"I've killed women and children. I've killed just about everything that walks or crawled at one time or another. And I'm here to kill you, Little Bill, for what you did to Ned." -10 sins for the most ice cold line ever delivered.
Agreed. His delivery of every line, especially at the end there in the bar, is just amazing!!! My family growing up used to mis-quote/exaggerate his lines when he is riding out of town because he is so badass! We would say something like: Y'all better bury Ned right! Or else I'm gonna come back and kill you, and your children, and your children's children, and your cats and your dogs too!
“Well, sir, you are a cowardly son of a bitch. You just shot an unarmed man!” “He should have armed himself, if he's gonna decorate his saloon with my friend.”
It is a great movie and one of my favorites. However, seeing Munny on his horse outside the saloon before his partners turn up on horseback is a WTF moment.
@@westmcgee9320 Well....since Obama wasn't man enough to debate anyone with a brain, and yes that means the Republicans AND Democrats he's debated were equally effing stupid, Clint had to talk to the empty chair.
Wait no sin off for realizing the whole movie was Beauchamp’s writings coming to fruition looking for the ultimate story about a gunfighter? He started with English Bob and after finding out he was full of it he moved on to Little Bill only to then come face to face with a living legend William Munny.
To clarify, Munny didn't magically get better at shooting by the end. He was using a shotgun and extremely close quarters to make up for his lost skill. He was still a crappy shot which is why several people needed to be shot again.
He may not have been perfect but he was still way better than everyone else in the movie, except for maybe Ned who couldn't even bring himself to finish off Davy. Seems like this movie tries to teach almost everyone basically sucks at shooting just that some suck worse than others.
Thank you for shining light on the significance of the bottle. When he rides into town & throws the empty bottle it gave me chills. This is the best western ever made.
Arguably one of the best westerns ever made, and certainly the best of the modern era. Must've been tough sinning it - though I don't think I've ever seen so many sin removals before.
Such a great movie to wrap up Clint's "spaghetti western" phase, and my god the star power. Really well done in pointing out sins while respecting the movie making craftmanship.
@@retr0-x9o Because a ton of those westerns were made in Italy and/or by Italians. Clint's classic "Man with no name" westerns were directed by Sergio Leone, an Italian director.
One of my favorite movies, also my favorite Eastwood and Western film(yes, i like it more than the Dollar trilogy). CE was never more badass as here, in my humble opinion at least.
@@AceMoonshot Love Dirty Harry, maybe his second coolest character, but still a mostly righteous cop, with a more deadly approach to criminals. I can't remember how they explained his quitting from the Police in the sequel.
The way I've always seen it, William Munny is the Man with No Name in his twilight years. Eastwood arguably reprised the role in both High Plains Drifter and Pale Rider, albeit with a supernatural element involved (the Stranger appears out of a heat haze, and is implied to be the angel or ghost of the dead marshal Duncan, while the Preacher rides a pale horse, a la Death from the Book of Revelations).
High Plains Drifter is one hell of a movie, so to speak. Pale Rider was OK, but Unforgiven and The Outlaw Josey Wales are just about the best. I'm sure I'm overlooking some other movies.
@@ralph0149 The TV guide described High Plains Drifter like "a mysterious stranger is hired by the residents of a remote mining town to defend them against a group of criminals." It was made to sound like ¡Three Amigos!. Great films both, but I was *not* prepared for the brutal, sexually violent stranger Clint actually turned out to be playing.
@@Princess_Ruto That was what was so good about the movie, it pulled no punches. It turns the whole 'hero saves the day' trope right on its head and there are NO innocents at all (don't want to spoil it for people as to why they had it coming). I.e. Clint thought 'if I'm going to do an anti-hero movie then I'm going to go all the way'.
I put this movie on before bed a few months ago mostly because I’ve never seen “young” Eastwood acting. I thought I’ll surely nod off after 20 mins. Narrator: but he did not nod off. He saw the entire film and was tired at work the next day.
Hot bath ($0.25), haircut ($0.25), shave ($0.10), and toilet water ($0.05) totals $0.65. Take the total sins for the movie, double it and give those sins to yourself for not checking your math. And Munny told his kids if there was any trouble they should go to stay with Ned's wife. Double your sins again for conveniently leaving that part out. Since you obviously can't do math, I'll help you out. Double 101, that's 202. Then double 202 and your sin total is 404. Math is hard, ain't it?
