The Wild Bunch

The Wild Bunch(1969)

R
06/19/1969 (US)Western2h 25m
7.6

"Unchanged men in a changing land"

Overview

An aging group of outlaws look for one last big score as the "traditional" American West is disappearing around them.

Walon Green

Screenplay

Sam Peckinpah

Screenplay

Sam Peckinpah

Director

Roy N. Sickner

Story

Walon Green

Story

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Media

Original Theatrical Trailer

Original Theatrical Trailer

Trailer

Looting the U.S. Arms Train

Looting the U.S. Arms Train

Clip

Opening Railroad Office Robbery

Opening Railroad Office Robbery

Clip

Final Shootout: Battle of Bloody Porch

Final Shootout: Battle of Bloody Porch

Clip

Josh Olson on THE WILD BUNCH

Josh Olson on THE WILD BUNCH

Featurette

Ernest Borgnine on THE WILD BUNCH

Ernest Borgnine on THE WILD BUNCH

Featurette

Social

J
A review by John Chard
10.0

Written on February 10, 2017

Brutal and elegiac masterpiece.

Outlaws led by Pike Bishop on the Mexican/U.S. frontier face not only the passing of time, but bounty hunters (led by former partner of Pike, Deke Thornton) and the Mexican army as well.

In 1969 Sam Peckinpah picked up the torch that Arthur Penn lit with 1967's "Bonnie & Clyde", and literally poured gasoline on it to impact on cinema to the point that the shock wave is still being felt today. The death of the "Motion Picture Production Code" in 1967 ushered in a new era for cinema goers, it was a time for brave and intelligent directors to step up to the plate to deliver stark and emotive thunder, and with "The Wild Bunch", director Sam Peckinpah achieved this by the shed load.

The Wild Bunch doesn't set out to be liked, it is a harsh eye opening perception of the Western genre, this is the other side of the coin to the millions of Westerns that whoop and holler as the hero gets the girl and rides off into the sunset. Peckinpah's piece is thematically harsh and sad for the protagonists, for these are men out of their time, this is a despicable group of men, driven by greed and cynicism, they think of nothing to selling arms to a vile amoral army across the border.

The film opens with a glorious credit sequence as we witness "The Bunch" riding into town, the picture freeze frames in black & white for each credit offering, from here on in we know that we are to witness something different, and yes, something very special. The film is book-ended by ferocious bloody carnage, and sandwiched in the middle is an equally brilliant train robbery and a slow-mo bridge destruction of high quality. Yet the impact of these sequences are only enhanced because the quality of the writing is so good (Walon Green and Roy N. Sickner alongside Peckinpah).

There's no pointless discussions or scene filling explanations of the obvious. Each passage, in each segment, is thought through to gain credibility for the shattering and bloody climax. There is of course one massive and intriguing question that hangs over the film - just how did Peckinpah make such low moral men appear as heroes, as the "four outlaws of the apocalypse" stroll into town, their fate to them already known?. Well I'm not here to tell you that because you need to witness the film in its entirety for yourself. But it's merely one cheeky point of note in a truly majestic piece of work. A film that even today stands up as one of the greatest American films ever made. 10/10