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The Wild Bunch

Unchanged men in a changing land
1969 | 145m | English

(93967 votes)

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Popularity: 3 (history)

Details

An aging group of outlaws look for one last big score as the "traditional" American West is disappearing around them.
Release Date: Jun 19, 1969
Director: Sam Peckinpah
Writer: Sam Peckinpah, Roy N. Sickner, Walon Green
Genres: Western
Keywords underdog, robbery, bounty hunter, texas, mexican revolution, friendship, honor, gang, shootout, soldier, steam locomotive, righteous rage
Production Companies Warner Bros.-Seven Arts
Box Office Revenue: $638,641
Budget: $6,244,087
Updates Updated: Feb 01, 2025
Entered: Apr 13, 2024
Trailers and Extras

Full Credits

Name Character
William Holden Pike Bishop
Ernest Borgnine Dutch Engstrom
Robert Ryan Deke Thornton
Jaime Sánchez Angel
Warren Oates Lyle Gorch
Edmond O'Brien Freddie Sykes
Ben Johnson Tector Gorch
Albert Dekker Pat Harrigan
Strother Martin Coffer
Emilio Fernández Gen. Mapache
Fernando Wagner Mohr
Alfonso Arau Herrera
Chano Urueta Don Jose
Jorge Russek Major Zamorra
L.Q. Jones T.C
Bo Hopkins Clarence 'Crazy' Lee
Dub Taylor Reverend Wainscoat
Paul Harper Ross
Bill Hart Jess
Rayford Barnes Buck
Stephen Ferry Sergeant McHale
Sonia Amelio Teresa
Chalo González Gonzalez
Elsa Cárdenas Elsa
Aurora Clavel Aurora
Enrique Lucero Ignacio
Elizabeth Dupeyrón Rocio
José Chávez Juan Jose
René Dupeyrón Juan
Pedro Galván Benson
Graciela Döring Emma
Ivan J. Rado Ernst
Margarito Luna Luna
Lilia Castillo Lilia
Yolanda Ponce Yolis
Major Perez Perez
Ivan Scott Paymaster
Señora Madero Margaret
Elizabeth Unda Carmen
Julio Corona Julio
Archie Butler Jabalai (uncredited)
Tap Canutt Burt (uncredited)
Gordon T. Dawson Pinkerton Man (uncredited)
Mickey Gilbert Frank (uncredited)
Robert "Buzz" Henry Bounty Hunter (uncredited)
Buck Holland Thornton Posse Rider (uncredited)
Walt La Rue Abe (uncredited)
Matthew Peckinpah Boy Watching Robber Scoop Up Moneybag (uncredited)
Jack Williams Phil (uncredited)
Joe Yrigoyen Simkins (uncredited)
Alyce Allen Woman (uncredited)
Dennis Falt Townie (uncredited)
Dennis Feldman Townsperson (uncredited)
'Chico' Hernandez Boy in Town (uncredited)
Raul Madero Old Teetotaler (uncredited)
Erwin Neal Fray (uncredited)
Bill Shannon Bounty Hunter (uncredited)
Jim Sheppard Bounty Hunter (uncredited)
Name Job
Sam Peckinpah Director, Screenplay
Anatol Kaminsky Musician
Ronald Langinger Musician
Erno Neufeld Musician
Howard Roberts Musician
Lou Lombardo Editor
William D. Faralla Production Manager
Crayton Smith Script Supervisor
Don Stott Gaffer
Mickey Gilbert Stunts
Clifford C. Coleman Assistant Director
Sonny Burke Music Supervisor
Chema Hernández Animal Wrangler, Stunts
Stanley Martin Sound Effects Editor