The scene when he starts drinking is just gold. I remember exactly when I watched it that my jaw dropped and was like "ohhhh shiiitttt, this is really happening". Really good movie, need to rewatch it soon.
As soon as that final text crawl happened in the theater, I knew I had watched an ultimate classic that was going to live through the ages. 30 years later, I'm glad I was right...
Was fortunate enough (lucky?) to catch a theater's last showing on a Thursday. Dude was taking down the one sheet, so I asked him what would become of it-as most movie theater staff take them home. Nobody claimed it during that whole run...and I got it. Yes, there was a rip on one corner and a fold about midway down. Don't show framed.🙃
I love it when a movie I love is sinned. I honestly find it entertaining especially with how well I usually know the movie and it doesn't diminish the enjoyment at all
It's better to be sinned for something that almost needs an explanation then for foolish things like a truck speeding along in the background of John Wayne's 1800's wagon train. 😁
You were laughing your ass off? How easy are you to make laugh? 99% of shit on this channel isn't funny, and most of it is quite stupid. I watch these when I'm bored just to see what dumb shit can be said and still have people laugh, for some reason.
You referencing the movie Airborne just made my March!! God, my cousin/best friend and I must have watched that movie like 2 dozen times!! There we were: Two pre-teen Black girls in a sea of white people in upstate NY, rocking our roller blades and windbreakers all over the park, thinking we were in that movie!! Of course, we never did any riding down stairs or stairs rails or anything really dangerous. We saw all the broken bones of our brothers and male cousins and knew better. But damn it we loved that movie!! If I saw Seth Green on the street tomorrow I would tell him how much we repeated that stupid speech about the Zamboni he gave in class... Man being a kid is liking stupid stuff...
@@jondunmore4268 Felt the same way back when they did Shawshank Redemption. When I pulled that one up, even my mom said "Really? They're going to pick *this* movie apart?.." as she walked past.
The train scene were filmed not far from our property, where they also filmed Back to the Future III and many other movies. We trail ride often and my wife always called my horse, "Mangy", just to get me to quote back, "He ain't Mangy ma'am". Yes, what a great movie.
Ned deserved better. At least Eastwood knew not to show his death. The whipping was too much. Thank you for commenting on how problematic that scene was/is. And how he handled hearing the news of his friends death that he knew he caused and just started drinking from the guilt/grief.
To be fair to Eastwood, the role was not written strictly as a "black" character, just so happened Freeman earned the role. IDK for sure, but I do think Eastwood revised some of the script so as not to make Ned's death so brutal (i.e., it was originally worse).
There are always movies I feel are perfect and sinning them is unforgivable, but then I watch your breakdowns and I can’t help but to agree. Yeah, I edited it…
12:21 The real sin is Parson being able to make out the very specific color of two of the horses, but having no idea if the third one is an appaloosa. I don't care what the damn excuse is, if you can't tell one is an appaloosa (and I am very aware that not all appaloosa's look like dalmatians) then you can't tell if the grey is flea-bitten, or if the other is a dun or a buckskin.
And dammit, how could you NOT show the scene where Eastwood rides thru town and says, "You better bury Ned right, or I'll come back and kill your children snd your children's children..." Or something like that. I just remember we could not stop repeating that line as he was riding out of town!!!
Award fact Unforgiven was nominated for 9 Oscars in 1993, taking home 4 awards in the following categories: Best Picture, Director (Clint Eastwood), Supporting Actor (Gene Hackman) and Film Editing (Joel Cox) The other 5 were Best Leading Actor for Clint Eastwood Lost against Al Pacino in Scent of a Woman Best Original Screenplay for David Webb Peoples Lost against Neil Jordan for The Crying Game Best Cinematography for Jack N. Green Lost against Philippe Rousselot for A River Runs Through It Best Production Design for Henry Bumstead and Janice Blackie-Goodine Lost against Luciana Arrighi and Ian Whittaker for Howard’s End Best Sound Lost against The Last of the Mohicans
Aboout the only one that I can agree with is "A River Runs Through It". That movie was a visual masterpiece as well. Al Pacino getting best actor is a joke.
