DVD - Wide Screen Learn more
| More Formats | |
|---|---|
| DVD - Letterbox | $17.99 |
| Blu-ray - Director's Cut / Wide Screen | $23.19 |
Soundtrack remastered in Dolby Digital 5.1; Interactive menus; Production notes; Documentary; Theatrical trailer; Scene access; Subtitles: English, Français, Español
Full Product DetailsSide#1--
0. Chapters
1. The Cavalry (Credits); "If they move, kill 'em" [6:15]
2. Temperance parade [3:35]
3. Blowin' this town to hell [4:19]
4. Blazing scorpions [:56]
5. Better 'n a hog-killin' [2:49]
6. The dear, dead departed [2:00]
7. Judas goat [2:24]
8. Across the border [:53]
9. Dreaming of washers [7:27]
10. "Being sure is my business." [3:13]
11. Learning from being wrong [2:18]
12. When you side with a man [5:09]
13. Turning back [1:07]
14. Sadness and celebration in Agua Verde [5:19]
15. Farewell to the bunch (La Golondrina) [2:05]
16. The general drives in [2:34]
17. Angel's woman no more [6:50]
18. Target: an arms shipment [4:02]
19. Rest and recreation [5:36]
20. Pike's lost love; "This time we do it right." [2:33]
21. Catching a train [5:15]
22. The Wild Bunch Express [4:33]
23. Backtrack [2:38]
24. Standoff at the border bridge [3:00]
25. Tip of the hat - and a bridge [1:03]
26. Bottom of the bottle [3:34]
27. Mapache under attack [3:17]
28. "We're after men." [1:35]
Side #2--
0. Chapters
1. Angel's friend [4:30]
2. Robbery-proof guns [5:02]
3. Trust between business partners [2:45]
4. Getting Sykes riled [:49]
5. Machine gun mayhem [2:24]
6. Angel betrayed [3:12]
7. Who you give your word to [4:37]
8. Dragged in the dust [3:57]
9. "Let's go." "Why not?" [4:07]
10. Walking toward a showdown [2:25]
11. "We want Angel." [1:42]
12. The shooting starts [1:11]
13. Commandeering the machine gun [1:18]
14. The Wild Bunch dies [2:10]
15. Taking stock of a slaughter [2:09]
16. Death echoes in the wind [2:03]
17. Some work to do [1:17]
18. A last glimpse; Cast list (La Golodrina) reprise [2:12]
Sam Peckinpah's elegiac, wildly revisionist western kicked up plenty of dust with its release in 1969, turning the cowboy flick into a kinetic, blood-splattered ballet. Sporting glorious performances by Ernest Borgnine and a remarkably vulnerable William Holden, The Wild Bunch follows a group of aging outlaws as they try to outride a posse led by a former member of the gang (Robert Ryan). As the film details the final days of men who have outlived their world -- it's 1913 and Model Ts are replacing horses -- it rushes forward by using the then-experimental technique of rapidly editing together slow-motion images. Blood flies visibly on each bullet impact, forcing audiences to consider the moral impact of violence by making them feel it on a visceral level; it was the antithesis of the safe movie violence of the Saturday matinees. Arguably Peckinpah's greatest film, The Wild Bunch changed the way in which action sequences are shot, and its influence can still be seen today in the work of such directors as John Woo, Walter Hill, and James Cameron. Ben Wolf, Barnes & Noble
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