peoples Homer: "Unforgiven" as a Reading of the "Iliad" . Poetics Today . 18 . 4 . 533–569 . 10.2307/1773186 . 1773186 . 0333-5372.
  18. News: Fox . David J. . August 18, 1992 . Weekend Box Office: Eastwood Still Tall in the Saddle . . December 1, 2010 . April 2, 2011 . https://web.archive.org/web/20110402055245/http://articles.latimes.com/1992-08-18/entertainment/ca-5744_1_weekend-box-office . live.
  19. News: Fox . David J. . August 25, 1992 . Weekend Box Office: 'Unforgiven' at Top for Third Week . . December 1, 2010 . April 2, 2011 . https://web.archive.org/web/20110402055251/http://articles.latimes.com/1992-08-25/entertainment/ca-6052_1_weekend-box-office . live.
  20. News: 'The Fugitive' leads at box office . https://web.archive.org/web/20220914190918/https://www.newspapers.com/clip/109292457/the-fugitive-leads-at-box-office/ . August 9, 1993 . September 14, 2022 . September 14, 2022 . 19 . . . live.
  21. Web site: Unforgiven (1992) . June 2, 2023 . . . November 12, 2020 . https://web.archive.org/web/20201112042547/https://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/1041911_unforgiven . live.
  22. Web site: Unforgiven Reviews . March 1, 2018 . . . March 14, 2018 . https://web.archive.org/web/20180314070359/http://www.metacritic.com/movie/unforgiven . live.
  23. Web site: Find CinemaScore. Type "Unforgiven" in the search box. CinemaScore. June 12, 2022.
  24. Ebert . Roger . Roger Ebert . July 21, 2002 . Unforgiven . . Ebert Digital LLC . April 2, 2021 . March 18, 2021 . https://web.archive.org/web/20210318002134/https://www.rogerebert.com/reviews/great-movie-unforgiven-1992 . live.
  25. Web site: 106 Doesn't Add Up . David . Rothman . January 24, 1993 . Los Angeles Times . May 9, 2020 . August 1, 2020 . https://web.archive.org/web/20200801200207/https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-1993-01-24-ca-2356-story.html . live.
  26. News: The 65th Academy Awards (1993) Nominees and Winners . October 22, 2011 . Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences (AMPAS) . live . https://web.archive.org/web/20141109220926/http://www.oscars.org/oscars/ceremonies/1993 . November 9, 2014 .
  27. Web site: BSFC Winners: 1990s . . July 27, 2018 . July 5, 2021.
  28. Web site: BAFTA Awards: Film in 1993 . . 1993 . September 16, 2016 . .
  29. Web site: 1988-2013 Award Winner Archives . . January 2013 . August 24, 2021.
  30. Web site: 45th DGA Awards . . July 5, 2021.
  31. Web site: Category List – Best Motion Picture . . August 15, 2021.
  32. Web site: Unforgiven – Golden Globes . . July 5, 2021 . .
  33. Web site: KCFCC Award Winners – 1990-99 . kcfcc.org . December 14, 2013 . May 15, 2021.
  34. Web site: The Annual 18th Los Angeles Film Critics Association Awards . . August 24, 2021.
  35. Web site: 1992 Award Winners . . July 5, 2021.
  36. Web site: Past Awards . . December 19, 2009 . July 5, 2021.
  37. Web site: 1992 New York Film Critics Circle Awards . . July 5, 2021.
  38. Web site: Film Hall of Fame Inductees: Productions . Online Film & Television Association . August 15, 2021.
  39. News: Ayscough. Suzan. PGA reveals nominees. October 16, 2017. Variety. February 3, 1993.
  40. Web site: Unforgiven . National Cowboy & Western Heritage Museum . May 15, 2021.
  41. Web site: Winners – Western Writers of America . . May 12, 2012 . June 24, 2022.
  42. Web site: Awards Winners. wga.org. Writers Guild of America. https://archive.today/20121205095022/http://www.wga.org/awards/awardssub.aspx?id=1551. December 5, 2012. June 6, 2010.
  43. News: AFI Crowns Top 10 Films in 10 Classic Genres . June 17, 2008 . . June 18, 2008 . August 18, 2008 . https://web.archive.org/web/20080818100312/http://www.comingsoon.net/news/movienews.php?id=46072 . live.
  44. Web site: Top 10 Western . https://web.archive.org/web/20131020155122/http://www.afi.com/10top10/western.html . October 20, 2013 . June 18, 2008 . American Film Institute.
  45. Web site: Cameron . February 24, 2015 . Not Dead Yet: Ten Best Modern Westerns . November 15, 2015 . The Film Box . 10 . November 17, 2015 . https://web.archive.org/web/20151117025403/http://thefilmbox.org/top-10/ten-best-modern-westerns/10/ . live.
  46. Web site: Viper At Six Flags Great Adventure. February 13, 2022. www.greatadventurehistory.com.
  47. Web site: 2013 . 101 Greatest Screenplays . September 14, 2016 . . November 22, 2016 . https://archive.today/20161122211118/http://www.wga.org/writers-room/101-best-lists/101-greatest-screenplays/list . live.
  48. Web site: Indvik . Kurt . July 3, 2002 . Warner Bows First Premium Video Line . https://web.archive.org/web/20020828195253/http://www.hive4media.com/news/html/product_article.cfm?article_id=3395 . August 28, 2002 . September 13, 2019 . hive4media.com . live.
  49. Newman . Gene . Unforgiven [Blu-ray Book] ]. . Alpha Media Group Inc. . https://web.archive.org/web/20130502195755/http://www.maxim.com/movies/unforgiven-blu-ray-book . May 2, 2013 . April 2, 2012.
  50. Web site: Unforgiven 4K Blu-ray . blu-ray.com . April 27, 2018 . April 26, 2018 . https://web.archive.org/web/20180426134007/http://www.blu-ray.com/movies/Unforgiven-4K-Blu-ray/165822/ . live.