Junior Bonner with Steve McQueen: DVD Cover

    Junior Bonner Director: Sam Peckinpah Cast: Steve McQueen, Robert Preston, Ida Lupino, Ben Johnson

    DVD - Letterbox Learn more

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    • DVD Release Date: 05/25/2004
    • Original Release: 1972
    • Rating: Rated PG
    • Sales Rank: 19,232

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    • Overview
    • Editorial Reviews
    • Scenes
    • Customer Reviews
    • Cast & Crew
    • Full Product Details

    Features

    Closed Caption; Audio commentary by Sam Peckinpah, authors Paul Seydor, Garner Simmons, and David Weddle, with moderator Nick Redman; Original theatrical trailer

    Full Product Details

    Scene Index

    Side #1 --
    1. Main Title/Rodeo Life [7:35]
    2. Progress [5:43]
    3. The Competition [5:10]
    4. Slowing Down [6:53]
    5. Selling Out [6:27]
    6. Kinfolks [6:30]
    7. Horse Thiefs [5:39]
    8. Frontier Days [7:45]
    9. Busted [6:36]
    10. Seven Seconds [5:32]
    11. Bulldogging [6:52]
    12. A Friendly Drink [6:12]
    13. Bar Brawl [5:51]
    14. Last Chance [7:01]
    15. Sunshine [5:59]
    16. Moving On/End Credits [4:27]

    Scene Index

    Editorial Reviews

    Sam Peckinpah eschews his slow-motion bullet ballets for this quiet character study of ex-rodeo cowboy turned drifter Junior Bonner (Steve McQueen), who returns home to Arizona to reconcile with the family he hasn't seen in years. Bonner is shocked to see that the solid family he was hoping to come back to is breaking apart. His parents, Ace (Robert Preston) and Elvira (Ida Lupino), have separated, and his brother Curley (Joe Don Baker) has turned into a heartless real estate tycoon, parceling off sections of his parent's land for quick money. With nowhere to turn and nowhere to run, Bonner has to face himself and try to find a way to regain his self-respect. He is given that opportunity at the town's Fourth of July Rodeo, where he is determined to mount and ride and unrideable bull. Paul Brenner, All Movie Guide

    Customer Reviews

    • Viewer Rating:
    • Ratings: 1Reviews: 1

    Junior Bonnerby Anonymous

    Reader Rating:
    See Detailed Ratings

    May 17, 2005: The movie is good as all Steve McQueen movies are...but I purchased the movie because it's grouped with Sandra Dee.

    common sense media

    This item Rated Appropriate for Ages 11 and Up

    Why We Rated This Appropriate for Ages 11 and UP

    What to watch out for

    • Drugs:

      A character is shown smoking cigars.

    • Language:

      A few curse words, such as "s--t" and "bastard."

    • Messages

    • Sex:

      A woman and man kiss, and later are interrupted while they're making out on a couch. The woman later suggests that they have sex, which occurs off-screen. A shelf of porno videos is briefly seen in a fertility doctor's office. It's understo... More

      A woman and man kiss, and later are interrupted while they're making out on a couch. The woman later suggests that they have sex, which occurs off-screen. A shelf of porno videos is briefly seen in a fertility doctor's office. It's understood that the videos are there to help men submit their sperm samples. Close

    • Violence:

      Dr. Hesse throws another character across a room. One scene shows a doctor injecting a long needle into a man's abdomen. During two separate childbirth scenes, a little blood is seen on a suction tube and on a newborn infant's head.

    • Consumerism:

      Not an issue.

    What Parents Need to Know

    About Junior Bonner

    Parents need to know that this movie, which features a male character who becomes pregnant, is probably not for younger kids who are still asking, "Where do babies come from?" Some kids might also be disturbed by the fact that chimpanzees, which are used in fertility experiments in the film, are shown in cages in a laboratory. However, the movie does not depict any animal abuse, unless one counts the fact that the chimps had to co-star in a mediocre film.

    Families Can Talk About

    Families can talk about why Dr. Hesse decides to "keep the baby." How does the experience change him and make him a better person overall? They can also talk about comedies they really enjoy. What do they have in common? What kind of humor do they use? How are they effective at making you laugh? Is there an element of the absurd in everything that's funny?