Ed Scheid Supervising Sound Effects Editor
Roy N. Sickner Story, Stunts
Denny Arnold Stunts
Fred Gammon Assistant Director
John Barton Assistant Property Master
Tyrus Wong Art Department Assistant
Jerry Fielding Conductor, Original Music Composer
Edward Carrere Art Direction
Bud Hulburd Special Effects
Bernie Abramson Still Photographer
James R. Silke Costume Design
Al Greenway Makeup Artist
Archie Butler Stunt Coordinator
Tap Canutt Stunts
Joe Yrigoyen Stunt Double, Stunts
Dan Wallin Scoring Mixer, Sound Re-Recording Mixer
Joe Kavigan Sound Effects Editor
Bill Rivol Sound Effects Editor
John O. Young Sound Effects Editor
Jim Feazell Stunts
Whitey Hughes Stunts
Danny Sands Stunts
Jim Sheppard Stunts
Phil A. Ankrom Property Master
Arnold Losey Props
Ralph Ayres Special Effects
Chad Evans Stunts
Yolanda Ponce Stunts
Dave Friedman Assistant Camera
Richard Tim Vanik First Assistant Camera
John Audino Musician
Dominick Fera Musician
Alan Harshman Musician
Jack Williams Stunts
Robert L. Wolfe Associate Editor
Donald Harris Music Editor
Keester Sweeney Makeup Artist
Joe Canutt Stunt Double
Norman Bishop Stunts
Joe Finnegan Stunts
Dick Shane Stunts
Phil Rawlins First Assistant Director
Stephen R. Ferry Property Master
Robert J. Miller Sound
Erwin Neal Stunt Double
Bud Gaunt Key Grip
James F. Reber Generator Operator
Bonnie Jean Douglas Musician
Carl Fortina Musician
William Hinshaw Musician
Raphael Kramer Musician
Edgar Lustgarten Musician
Tommy Morgan Musician
Emil Richards Musician
Henry Sigismonti Musician
Milton Thomas Musician
Al Viola Musician
Mary Louise Zeyen Musician
James Rugg Special Effects
Bill Shannon Stunts
Reggie Jones Grip
Gordon T. Dawson Wardrobe Supervisor
Israel Baker Musician
Norman Herzburg Musician
Manny Klein Musician
Abe Luboff Musician
Greig McRitchie Orchestrator
Joe Porcaro Musician
Thomas Z. Shepard Musician
Tony Terran Musician
Gerald Vinci Musician
Albert Woodbury Orchestrator
Tommy Tedesco Musician
Lloyd Ulyate Musician
Ken Watson Musician
Stanley Feldman Production Coordinator
Walon Green Screenplay, Story
Lucien Ballard Director of Photography
Thomas Laughridge Camera Operator
Joel Cox Assistant Editor
Billy Mauch Sound Effects Editor
Edwin Neal Stunt Double
Bob Herron Stunt Double
John "Bud" Cardos Second Unit Director, Stunts
Tony Epper Stunts
Louie Elias Stunts
Robert "Buzz" Henry Second Unit Director, Stunts
Billy E. Hughes Stunts
Bob Orrison Stunts
Gary McLarty Stunts
Howard G. Kazanjian Second Assistant Director
Gary Combs Stunts
Bill Hart Stunts
Laurindo Almeida Musician
Shelly Manne Musician
Name Title
Phil Feldman Producer
Roy N. Sickner Associate Producer
Organization Category Person
Academy Awards Best Actor William Holden Nominated
BAFTA Awards Best Actor William Holden Nominated
BAFTA Awards Best Director Sam Peckinpah Nominated
Popularity Metrics

