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The Wild Bunch (1969)


Directed by: Sam Peckinpah
Starring: William Holden
Genre:
Western/Classic
Run Time: 145
min.
Release Date: June
1969
On The Web:
Unofficial Site
Teaser:
Movie Trailer
Reviewed by
Chad Wilson |
THE WILD BUNCH
is often credited as a classic western and praised as a bold departure
from the morally prideful films with straight-laced heroes. Director Sam
Peckinpah
continues his maverick tastes in this film, creating a story filled with
anti-heroes and villains with just a touch of morality, and a heavy
helping of action and violence. While the film is important in the grand
scheme of film history and westerns in general, it doesn't quite live up
to the mantle of "classic" lauded by fans.
An aging band of outlaws in the American Old
West come up with a plan to end their wayward ways with a final robbery
that will make them rich. Gang leader Pike (William Holden) finds his plans going awry when
his ex-gang-mate-turned-bounty-hunter Deke (Robert Ryan) foils their bank robbery and
pursues the bandits cross country. Dealing with his discontented gang,
bounty hunters on his tail, and the end of his way of life, Pike manages
to find a way out by stealing arms for a Mexican General named "Mapache"
Juerta (Emilio Fernandez) which may just present the
biggest payoff of his criminal career.
Short and reserved dialogue from the actors
makes for a somewhat stolid style in this otherwise grand tale of the
old west. William Holden in particular drives the film, portraying Pike
as a tired man on the fringe running out of time in a land quickly being
swallowed by civilization. In many ways the story of The Wild Bunch
is an homage to a vanished way of life and the men who lived it. In
accordance with that theme, director Peckinpah creates his tale with a
lot of male gusto and stoic drama. These are hardened men living life
hard and fast, spending what time and riches they have on violence,
drink, and women.
Like most Peckinpah films, the characters of
The Wild Bunch are atypical subjects and outsiders. Peckinpah
pulls no punches as his characters kill and fight their way through one
robbery and onto another. Like the morally ambiguous characters of
Kurosawa films
that inspired The Wild Bunch, we watch the gang do their deeds
with a combination of repugnance, admiration, and understanding. The
action in the film is pure Peckinpah panache, and movies like The
Wild Bunch inspired the action genre for years to come.
The weaker elements of The Wild Bunch
also rest with Peckinpah. The pacing of the film can often feel as tired
as the main characters. Peckinpah was never a overly innovative visual
director outside of his action sequences and this film does drag from
drab, conventional shots during the majority of the acts. The script is
also a fairly banal work from a narrative angle and many flashback
sequences are extraneous scenes worth cutting. Unlike other western
classics such as Sergio Leone's
Once Upon A Time In The West, The Wild Bunch feels
like a film from the late 60's rather than possessing a visual presence
that would transcend its own era. The final act is also a violent
tour-de-force typical of Peckinpah films that fails to provide a strong
closure to the story.
An important film of the action and western
genres, but not quite the great classic often attributed to Sam
Peckinpah's anti-hero adventure films.
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Image from The Wild Bunch

DVD cost: $19.55
Purchase:
Tower.com
(Blu-Ray)
Film Review Stew
Favorite? No.
Stew Poo-Poo? No.
Newsworthy:
There were not enough
uniforms for all of the stunt people and extras in the gun battle. If
someone was filmed getting shot, the costume people would repair a
uniform by washing off the fake blood, taping and painting over the
bullet holes, drying the paint and sending either the same or a
different performer out to get shot again.
Movie Quote: "You
think Pike and old Sykes haven't been watchin' us. They know what this
is all about - and what do I have? Nothin' but you egg-suckin', chicken
stealing gutter trash with not even sixty rounds between you. We're
after men - and I wish to God I was with them. The next time you make a
mistake, I'm going to ride off and let you die."
Other Actors/Actresses
from The Wild Bunch
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