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- The Wild Bunch - Wikipedia
The Wild Bunch is a 1969 American epic revisionist Western film directed by Sam Peckinpah and starring William Holden, Ernest Borgnine, Robert Ryan, Edmond O'Brien, Ben Johnson and Warren Oates The plot concerns an aging outlaw gang on the Mexico–United States border trying to adapt to the changing modern world of 1913
- The Wild Bunch (1969) - IMDb
The Wild Bunch: Directed by Sam Peckinpah With William Holden, Ernest Borgnine, Robert Ryan, Edmond O'Brien An aging group of outlaws in 1913 Texas look for one last big score, selling stolen Army rifles to a rogue Mexican general during that country's revolution, as the traditional American West is disappearing around them
- The Wild Bunch movie review film summary (1969) - Roger Ebert
In an early scene of “The Wild Bunch,” the bunch rides into town past a crowd of children who are gathered with excitement around their game They have trapped some scorpions and are watching them being tortured by ants
- The Wild Bunch (1969) - Turner . . . - Turner Classic Movies
Wild Bunch, The (1969) -- (Movie Clip) When You Side With A Man Heading for Mexico, geezer Sykes (Edmond O'Brien) leads the gang over a dune, causing Tector (Ben Johnson) to snap, and Pike (William Holden) to crack the whip, his age showing, in Sam Peckinpah's The Wild Bunch, 1969
- The Wild Bunch - 1969 - Summary and analysis - Full cast - Quotes
The Wild Bunch (1969), directed by Sam Peckinpah, follows a gang of aging outlaws in 1913 as they navigate a rapidly modernizing world Led by Pike Bishop, the gang undertakes a dangerous mission to steal weapons for a corrupt Mexican warlord
- The Wild Bunch (1969) - The Movie Database (TMDB)
An aging group of outlaws look for one last big score as the "traditional" American West is disappearing around them There are no ‘good guys’ in The Wild Bunch, only bad guys and worse guys
- The Wild Bunch (1969) - Greatest Films
The Wild Bunch (1969) is director co-writer Sam Peckinpah's provocative, brilliant yet controversial Western, shocking for its graphic and elevated portrayal of violence and savagely-explicit carnage, yet hailed for its truly realistic and reinterpreted vision of the dying West in the early 20th century
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