Popularity History


Year Month Avg Max Min
2024 4 25 31 19
2024 5 29 38 17
2024 6 22 35 13
2024 7 28 46 16
2024 8 21 31 14
2024 9 17 30 10
2024 10 17 28 10
2024 11 17 25 10
2024 12 17 24 10
2025 1 20 29 14
2025 2 16 29 3
2025 3 6 19 1
2025 4 3 6 1
2025 5 2 7 1
2025 6 3 5 2
2025 7 2 4 1
2025 8 2 3 1
2025 9 3 4 2
2025 10 3 4 3

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Reviews

John Chard
10.0

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

May 16, 2024
tmdb28039023
6.0

There are no ‘good guys’ in The Wild Bunch, only bad guys and worse guys. The titular bunch are thieves and killers, but at least they won’t rob a dead man – unlike the posse of bounty hunters, led by Deke Thornton (Robert Ryan), sent by the railroad company to bring the bunch in dead or alive. Deke ... , himself a former bunch member, is considerably more evolved than the mercenaries railroad man Harrigan (Albert Dekker) has saddled him with (“chicken-stealing gutter trash,” Deke calls them). There is no love lost between Deke and bunch leader Pike Bishop (William Holden), but the former has only accepted the task of capturing the latter because success means freedom (Deke has been temporarily released from jail expressly to track down the bunch; as Harrigan warns him, it’s “Thirty days to get Pike or 30 days back to Yuma”); on the other hand, Pike holds no ill will toward Deke because he would do the same were the situation reversed. This is interesting because, according to Roger Ebert, men like Pike and Deke live (and, as it turns out, also die) by a code, and “The men provided to [Deke] by a railroad mogul are shifty and unreliable; they don't understand the code of the bunch” – but then the rest of the bunch doesn’t necessarily understand it either. Pike respects that Deke has given his word that he will chase the bunch to hell and back and hell again if need be; that the word was given to the railroad company is immaterial. But to Pike’s second in command, Dutch Engstrom (Ernest Borgnine), “That ain't what counts! It's who you give [your word] to.” So the code is at best hazy even to the bunch, and perhaps only Pike and Deke are really privy to it – but, considering they have been at odds with each other since before the events of the film, it stands to reason that one of them must have broken it. All of that notwithstanding, the code exists; maybe only in name, but it does – it has to, otherwise what do aging pistoleros such as Pike, and Deke, and Dutch, and Lyle (Warren Oates), and Tector (Ben Johnson) have left to convince themselves that they are at least the bad guys and not the worse? The only character who still believes in something is the much younger Angel (Jaime Sánchez), who wants to give some of the guns the gang plans to steal for the sadistic General Mapache (Emilio Fernández) to a band of Pancho Villa supporters (Pike and the others agree, though not before making sure Angel will forfeit his share of their earnings in exchange). While Angel has ideals, the others have dreams – mainly of “quitting” after one “last job” –, but it makes little difference; they all pay the price for their hopes and ambitions, because they have all gone the wrong away about them. If there ever was a film illustrating that he who lives by the sword dies by the sword, this is it. And yet, those bad guys… well, they weren’t all that bad after all, were they?

Sep 03, 2022
FilipeManuelNeto
5.0

**A good Western, with some problems that prevent it from being excellent.** Personally, I think that Western is a genre of cinema focused on entertainment and action, and I think that is generally correct. I haven't seen many Western films that can be said to be great (although they exist). This ... film is good, it is beyond average, but it is not free from problems and imperfections. The plot is based on a gang that carries out its latest bank robbery. They know that, in the 20th century, they are part of a dying world and times are changed. Things go wrong: it was a trap set up by the authorities, and this forces them to cross the border into Mexico and spend an insane amount of time looking over their shoulders while a group of bloodthirsty bounty hunters with few scruples set off in pursuit, and get closer to their objective. The plot is nothing special. We've seen this countless times. The epicenter and soul of Westerns is often about the duel between criminals and the forces of law, and it often shows that there is very little difference between them. However, this does not pose any problem. The film's first big problem is its excessive length and slow pace: the action is interrupted by a set of scenes of small interest or irrelevant dialogues: after an hour of running time, I simply wanted them to kill everyone. Some part of these scenes was an attempt to better develop a core of main characters. However, the effort fails because they are unable to be interesting, the connection that binds the audience to them does not exist. Directed by Sam Peckinpah, it's a regular film which relies on good action scenes with some sensationalism. Good actors with vast experience give us an elegant and committed effort, particularly William Holden, Albert Dekker, Ernest Borgnine and Robert Ryan, and it is worth seeing the way they bring the characters to life. The action is there and is explosive, there is no concern about sparing civilians and the result is complete carnage. Cinematography is quite good, the effects too, the filming locations are very effective. The soundtrack is understandable, but it is not pleasant.

Oct 15, 2023