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The Wild Bunch (1969)
Director: Sam Peckinpah
Movie review
From Time Out Film Guide
From the opening sequence, in which a circle of laughing children poke at a scorpion writhing in a sea of ants, to the infamous blood-spurting finale, Peckinpah completely rewrites John Ford's Western mythology - by looking at the passing of the Old West from the point of view of the marginalised outlaws rather than the law-abiding settlers. Though he spares us none of the callousness and brutality of Holden and his gang, Peckinpah nevertheless presents their macho code of loyalty as a positive value in a world increasingly dominated by corrupt railroad magnates and their mercenary killers (Holden's old buddy Ryan). The flight into Mexico, where they virtually embrace their death at the hands of double-crossing general Fernandez and his rabble army, is a nihilistic acknowledgment of the men's anachronistic status. In purely cinematic terms, the film is a savagely beautiful spectacle, Lucien Ballard's superb cinematography complementing Peckinpah's darkly elegiac vision.Author: NF
User reviews of this film
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- Ali said...
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Posted on Feb 27 2011 17:46
"The Wild Bunch" - is the best film ever made.
It's real best western of all time. Sam Peckinpah was a brilliant genius and one of the best director of all time. - Report as inappropriate
Cast & crew
Director: Sam Peckinpah
Producer: Phil Feldman
Cast: William Holden, Ernest Borgnine, Robert Ryan, Edmond O'Brien, Warren Oates, Jaime Sanchez, Ben Johnson, Emilio Fernandez, Strother Martin, LQ Jones, Albert Dekker, Bo Hopkins full cast
Genre(s): Westerns
Duration: 145 mins
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