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Unforgiven

Some legends will never be forgotten. Some wrongs can never be forgiven.
1992 | 130m | English

(461177 votes)

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Popularity: 7 (history)

Details

William Munny is a retired, once-ruthless killer turned gentle widower and hog farmer. To help support his two motherless children, he accepts one last bounty-hunter mission to find the men who brutalized a prostitute. Joined by his former partner and a cocky greenhorn, he takes on a corrupt sheriff.
Release Date: Aug 07, 1992
Director: Clint Eastwood
Writer: David Webb Peoples
Genres: Western
Keywords prostitute, sheriff, regret, wyoming, usa, right and justice, kansas, usa, revenge, mutilation, one last job, reputation, 19th century, englishman, pig farmer, prostituição, matador de aluguel
Production Companies Malpaso Productions, Warner Bros. Pictures
Box Office Revenue: $159,157,447
Budget: $14,400,000
Updates Updated: Oct 30, 2025
Entered: Apr 13, 2024
Trailers and Extras

Full Credits

Name Character
Clint Eastwood William Munny
Gene Hackman 'Little' Bill Daggett
Morgan Freeman Ned Logan
Jaimz Woolvett The Schofield Kid
Richard Harris English Bob
Saul Rubinek W.W. Beauchamp
Frances Fisher Strawberry Alice
Anna Thomson Delilah Fitzgerald
David Mucci Quick Mike
Rob Campbell Davey Bunting
Anthony James Skinny Dubois
Tara Frederick Little Sue
Beverley Elliott Silky
Liisa Repo-Martell Faith
Shane Meier Will Munny
Aline Levasseur Penny Munny
Cherrilene Cardinal Sally Two Trees
Josie Smith Crow Creek Kate
Robert Koons Crocker
Ron White Clyde Ledbetter
Mina E. Mina Muddy Chandler
Henry Kope German Joe Schultz
Jeremy Ratchford Deputy Andy Russell
John Pyper-Ferguson Charley Hecker
Jefferson Mappin Fatty Rossiter
Walter Marsh Barber
Garner Butler Eggs Anderson
Larry Reese Tom Luckinbill
Blair Haynes Paddy McGee
Frank C. Turner Fuzzy
Sam Karas Thirsty Thurston
Lochlyn Munro Texas Slim
Ben Cardinal Johnny Foley
Philip Maurice Hayes Lippy MacGregor
Michael Charrois Wiggens
William Davidson Buck Barthol (as Bill Davidson)
Paul Anthony McLean Train Person #1
James Herman Train Person #2
Michael Maurer Train Person #3
Larry Joshua Bucky
George Orrison The Shadow
Greg Goossen Fighter
Name Job
Michael Evje Sound Mixer
Valerie T. O'Brien Set Costumer
Adrian Gorton Art Direction
Janice Blackie-Goodine Set Decoration
Phyllis Huffman Casting
Rick Roberts Art Direction
Michael Maurer Production Accountant
Iloe Flewelling Hair Department Head
Michael Hancock Makeup Department Head
Carol Pershing Hairstylist
Stan Edmonds Makeup Artist
Lynne Bespflug Unit Manager
Bob Gray Production Manager
Maurice Routly Special Effects
Paul Healy Special Effects
Stuart Aikins Casting
Lorelei Kuchera Casting
Michael Cipriano Assistant Editor
Phil Downey Color Timer
Bob Akester Still Photographer
Rick Alexander Sound Re-Recording Mixer
Donald Harris Music Editor
Edward Aiona Property Master
Ron Trost Construction Coordinator
James J. Murakami Set Designer
Devon Heffley Curry ADR Supervisor
James J. Isaacs Dialogue Editor
Karen G. Wilson Dialogue Editor
Kelly Zombor Boom Operator
Les Fresholtz Sound Re-Recording Mixer
Vern Poore Sound Re-Recording Mixer
Karen Spangenberg Supervising Dialogue Editor
Walter Newman Supervising Sound Editor
T. Daniel Scaringi Dolly Grip
Carey Toner Dolly Grip
Charles Saldaña III Key Grip
Scott Maitland First Assistant Director
Grant Lucibello Third Assistant Director
Tom Rooker Third Assistant Director
Neil Burrow Sound Editor
Gordon Davidson Sound Editor
Marshall Winn Sound Editor
Butch Wolf Sound Editor
Cindy Marty Sound Editor
Michael Mirkovich Assistant Sound Editor
Kim Nolan Assistant Sound Editor
Michael Ruiz Assistant Sound Editor
Rob Young Sound Mixer
Stephen St. John "A" Camera Operator
Roger Vernon "B" Camera Operator
Tony Rivetti Sr. First Assistant "A" Camera
Douglas Craik First Assistant "B" Camera
Marco Ciccone Second Assistant "A" Camera
Dan Heather Second Assistant "B" Camera
Glenn Wright Wardrobe Supervisor, Wardrobe Specialized Technician
Carla Hetland Wardrobe Supervisor
Joanne Hansen Wardrobe Supervisor
Jim Gregor Assistant Chief Lighting Technician
Randy Swanson Best Boy Grip
Penny Gibbs Production Coordinator
Anisa Lalani Assistant Production Coordinator
Cathy Yost Assistant Production Coordinator
Loranne Turgeon Production Secretary
Lynn Elston Production Accountant
Jeff Kloss Production Accountant
Sheila Aquiline Assistant Accountant
Rino Pace Location Manager
Michael Sexton Assistant Property Master
Dean Goodine Assistant Property Master
Jan Kobylka Construction Coordinator
Bruce Robinson Construction Foreman
George Griffiths Standby Painter
Doug Wilson Painter
Gary Clayton Ripley Painter
Keith Dillin Transportation Coordinator
Ray Breckenridge Transportation Captain
Randy Luna Transportation Co-Captain
Marco Barla Unit Publicist
Matt Palmer Production Assistant
Nadene Katz Casting Assistant
John Lind Production Assistant
William Haines Casting Consultant, Casting Assistant
Donah Bassett Negative Cutter
Jeffrey Wetzel Second Assistant Director
Mark Anderson Second Assistant Camera
Peter N. Green Camera Loader
Víctor Pérez Assistant Chief Lighting Technician
Hal Nelson Best Boy Grip
Harold Selig Special Effects Best Boy
Chuck McSorley Assistant Property Master
Carol Trost Production Coordinator
Robert Fernandez Scoring Mixer
Lennie Niehaus Original Music Composer
Henry Bumstead Production Design
George Orrison Stunts
David Valdes Production Manager
Alex Green Stunts
Lloyd Nelson Script Supervisor
Alan Robert Murray Supervising Sound Editor
Tom Stern Chief Lighting Technician
Sergio Leone Thanks
John Ford Thanks
Don Siegel Thanks
David Webb Peoples Writer
Clint Eastwood Director
Joel Cox Editor
John Frazier Special Effects Coordinator
Jack N. Green Director of Photography
Bill Bannerman Second Assistant Director
Name Title
Julian Ludwig Associate Producer
David Valdes Executive Producer
Clint Eastwood Producer
Organization Category Person
Golden Globes Best Supporting Actor Gene Hackman Won
Academy Awards Best Supporting Actor Gene Hackman Won
Cannes Film Festival Best Actor Clint Eastwood Won
BAFTA Awards Best Supporting Actress Anna Paquin Nominated
BAFTA Awards Best Supporting Actor Gene Hackman Won
Popularity Metrics