13:00 Actually, calling out that it was a Spencer is more of a call out to the kind of historical military gun nuts that obsess about these kinds of movies. It was one of the first repeating rifles. The baddie in this scene is basically saying that his rifle outclasses most of theirs and that the person with it was probably ex military.
Interesting. At the arrest of English Bob, all those weapons and not one cocked. Not a smart ploy against a professional gun methinks. That aside, an outstanding character study drama with an oustanding cast despite all the galloping all over the countryside. And good to see Richard Harris in one of his final roles. I have the feeling Gene Hackman was having a ball, as in The Quick and The Dead. It would be neat to see the outtakes
You missed one of my favorites after the "hell of a thing killing a man, taking away all he's got and all he's ever gonna have" then slides into kid's "well I guess they they had it coming" to CE "we all got it coming kid"
To be fair bro, kids in the 1880s were as tough as adults. Knew how to hunt. Knew how to homestead and live in the wilderness. Just saying, tougher times created tougher people.
When I was a kid there was still a WW1 vet around my town. My grandmother knew him and we went to visit him and he was up shingling his roof at 92 and did the entire job himself. Those people were crazy self-reliant.
I just watched this movie for the first time tonight and immediately came here and the sin removal for him drinking towards the end was spot on. I didn’t really notice it until about the third swig and I was like oh shit, he is drinking it’s about to go down. Such a great movie
it's a hell of a thing sinning Unforgiven.
You sin all that movie's done, & all that it will ever do.
No movie is without sin.
...but this might be one of the closest.
They still haven't sinned GoodFellas and it's been nearly 12 years. It's like they're afraid of it.
You could say that's, an Unforgiven sin...
Ding
Ding
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"I've killed women and children. I've killed just about everything that walks or crawled at one time or another. And I'm here to kill you, Little Bill, for what you did to Ned." -10 sins for the most ice cold line ever delivered.
Agreed. His delivery of every line, especially at the end there in the bar, is just amazing!!!
My family growing up used to mis-quote/exaggerate his lines when he is riding out of town because he is so badass! We would say something like:
Y'all better bury Ned right! Or else I'm gonna come back and kill you, and your children, and your children's children, and your cats and your dogs too!
“Well, sir, you are a cowardly son of a bitch. You just shot an unarmed man!”
“He should have armed himself, if he's gonna decorate his saloon with my friend.”
"I don't deserve this!"
"... Deserve's got nothin' to do with it."
So iconic.
You shot an unarmed man!
He should've armed himself!
"I'll see you in hell, Will Munny."
"Yeah"
Along with: "We ALL got it comin' kid."
This movie is flawless. His slow swig off the bottle when he hears Ned is dead. Pure malice and vengeance coming.
It's a crap film.
It is a great movie and one of my favorites. However, seeing Munny on his horse outside the saloon before his partners turn up on horseback is a WTF moment.
@@mariogmajner6549 That is a very well thought out and articulated argument.
Clint Eastwood is pure unadulterated badass.
Fr, he invented it
…whenever empty chairs are around, anyway.
...and he was 68!!!
Your Vegeta is showing!
@@westmcgee9320 Well....since Obama wasn't man enough to debate anyone with a brain, and yes that means the Republicans AND Democrats he's debated were equally effing stupid, Clint had to talk to the empty chair.
Wait no sin off for realizing the whole movie was Beauchamp’s writings coming to fruition looking for the ultimate story about a gunfighter? He started with English Bob and after finding out he was full of it he moved on to Little Bill only to then come face to face with a living legend William Munny.
To clarify, Munny didn't magically get better at shooting by the end. He was using a shotgun and extremely close quarters to make up for his lost skill. He was still a crappy shot which is why several people needed to be shot again.
Wow I didn't notice that.... holy cow that is brilliant story telling....
But he still keeps his head level and doesn't panic.
He may not have been perfect but he was still way better than everyone else in the movie, except for maybe Ned who couldn't even bring himself to finish off Davy. Seems like this movie tries to teach almost everyone basically sucks at shooting just that some suck worse than others.
@@joshlight6892 To paraphrase, "Shooting's got nothin' to do with it."
