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Author Topic: The secrets of High Plains Drifter  (Read 9928 times)
bledstein
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« on: November 11, 2017, 10:48:08 PM »

He's the devil version of Jim Duncan. Here's proof:

-1. He has no name and towards the end when the midget sheriff/mayor says he doesn't know his name, the stranger replies, "Yes you do." He rides off and vanishes. Before vanishing, the camera pans to the gravestone that says "Here Lies Jim Duncan" which was just carved by Mordecai the midget before the stranger took off. One of the characters even said a few scenes earlier, "They say the dead don't rest without a marker of some kind".

.2. Why did he dream of a sheriff getting whipped to death if he wasn't there when the memory happened? Because it must be him getting whipped to death. In fact, the actor who played the sheriff in the flashbacks was Eastwood's stunt double Buddy Van Horn.

-3. He paints the town red. This also symbolizes blood because of blood on the hands of the townspeople for standing around and doing nothing about the murder of their sheriff and that hell is a fiery red image, or anger which is red as an expression. Plus the devil is red anyhow.

-4. The Belding's character says in a town meeting inside the church, "It couldn't be worse if the devil himself rode right into Lago." The next shot is of the stranger.

-5. Why would the unmarked gravestone remain unmarked for all this time until after the stranger leaves when no one expected him to arrive?

-6. Towards the end before Stacey Bridges is shot and killed, the stranger whispers, "Help Me!" Help Me!" How would he know the sheriff said those words the night he was killed?

-7. When he whipped one of the cousins to death, how did he know the sheriff was also whipped? Also, the town was in flames in the background of the Stranger while the whipping happened. More of a sign that it's Hell.

-8. The first time the stranger reacts to anything in Lago is the sound of a horse whip. He turns around looking scared. Suppose the whip reminded him how he died?

-9. Another sign is when a woman says "You're the kind of man that makes people afraid and that's dangerous." Eastwood replies, "Well, it's what people don't know about themselves inside that make them afraid." The final sentence proves he's showing his inner demons by returning with a beard, hat and personality that he never had before. Sort of like Jekyll and Hyde.

-10. Besides, when he's asked by the girl "Have you ever heard of a man named Jim Duncan?" He says, "I've heard a lot of things. Why?" No one mentioned Jim Duncan to him and when a dead sheriff was brought to his attention earlier, the name wasn't. She didn't mention that Jim was sheriff until after his response.
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KC
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« Reply #1 on: November 11, 2017, 11:06:50 PM »

Interesting post, thanks!

Duncan was a marshal, not the sheriff. And the Stranger did know about him, and his name. An early scene has Sheriff Sam Shaw asking the Stranger to be the town's protector. The Stranger declines, with a sardonic suggestion as to what he can do when the bad guys come back to town: "You just clap the bracelets right on them." Then there's this exchange:

Quote
SHERIFF: Look, I'm no lawman. They just hung this thing on me when that young Marshal Duncan was killed. You know he was whipped to death right here in this street. Bullwhipped. Damnedest thing I ever saw.

STRANGER: Why would anybody want to do a thing like that?

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bledstein
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« Reply #2 on: November 11, 2017, 11:13:18 PM »

Back in the day, was there a difference between a Marshall and a sheriff?
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KC
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« Reply #3 on: November 12, 2017, 09:00:14 AM »

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Perry
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« Reply #4 on: February 09, 2018, 10:57:24 AM »



The only difference was the Sheriff got a free hunk of pie.
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Gant
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« Reply #5 on: February 12, 2018, 11:51:54 AM »

I'm going to re watch this film.. It's been too long..
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Moorman
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« Reply #6 on: April 20, 2018, 05:23:13 PM »

I believe this is one of Clint's best westerns.  Highly underrated. 
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bdc28
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« Reply #7 on: September 08, 2018, 09:00:19 PM »

A sheriff had a town, a marshall had a territory.

In most cases the Marshall had rule over the local sheriff.

FYI.
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"I once shot an elephant in my pajamas. What he was doing wearing my pajamas I have no idea..."
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« Reply #8 on: June 01, 2022, 08:21:38 PM »

I can't remember where I posted this, maybe on the Sergio Leone Forum, but yes,  The Stranger is the Sheriff. 
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Moorman
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« Reply #9 on: June 28, 2023, 07:12:28 PM »

Back in the day, was there a difference between a Marshall and a sheriff?

Sharif, Sherif, titles of nobility. Linguists attempt to not link the two but its one and the same word as sheriff.  If you research it, the link is highly dismissed.  There is a hidden history behind the true meaning of these words.  The word Marshall comes from Latin marschalk, praefectus servo runn, meaning a servant, commander, officer.  Shariffs had jurisdiction domestic and Marshalls jurisdiction international.
« Last Edit: June 28, 2023, 07:40:29 PM by Moorman » Logged
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