Popularity History


Year Month Avg Max Min
2024 4 62 107 45
2024 5 56 107 40
2024 6 48 74 34
2024 7 48 82 36
2024 8 44 78 27
2024 9 32 42 25
2024 10 40 65 23
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2024 12 42 80 31
2025 1 42 68 27
2025 2 29 49 7
2025 3 22 59 3
2025 4 6 7 4
2025 5 6 7 5
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2025 8 5 6 4
2025 9 6 10 4
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Reviews

redTed
10.0

Quite easily the finest western ever made and very close to the greatest film ever made. It won loads of Oscars and other film awards in 1993, but it still should have won more. Talk about a man at his peak ? This has Clint Eastwood, Gene Hackman, Richard Harris, Morgan Freeman and virtual rookie, ... Jaimz Woolvett as The Schofield Kid, all putting in magnificent, career defining performances. Not to mention the bit players who all add to this stunningly captivating film. Weak points ? There are none. Every frame is a gem. It has plenty of dark humour. A few touching moments where you would think it wasn't possible. Sadistic and brutal fight scenes and then it has Clint Eastwood riding into town for the final terrifying, yet totally satisfying, showdown. How Al Pacino (The Scent of a Woman) beat Clint to Best Actor in 1993 is a mystery of modern times. Right up there with how The Shawshank Redemption didn't win anything of note in '95 but is now regarded as possibly the greatest film of all time by many people.