Munny is a killer, no one else is.
I thought the difference was he had to be drunk.
Sinning a movie while showing it much respect is not an easy thing to do. You just showed the world how it’s done.
Thank you for shining light on the significance of the bottle. When he rides into town & throws the empty bottle it gave me chills.
This is the best western ever made.
Arguably one of the best westerns ever made, and certainly the best of the modern era. Must've been tough sinning it - though I don't think I've ever seen so many sin removals before.
Such a great movie to wrap up Clint's "spaghetti western" phase, and my god the star power. Really well done in pointing out sins while respecting the movie making craftmanship.
Still wondering why they call it Spaghetti western lol 😂
@@retr0-x9o Because a ton of those westerns were made in Italy and/or by Italians. Clint's classic "Man with no name" westerns were directed by Sergio Leone, an Italian director.
@@ruffshots oh ok thx
@@ruffshots They were actually filmed in Spain.
@@mariogmajner6549 Yes, many were, they are probably better referred to as "European Westerns"
Love it when you guys do classics like this. Still waiting on Casablanca or Singin in the Rain.
One of my favorite movies, also my favorite Eastwood and Western film(yes, i like it more than the Dollar trilogy). CE was never more badass as here, in my humble opinion at least.
No argument from me.
Well...Dirty Harry?
I dunno I like how TGTBTU was little more upbeat and bright. Plus I love tuco
No doubt. When he came back to town drunk. It was over for lil bill them
@@AceMoonshot Love Dirty Harry, maybe his second coolest character, but still a mostly righteous cop, with a more deadly approach to criminals. I can't remember how they explained his quitting from the Police in the sequel.
The way I've always seen it, William Munny is the Man with No Name in his twilight years. Eastwood arguably reprised the role in both High Plains Drifter and Pale Rider, albeit with a supernatural element involved (the Stranger appears out of a heat haze, and is implied to be the angel or ghost of the dead marshal Duncan, while the Preacher rides a pale horse, a la Death from the Book of Revelations).
I guess in all his Westerns Clint Eastwood plays different versions of the same character.
High Plains Drifter is one hell of a movie, so to speak. Pale Rider was OK, but Unforgiven and The Outlaw Josey Wales are just about the best. I'm sure I'm overlooking some other movies.
Man with no name killing women and children? not a chance.
@@ralph0149 The TV guide described High Plains Drifter like "a mysterious stranger is hired by the residents of a remote mining town to defend them against a group of criminals." It was made to sound like ¡Three Amigos!. Great films both, but I was *not* prepared for the brutal, sexually violent stranger Clint actually turned out to be playing.
@@Princess_Ruto That was what was so good about the movie, it pulled no punches. It turns the whole 'hero saves the day' trope right on its head and there are NO innocents at all (don't want to spoil it for people as to why they had it coming). I.e. Clint thought 'if I'm going to do an anti-hero movie then I'm going to go all the way'.
10 sins to CinemaSins for not removing sins for Eastwood's delivery of the lines as he heads out the door and leaves town.
That was the best part of the movie.
@@divinedelaware7541 Shit film, High Plains Drifter a much better film.
4:29 actually, Morgan Freeman was born 45 years old.
great joke!!
One of the best westerns of all time.
I’ve stayed at better
I put this movie on before bed a few months ago mostly because I’ve never seen “young” Eastwood acting. I thought I’ll surely nod off after 20 mins.
Narrator: but he did not nod off. He saw the entire film and was tired at work the next day.
Hot bath ($0.25), haircut ($0.25), shave ($0.10), and toilet water ($0.05) totals $0.65. Take the total sins for the movie, double it and give those sins to yourself for not checking your math.
And Munny told his kids if there was any trouble they should go to stay with Ned's wife. Double your sins again for conveniently leaving that part out.
Since you obviously can't do math, I'll help you out. Double 101, that's 202. Then double 202 and your sin total is 404.
Math is hard, ain't it?
I love seeing masterpieces like this ripped apart by CinemaSins. There's plenty of sin in this movie, yet it was done with the respect it deserves.
Clint Eastwood just enjoyed his walk.
A very enthusiastic walk.
He is a real fucking cowboy.
The Gladiator reference is outstanding.
