I find it rather worrying that so many people are convinced it wasn't, or at they very least are trying to convince others (and themselves?) that it wasn't.
Is it because this is a Clint Eastwood movie and a Clint Eastwood character that people have a hard time seeing it as rape? I mean, it's not the usual sort of thing your screen idol does in a movie, is it? So surely it can't be happening here, right? I hate to be patronising but seeing how wafer thing some people's arguments are that it was not rape, I think there might be at least a little of that going on ... sorry to say.
But that's the whole point, people! It's NOT the usual thing your screen idol does in a movie which is precisely why it's included here! The Stranger is NOT a nice man; he might be the protagonist but he's still a villain. He's a Bad Guy. This rape scene, so early in the movie, is a clear demonstration of that fact and is intended to demonstrate right from the word go that you are NOT watching a "lovable rogue" "anti-hero" like The Man With No Name. The Stranger is a completely different character, on a completely different moral scale.
You're not supposed to like him.
That's why this rape is shown. So that you don't like the main character. He's a villain. He's as big a villain as those he takes revenge upon if not more so; their crimes were to stand still and not help, his crimes are rape and murder.
I do agree it was rape. I was able to watch this movie one time. I haven't bee able to go back to it because of all of it's terrible characters. Eastwood's revenge of the town folk, the town folk who didn't do anything to stop the slow death of the brother and the outlaws released from jail going back to the town.
There are no heroes in this movie.
It was rape.
"Can you show me to the registration office? I'm here to sign up for ESL classes." -Jetfire
The entire movie revolves around the revenge Eastwood sets out to get over how they didn't do anything to prevent his brother's death. The former sheriff who was whipped to death by the three out laws.
There's a rock song playing over the credits. It's not that the score isn't memorable.
It seems like people are missing the point, i.e. Eastwood's character here is NOT a hero and the woman--while CLEARLY raped--is clearly also mentally disturbed and not quite an innocent victim, either. The movie is filled with moral ambiguity designed to touch a nerve and get people riled up. Aside from Sarah, the wife of the hotel keeper, and maybe the first incarnation of the marshal, really ALL the characters in this movie are supposed to be abusive/cowardly/mentally ill and reprehensible.
The women is clearly trying to come on to Clint's character "The Stranger". She makes a point to walk past him and "bump" into him. Then when he tries to turn and walk away she stops him and says something to the effect "I'm not finished with you". She then gets madder when he doesn't fall for her little game and slaps his cigar from his mouth. It's at that point he loses his temper and drags her to the barn.
It seems at some point during the rape that she gives in and goes along with it...
If we're talking in terms of Vladimir Propp's 7 character spheres http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vladimir_Propp#Characters, then yes you are right - villain is the wrong word and he is The Hero of the story. But most people don't think in terms of Propp's theory and automatically imbue the word "hero" with good qualities, heroic qualities, despite that not being the intended meaning of the word hero in use here. Yes, The Hero can be evil but most people don't accept that.
So to avoid confusion, unless having an academic conversation *g*, I use the word "hero" to mean a good guy and "villain" to mean a bad guy, regardless of their roles in the story. :-)
...and here's another helpful tip; if you don't want the ruthless stranger that just rode into town to rape you, it would be best NOT to intentionally run into him, slap the cigar from his mouth, and then start insulting him verbally.
The way she just "accidentally" bumped into him while crossing a 50-foot-wide street has always bothered me.
It doesn't mean that she (or any other woman) "deserves" to be raped; it just means that she wasn't totally blameless. She obviously went looking for trouble--and then had the nerve to be indignant when she got more than she bargained for.
I thought she got EXACTLY what she was bargaining for. It's a horribly misogynistic way to write a woman, especially by today's standards; but allowing for the generally terrible portrayal of women in Westerns and also the fact that everyone in Lago is genuinely rotten, we seem to have a woman who was looking to be taken by a man, and so set out to provoke him into "teaching her some manners".
Please note that, in the real world, such a woman probably doesn't exist (unless we're looking among the mentally ill); and also in the real world, what the Stranger did would be rape, pure and simple. So real world and movies aren't the same thing. I am willing to grant some latitude to a ghost story in the form of a Western, that I would not to real-life assaults.
That said, there is a lesson here: ladies, if you find yourself in close quarters with a drunken oaf, and maybe he's taking liberties, do NOT slap him and stand your ground. The drunken oaf (did I mention that he's a drunken oaf, and not a sober empathetic person?) is going to see that as a challenge to his manhood, and since he's not "allowed" to punch back, he's going to at least consider some other option. A better response to the drunken oaf is to be smarter and wilier, and just escape from him. Tell him you have to pee, and if he protests, ask him whether he really wants to get peed on. Then make as much distance from him as you can. If there's any part of you that feels guilty about deceiving a guy -- decent people are taught to feel bad about that -- think of it more like, you're being wily like all the great heroes and heroines of legend have to be at one point or another.