Jun 23, 2021
John Chard
10.0

That's right. I'm just a fella now. I ain't no different than anyone else no more. William Munny (Clint Eastwood taking the lead and directing the piece) is an old and retired gunman whose past misdemeanours would make the devil himself seem tame. Widowed and struggling to raise his two children ... on a paltry farm, he's tempted out of retirement for one last pay dirt job, the consequence of which provides violence - both physically and of the soul. Clint Eastwood signed off from the Western genre with this magnificent 1992 picture, the appropriation and irony of which is in itself a majestic point of reference. After the script had been knocking around for nigh on twenty years (written by Blade Runner scribe David Webb Peoples), Eastwood seized the opportunity to play William Munney and lay bare the mythologies of the Wild West. What is most amazing about Unforgiven's screenplay is how we the audience are firmly on Munney's side, we are, incredibly, influenced by Eastwood's part in the history of the Western. In spite of Munney's obvious murky past (despicable crimes they be), we wait (and hope) for Munney to make a quip and way-lay the bad guys - actually, salivating at the prospect is probably closer to the truth. So it's with enormous credit that Eastwood, and his magnificent cast and crew, manage to fuddle all our respective perceptions of the West and the characters we ourselves have aged with. It's not for nothing that W.W. Beauchamp (Saul Rubinek) is the critical character that nobody expected. Beauchamp is a writer of penny pulpy novels that tell of derring-do heroics, gunslingers with a glint in their eye and death dealt like an heroic encore, this gives Unforgiven an excellent sleight of hand, for this West is grim and a destroyer of all illusions. Eastwood is greatly served by the actors around him, Morgan Freeman, Gene Hackman (winning the Best Supporting Actor Oscar for a script he turned down many years before!), Rubinek, Frances Fisher, Anna Thomson, Jaimz Woolvett and an incredible cameo from Richard Harris. Along with Hackman's win for his brutally tough portrayal of Sheriff "Little Bill" Daggett, Unforgiven also won Oscars for Eastwood for his clinically tight direction, Best Picture, Best Editing and it was nominated for in another five categories. One of those nominations was for Jack Green's cinematography, which now, in this age of High Definition enhanced cinema, can be seen in all its wonderful glory. The Alberta location is magically transformed into the Western frontier, with the orange and brown hues a real treat for the eyes. Ultimately, though, Unforgiven is a lesson in brilliant film making, across the board it works so well, why? Well because the man at the helm knows this genre so well, having been its sole flag bearer for practically 25 years, and learning from his peers, Eastwood has crafted a thematically complex piece that for all its violence, debunking and melancholy pulse beats, is a film that is as beautiful as it is most assuredly stark, an incredible and true highlight of modern day cinema. 10/10

May 16, 2024
John Chard
10.0

That's right. I'm just a fella now. I ain't no different than anyone else no more. William Munny (Clint Eastwood taking the lead and directing the piece) is an old and retired gunman whose past misdemeanours would make the devil himself seem tame. Widowed and struggling to raise his two children ... on a paltry farm, he's tempted out of retirement for one last pay dirt job, the consequence of which provides violence - both physically and of the soul. Clint Eastwood signed off from the Western genre with this magnificent 1992 picture, the appropriation and irony of which is in itself a majestic point of reference. After the script had been knocking around for nigh on twenty years (written by Blade Runner scribe David Webb Peoples), Eastwood seized the opportunity to play William Munney and lay bare the mythologies of the Wild West. It's striking that the makers here have lured us in to being firmly on Munney's side, we are, incredibly, influenced by Eastwood's part in the history of the Western. In spite of Munney's obvious murky past (despicable crimes they be), we wait (and hope) for Munney to make a quip and way lay the bad guys - in fact salivating at the prospect is probably closer to the truth. So it's with enormous credit that Eastwood, and his magnificent cast and crew, manage to fuddle all our respective perceptions of the West and the characters we ourselves have aged with. It's not for nothing that W.W. Beauchamp (Saul Rubinek) is one of the critical characters on show, this even though we didn't expect that to be the case. Beauchamp is a writer of penny pulpy novels that tell of derring-do heroics, gunslingers with a glint in their eye who deal death as some sort of heroic encore. This gives Unforgiven an excellent sleight of hand, for this West is grim and a destroyer of all illusions and it's not controversial to say that this is indeed a good thing. Eastwood is greatly served by the actors around him, Morgan Freeman, Gene Hackman (winning the Best Supporting Actor Oscar for a script he turned down many years before!), Rubinek, Frances Fisher, Anna Thomson, Jaimz Woolvett and an incredible cameo from Richard Harris. Along with Hackman's win for his brutally tough portrayal of Sheriff "Little Bill" Daggett, Unforgiven also won Oscars for Eastwood for his clinically tight direction, Best Picture, Best Editing and it was nominated in another five categories. One of those nominations was for Jack Green's cinematography, which now, in this age of High Definition enhanced cinema, can be seen in all its wonderful glory. The Alberta location is magically transformed into the Western frontier, with the orange and brown hues a real treat for the eyes. Ultimately though, Unforgiven is a lesson in adroit film making, where across the board it works so well. Why? Well because the man at the helm knows this genre inside out, he was after all the sole flag bearer for practically 25 years. He learnt from his peers, and thus Eastwood has crafted a thematically complex piece that for all its violence, debunking and melancholy pulse beats, is a film that is as beautiful as it is most assuredly stark. An incredible and true highlight of modern day cinema, regardless of being a genre fan or not. 10/10