"Abadoning your children to be haunted by a ghost" This has to be my favorite sin ever, its so damn dry and actually funny XD
If there's one director whose work and style I admire most it's Eastwood.
Love the Assassins reference. Underrated movie.
Clint Eastwood and Gene Hackman were both 61, and Morgan Freeman was 53 when filming this movie. I think Gene aged the best.
Do all the Clint movies
Can't wait for "Bronco Billy" and of course "The Rookie"
One of the best if not the greatest western ever. Eastwood =certified badass
The scene when he starts drinking is just gold. I remember exactly when I watched it that my jaw dropped and was like "ohhhh shiiitttt, this is really happening". Really good movie, need to rewatch it soon.
The absolute best line in this video: "What is this magical whiskey that prevents you from getting sick? And why am I only learning about it now?" 😂🥃
10:19 The Nice Guys (2016)
very underrated
Western expansion towns were built where the horses died. and the way they left kids alone were pretty much how Gen Xers were raised
Just come home when the street lights come on.
100%
I was _not_ disappointed, with _both_ a Dumbledore line, and a Lex Luther line...
That age joke for Eastwood & Freeman is A+
It never gets old.....
I was very lucky to see this at the theater when it came out.
Same here.
As soon as that final text crawl happened in the theater, I knew I had watched an ultimate classic that was going to live through the ages. 30 years later, I'm glad I was right...
Was fortunate enough (lucky?) to catch a theater's last showing on a Thursday. Dude was taking down the one sheet, so I asked him what would become of it-as most movie theater staff take them home. Nobody claimed it during that whole run...and I got it. Yes, there was a rip on one corner and a fold about midway down. Don't show framed.🙃
Do more Clint Eastwood movies cinemasins and I might return to watching your channel. Best of luck my friends.
This episode shall not be forgiven.
You gotta do “In the line of fire” with Clint now
I own the entire Clint Eastwood movie collection. I thought all the way they were going to take a sin off for ''decorate his saloon with my friend''.
Takes a lot of balls to sin a movie like this
Dude, I gotta say, sinning Unforgiven I was a little pissy at first but after watching I laughed my ass off great job brother!!
I love it when a movie I love is sinned. I honestly find it entertaining especially with how well I usually know the movie and it doesn't diminish the enjoyment at all
It's better to be sinned for something that almost needs an explanation then for foolish things like a truck speeding along in the background of John Wayne's 1800's wagon train. 😁
You were laughing your ass off? How easy are you to make laugh? 99% of shit on this channel isn't funny, and most of it is quite stupid. I watch these when I'm bored just to see what dumb shit can be said and still have people laugh, for some reason.
Sinning unforgiven is almost unforgivable.
You referencing the movie Airborne just made my March!!
God, my cousin/best friend and I must have watched that movie like 2 dozen times!! There we were: Two pre-teen Black girls in a sea of white people in upstate NY, rocking our roller blades and windbreakers all over the park, thinking we were in that movie!!
Of course, we never did any riding down stairs or stairs rails or anything really dangerous. We saw all the broken bones of our brothers and male cousins and knew better. But damn it we loved that movie!!
If I saw Seth Green on the street tomorrow I would tell him how much we repeated that stupid speech about the Zamboni he gave in class...
Man being a kid is liking stupid stuff...
You know it's going to be a good one when your first reaction to seeing the notification is "Oh no.."
Yep, they don't even stop at sinning Clint's most revered film. They clearly have NO limits at this stage! 😂
I couldn't believe my eyes when I saw this title.
@@jondunmore4268 Felt the same way back when they did Shawshank Redemption. When I pulled that one up, even my mom said "Really? They're going to pick *this* movie apart?.." as she walked past.
Best line ever, in this CinemaSins review, "We needed a CANteen, kid, not a CANTeen."
Unforgiven is a perfect movie, change my mind
You, sir, are correct.
I'm not gonna argue with you.
I saw this movie back on September 16, 2022. This movie is one of my favorite Clint Eastwood westerns, but I am glad Jeremy reviewed this movie.
autistic nitpicking is not reviewing
Sinning “unforgiven” = DING
Unforgivable cinemasins …unforgivable!!! Keep up the great work 👍
I wonder how much of hackman's character in the Quick and the Dead was just him deciding to be the opposite of his character here
"Go ahead...sin my movie".