I just minutes ago finished watching this movie for the first time since the 1970s, and it was NOT rape. And there is a very simply reason why its not. When he's on top of her in the livery stable, you can see her hands helping to remove his belt. Rape victims don't customarily work themselves into a frenzy trying to get their assailant's pants down as quickly as possible.
Been making IMDB board posts since the 90s, yet can't bring up any from before December of 2004.
Good point. "Oh, no, please, I beg of you.....what? You can't get your pants off and squeeze my tits at the same time? Here, let me help you with that!".
"Rape victims don't customarily work themselves into a frenzy trying to get their assailant's pants down as quickly as possible."
No, they don't. She clearly starts to enjoy it half way through. This makes the scene much more disturbing to me and made the rest of the film distasteful to me. She's clearly being raped in the beginning but somewhere in the middle suddenly starts to like it. Same with the other woman. She threatens him with a knife but then when he grabs her and kisses her suddenly she likes it. Because, you know, secretly all women want a man to take her forcefully.
"She clearly starts to enjoy it half way through. This makes the scene much more disturbing to me and made the rest of the film distasteful to me. She's clearly being raped in the beginning but somewhere in the middle suddenly starts to like it. Same with the other woman. She threatens him with a knife but then when he grabs her and kisses her suddenly she likes it. Because, you know, secretly all women want a man to take her forcefully."
I suppose the facts will almost bear such an interpretation, but frankly I find it cliched, heavy-handed, and unnecessary. If that's how you're interpreting the scene ie., that its some retrograde portrayal of how woman secretly like being raped, well, let's just say that I suspect you have an axe to grind that leads to your desire to interpret the scene in that rather simplistic and oh-so-earnest manner. I think a much more insightful, dynamic, and accurate (as it were) interpretation would be that human sexual relationships are often not so cut-and-dry as moralists & Feminists alike are inclined to instruct as that they are, and that far from being the perpetual victims your somewhat hamfisted interpretation invites us to see them as, yet again (for like the five-zillionth boring time in literary-cinematic history), that perhaps what we're seeing in this scene is an example of women attempting to use their sexuality to manipulate Easrtwood's character...and his character winning the ensuing power struggle. Which is, of couse, very politically incorrect, but not at all a bad thing. Unless you think every time there is a conflict between a man and a woman, its shomehow bad if the man doesn't lose. Many contemporary Americans do seem to think much like that, alas.
But you think these are rape scenes, made more horrific by the fact the female characters seem to like getting raped, so leaving aside how ridiculous it would be to assume a modern film-maker would choose to construct such vile scenes (I mean, this movie was made in the 1970s, not during Tudor England, or ancient Roman times, for the love of Ned), your conveniently oh-so-safe-and-conventionally-dull interpetation doesn't require any further thought on the matter. Please do us both a favor, and don't reply with some reiteration of your plodding, tiresome little scold of an interpretation.
Wow! You are so astute. You are amazing! I bow to your superior intellect. I feel like a better person now that you've insulted me repeatedly. My god you are the greatest film critic to ever exist. Thank you for replying to me. I feel blessed.
I actually wasn't very clear in my first response. I meant to argue against others saying that it wasn't a rape because she starts to pull his pants down and is enjoying it at the end. This is true, by the end of the scene it is clearly not a rape, but at the beginning it most certainly is. She screams, claws, and kicks against Eastwood, telling him no, yet he proceeds. They had not worked it out beforehand so there is no way he could no she was just kidding. Thus he is raping her. The fact that she actually likes it at the end does not absolve Eastwood's character from the beginning.
"I suppose the facts will almost bear such an interpretation, but frankly I find it cliched, heavy-handed, and unnecessary."
Let me get this straight, the facts support my interpretation, but I am wrong and you are right even though you don't use any facts to support your interpretation. Who needs facts anyway when you've got smuggish intellect.
"let's just say that I suspect you have an axe to grind that leads to your desire to interpret the scene in that rather simplistic and oh-so-earnest manner"
And lets just say that I find you intensely dull.
"so leaving aside how ridiculous it would be to assume a modern film-maker would choose to construct such vile scenes (I mean, this movie was made in the 1970s, not during Tudor England, or ancient Roman times, for the love of Ned)"
Right. Because no filmmaker in the last 40 years has created such vile scenes. Have you watched a movie since the 70s? I'll accept the argument that Eastwood is a great director and that he would not construct such a scene, but that's not really what you said.
Honestly, I think the facts support that she was using her sexuality to manipulate Clint. Its later found out that she slept with the villain, and then when he got sent up she took up with another powerful man. When Clint shows up killing people its likely she saw him as the next leader and so she assaulted him so that she would be taken and could be on his side.
So mostly I'm gonna agree with you. Still, that scene is difficult. And your reply was jerkish.
Just watched it for the first time...NOT a rape. It's made very clear that she was damaged and was looking for mistreatment. As the "tussle" continues, she does a 180 and starts enjoying it.
How can a ghost rape someone? I think that loose slut made it all up in her head. She was all over every man in power (except for the midget) afterall rofl.