May 16, 2024
narrator56
10.0

This movie directed by Clint Eastward is one of my big three. Three westerns I am willing to watch multiple times when the opportunity arises. (The other two are Once Upon a a Time in the West and The Good the Bad and the Ugly.) All three of those movies are gritty, but not necessarily realistic. Th ... e Wild West didn’t see many Gun fights where a gunman outshoots four or five guys facing him. And yet, if we saw a movie gunfight where they are shooting pistols at each other and missing all over the place, that might seem unrealistic to us. Movie magic. So Eastwood plays a former ruthless bad guy who we root for now, and Gene Hackman plays a good guy lawman who is cruel and easy to root against. The dialogue is excellent, such as what Bill Munny says after her shoots a bar owner. There is some humor, as usual for his movies, especially concerning the bragging Schofield. I could go on and on, but you may be one of those lucky ones who hasn’t seen it and still has it to look forward to.

Jun 23, 2021
Wuchak
7.0

_**“It’s a hell of a thing, killing a man”**_ In 1880-81, Big Whiskey, Wyoming, a prostitute’s face is cut up by an offended patron. When the big, tough sheriff (Gene Hackman) goes soft on the two cowboys responsible, the vengeful women collect their assets for a “whore’s gold” reward to attract ... a hit man. Clint Eastwood and Morgan Freeman play old pardners who are interested in teaming up with a young kid (Jaimz Woolvett) to earn the money. Saul Rubinek plays a maker of Western legends while Richard Harris is on hand as the deadly English Bob. Directed by Eastwood, "Unforgiven" (1992) is a downbeat Western with a bit o’low-key humor. It’s marred by a pall of ugliness and darkness, but it has grim realism in its favor. It’s all about what it takes to kill/abuse people and the ramifications thereof. Munny (Eastwood) is haunted by it, the hardened Sheriff leads by it, Ned (Morgan) discovers he just can’t do it anymore, English Bob relishes it for celebrity status while the ‘Schofield Kid’ is just testing his mettle. Frances Fisher and Anna Thomson lead the female cast with the latter playing the scarred prostitute. Liisa Repo-Martell stands out as the young blonde. There are a few more. There are several iconic scenes, but two moving ones come to mind: When the 'Schofield Kid' experiences an unexpected breakdown. And when the scarred girl shows honor for Munny's faithfulness to his beloved wife (even though she finds out later the wife had passed away; nevertheless Munny was still faithful to her). It's almost as if she marvels at the nobility of a man who refuses to be a faithless adulterer. Munny was really rehabilitated by his beloved and it was only a certain person's death that brings back the cold killer, albeit this time an agent of fearsome vengeance. The film runs 2 hours, 7 minutes, and was shot in Longview, Alberta, Canada (the town of Big Whiskey) and other areas of Alberta, as well as Red Hills Ranch, Sonora, California, for the train sequence. GRADE: B+

Jun 23, 2021
r96sk
7.0

It's good! I have to say I'm a little surprised to see just how highly regarded this is, given I had - somehow, evidently - never even heard of it until scheduling this Clint Eastwood watchathon of mine - all of the latter's other well received I had/have heard of, but not this. I don't check rev ... iews etc. until after I view films and my jaw kinda dropped when I saw the 4.1 average rating, I won't lie. That makes it sound like I think <em>'Unforgiven'</em> is bad, which I absolutely, most definitely do not. I honestly just found it to be a solid but unspectacular western flick from 1992. I really enjoy Eastwood, Morgan Freeman and Gene Hackman as actors and they are all good value in this. There is also some neat cinematography, while the production is well paced. Happy for all involved that this did do bits with awards et al., even if it is a tad unexpected for me - what do I know!

Feb 04, 2022