The train scene were filmed not far from our property, where they also filmed Back to the Future III and many other movies. We trail ride often and my wife always called my horse, "Mangy", just to get me to quote back, "He ain't Mangy ma'am". Yes, what a great movie.
Ned deserved better. At least Eastwood knew not to show his death. The whipping was too much. Thank you for commenting on how problematic that scene was/is. And how he handled hearing the news of his friends death that he knew he caused and just started drinking from the guilt/grief.
How was that scene "problematic"?
@@DH-xw6jp don’t play dumb
@@AlecArtComics im not.
That is simply how things were at the time, should we lie and pretend things never happened like that?
To be fair to Eastwood, the role was not written strictly as a "black" character, just so happened Freeman earned the role. IDK for sure, but I do think Eastwood revised some of the script so as not to make Ned's death so brutal (i.e., it was originally worse).
Honestly, the fact that you are sinning a Clint Eastwood movie does not bother me. Just glad to watch your magic!
The "scene does not contain Russell Crowe's hand" got me so good lol!
There are always movies I feel are perfect and sinning them is unforgivable, but then I watch your breakdowns and I can’t help but to agree.
Yeah, I edited it…
By unforgettable, did you mean unforgivable? *See movie title.
Another flawless movie. You're really scraping the barrel trying to sin this flawless gem.
it's a terrible movie. let me guess, you think magnolia is a masterpiece too?
6:30 - considering that, at this point, Queen Victoria had already survived over half a dozen assassination attempts, GoT ain't the only ones.
Unforgiven is an all time top 5 movie, the best western ever made and my personal all time best movie ever made.
As an Englishman, English Bob pronouncing pheasant was spot on.
It wasn’t mispronounced, a pheasant is a bird.
please do Open Range, one of the greatest westerns ever
12:21 The real sin is Parson being able to make out the very specific color of two of the horses, but having no idea if the third one is an appaloosa. I don't care what the damn excuse is, if you can't tell one is an appaloosa (and I am very aware that not all appaloosa's look like dalmatians) then you can't tell if the grey is flea-bitten, or if the other is a dun or a buckskin.
cripes at that level of detail, Im really surprised he didn't tell the sheriff what sex it was and how many hands high it was...LOL
How he says he was gonna come back and kill every last one of them sons of bitches. I believed him
"You better bury Ned Right right! and don't cut up no women- or I'll come back here and kill all you sons of bitches and burn your damn town down!!'
@@eclipsehorse8693 💯💪🏿💯. Favorite movie ending ever.
If we're doing fantastic Westerns, I'd love to see a sinning of High Noon
And dammit, how could you NOT show the scene where Eastwood rides thru town and says, "You better bury Ned right, or I'll come back and kill your children snd your children's children..." Or something like that. I just remember we could not stop repeating that line as he was riding out of town!!!
Holy fortuitous timing Batman. I literally watched this movie for the first time just three days ago
Wtf
I'm sinning you for not only not taking a sin off for the "he should have armed himself" line, but for sinning it
Award fact
Unforgiven was nominated for 9 Oscars in 1993, taking home 4 awards in the following categories:
Best Picture, Director (Clint Eastwood), Supporting Actor (Gene Hackman) and Film Editing (Joel Cox)
The other 5 were
Best Leading Actor for Clint Eastwood
Lost against Al Pacino in Scent of a Woman
Best Original Screenplay for David Webb Peoples
Lost against Neil Jordan for The Crying Game
Best Cinematography for Jack N. Green
Lost against Philippe Rousselot for A River Runs Through It
Best Production Design for Henry Bumstead and Janice Blackie-Goodine
Lost against Luciana Arrighi and Ian Whittaker for Howard’s End
Best Sound
Lost against The Last of the Mohicans
Yeah, that was a rough category to be up against Montana scenery. Thanks for this!
A River Runs Through It is a gorgeous looking movie
Now that I think about it, I think I remember watching that award show on TV. 🤔
Aboout the only one that I can agree with is "A River Runs Through It". That movie was a visual masterpiece as well. Al Pacino getting best actor is a joke.
