fandango wrote:
micky wrote:
any of you who hasn't seen The WIld Bunch is truly missing a cinematic MASTERPIECE.. |
couldn't agree with you more, Micky....
Straw Dogs is also very powerful.... |
oh yes.... and Cross of Iron.... only Peckinpah could have captured the savage nature of the Eastern Front in WW 2.
for those who don't know of The Wild Bunch.... a nice review
Peckinpah has a rep and this is the film which provided most of it. I
had the privilege of actually seeing this on the big screen once, in
the late seventies. As the beginning credits end, Pike (Holden) tells
his bunch "If they move, Kill 'em!" Then Peckinpah's credit appears. A
woman seated behind me gasped, whispering "oh, no..." Oh, my. It
sounded like the lady didn't know she'd wandered into a Peckinpah film
and she knew what she was in for. When you enter Peckinpah-land, you
need to be prepared. There are no punches pulled, no sidestepping the
unpleasant aspects of life. Peckinpah's characters are tough men; I
mean, really tough, not phony-Hollywood tough. In this case, they are
coarsened by what seems to be years on the trail, blasted by the sun,
snapped at by rattlesnakes, and harassed by bandits. And at this point,
they've pretty much had it.
Not that they're complaining, mind you. They've lived their lives how
they saw fit, this bunch, and they make no apologies for any of it. I
believe the actual year is around 1913, just before World War I begins.
Most of the action takes place in Mexico, where the Bunch becomes
involved with a local general (Fernandez) with the usual delusions of
grandeur. If you go by the name of the character Angel, the general can
be viewed as a version of the devil. That would make the Bunch avenging
angels at the end. But heroes? No, not at all. They have their own
code, they know instinctively they're stronger together than on each
own, but they reason this concept out also - Peckinpah wants to make
sure it's clear these are not unthinking savages. They're just men,
who've reached a point in history where they must make a crucial turn.
History, it seems, has no real use for them anymore. It's quite simple
- they either fade slowly or go out quickly. In a film such as this,
with its now insurmountable rep, you tend to wait for those big set
pieces, especially the climactic battle. Wait for it, wait for it...
here it is. Bam! - you're in Peckinpah territory. You're a part of
history.
and history is what the climax of this was