Although True Grit was largely Classic, their was many revisionist features evident throughout the movie which are highly comparable to Clint Eastwood's Unforgiven. One of the revisionist similarities thee two movies share are the obvious flaws that the main heros of the story struggle with. Unlike Ringo's unparalleled physical attributes, both William Munny and Rooster Cogburn have severe defects that they have acquired over the years. Both characters are rather aged and their days of heroism are over and with this comes alcoholism, Roosters flaw, and aged skills, Will's flaw. This is a huge component of revisionist movies and True Grit displays this quite heavily. Another feature both movies have is the underlying moral conflict that characters from both movies undergo. In Unforgiven, we see the Schofield Kids inability to cope with the killing of a man. In True Grit, the same thing happens in the log cabin where Rooster talks with a dying man. Both of these revisionist characteristics display the main piece behind revisionist Westerns and that is the realism portrayed in the story. Both movies have realistic features that tackle human emotion in a very realistic way which is what makes these revisionist Westerns so different and enjoyable.
True Grit possessed characteristics from both types of Western genres but overall I'd have to say that it was a more revisionist film. The movie was more realistic at it's heart unlike the legends of Stagecoach. It explored human emotion through the the interactions between the characters and by doing so made it much more realistic. The movie also held a cinematic presence that can be paralleled with Unforgiven. These elements include the Kuleshov effect, where long shot horse rides show negative space, as well as complex and meaningful camera shots which are completely different from the simple stationary shots in Stagecoach.
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