13:00 Actually, calling out that it was a Spencer is more of a call out to the kind of historical military gun nuts that obsess about these kinds of movies. It was one of the first repeating rifles. The baddie in this scene is basically saying that his rifle outclasses most of theirs and that the person with it was probably ex military.
Clint Eastwood has been 68 for the past 50 years. Almost choked on my fries but it was worth it.
"Never free. Never me. So I dub thee Unforgiven, TH-cam" ~Cinema Sins Jeremy
How did you completely skip the entire scene when he comes out of the saloon at the end???
10 sins for finishing to soon Cinema Sins!
That "Russel Crowe's hand" line made me cackle. I love Gladiator.
AND a reference to The Nice Guys. Love it.
Interesting. At the arrest of English Bob, all those weapons and not one cocked. Not a smart ploy against a professional gun methinks. That aside, an outstanding character study drama with an oustanding cast despite all the galloping all over the countryside. And good to see Richard Harris in one of his final roles. I have the feeling Gene Hackman was having a ball, as in The Quick and The Dead. It would be neat to see the outtakes
Jeremy you are a genius during these Sins.
My dad loves this movie! Clint Eastwood is one of his favorite actors!
Pointing out all the great lines in the film, but failing to mention the greatest line: 10 sins to EWW
“Deserve’s got nothing to do with it.”
Whoa there sparky... sinnin' this film... ya got some set of cajones on ya hombre!
You must have balls the size of Clint Eastwood to sin a movie this perfect.
This movie isn't perfect.
@@andymiller6661 it's as pretty damn close to perfect as cinema gets. Unforgiven is a rare masterpiece.
@@jaxonwoods8181 Nope. It's far from perfect
FINALLY A CLINT EASTWOOD MOVIE!!!!!!!
This film is a masterpiece.
You leave out the best line in the movie! "Deserves got nothing to do with it!" That's 1 sin on you CinemaSins!! Ding!
Quickly followed by; "Well, you ain't like that no more." Liberating!
Probably one of the best movies Clint has done.
no it's awful, you need to open your eyes
“He should’ve armed himself…”
Should have been 25 sins removed for that line.
Love unforgivin
Should've been Clyde who he shot (the deputy missing an arm already)😂
Between your video and the comments section you've covered every high(low) point of the entire movie, just like all the re-runs . Thx. liked it.👍
Don't you freaking dear sining this masterpiece jeremy
SO good, Jeremy. 👍
Clint Eastwood & Morgan Freeman will always have my respect!
You missed one of my favorites after the "hell of a thing killing a man, taking away all he's got and all he's ever gonna have" then slides into kid's "well I guess they they had it coming" to CE "we all got it coming kid"
Little Bill:"You just shot an unarmed man"
Munny: "Well he should've armed himself"
😂Best line in the whole movie at the most tense moment
This has to be one of the top Cinema Sins to remove sins.
Better be 0 sins
The Bob Marley joke was on point
✨👌
To be fair bro, kids in the 1880s were as tough as adults. Knew how to hunt. Knew how to homestead and live in the wilderness. Just saying, tougher times created tougher people.
When I was a kid there was still a WW1 vet around my town. My grandmother knew him and we went to visit him and he was up shingling his roof at 92 and did the entire job himself. Those people were crazy self-reliant.
I just watched this movie for the first time tonight and immediately came here and the sin removal for him drinking towards the end was spot on. I didn’t really notice it until about the third swig and I was like oh shit, he is drinking it’s about to go down. Such a great movie
"I'll see you in Hell William Munny."
"Yeah."
"I was lucky in the order. But I've always been lucky when it comes to killing folks. " My god....
Have you ever thought about doing CinemaSins for Major Payne?
Knee-jerk reaction to seeing the thumbnail: "This movie has no sins"
Richard Harris and his son are Irish - so yes - if the convinced you they are posh English types then yes they are acting.
Seriously? Unforgiven? I give 14 quintillion sins to you for considering this movie and another 35 quintillion for actually making the damn video.
Clint Eastwood. The inspiration for Roland or Gilead. So freaking cool.
Roland Deschain is my favorite fictional character of all time.
@@Edmures_rampant_manhood long days and pleasant nights!
@@zombieparrot2606 🌹