| James Coburn, Kris Kristofferson,
Bob Dylan , Harry Dean Stanton, Matt Clark , Barry Sullivan
A former friend betrays a legendary outlaw in Sam Peckinpah's final
western. Holed up in Fort Sumner with his gang between cattle rustlings,
Billy the Kid (Kris Kristofferson) ignores the advice of comrade-turned-lawman
Pat Garrett (James Coburn) to escape to Mexico, and he winds up
in jail in Lincoln, New Mexico. After Billy theatrically escapes,
inspiring enigmatic Lincoln resident Alias (Bob Dylan) to join him,
the Governor (Jason Robards) and cattle baron Chisum (Barry Sullivan)
requisition Garrett to form a posse and hunt him down. Rather than
flee to Mexico when he can, Billy heads back to Fort Sumner, meeting
his final destiny at the hands of his friend Pat, who, two decades
later, is forced to face the consequences of his own Faustian pact
with Progress. With a script by Rudolph Wurlitzer, Peckinpah uses
the historical basis of Billy's death to eulogize the West dreamily
yet violently as it is desecrated by corrupt capitalists. Both Pat
and Billy know that their time is passing, as surely as Garrett's
posse knows that they are participating in a legend. Using familiar
western players like Slim Pickens and Katy Jurado, Peckinpah underscores
the West's existence as a media myth, and he even appears himself
as a coffin maker. Just as the bloodletting of Peckinpah's earlier
The Wild Bunch (1969) invoked the Vietnam
War, the casting of Kristofferson and Dylan alluded to the chaotic
late '60s - early '70s present; the counterculture has little place
in a corporate future. Also like The Wild
Bunch, Pat Garrett was truncated by its studio; the cuts did
nothing to help its box office. Key scenes, particularly the framing
story of Garrett's fate, have since been restored to the home video
version. In this director's cut, Pat Garrett and Billy the Kid stands
as one of Peckinpah's most beautiful and complex films, killing
the Western myth even as he salutes it. |