
The most gangster movie I have ever seen.
One of the greatest things about film in the seventies were the actors used. Don’t sell me pretty-faced gangsters. Just character actors with faces full of character. Craggy, pock marked profiles with proud noses and receding hair lines. We have few people left in movies today that have real character. No more attention vortexes, the men who relied on their force of will to draw others to them. People like De Niro or Nicholson are an aging breed, the last of these never-beautiful leading men and unfortunately there doesn’t seem to be any fresh blood in Hollywood to take their place.
That’s why it is such a pleasure to return to the days when directors like Sam Peckinpaw were willing to create mood and landscape with the facial features of imperfection. The prettiest man in this film is a beer-bellied Kris Kristofferson. Cast as a rapist biker, his weathered skin and homeless tan lend credibility to his character and the film as a whole.
The leading man is a down on his luck piano player in a tourist dive in Mexico. Now-a-days we would expect Matthew McConaughey or one of the Wilsons cast in the role, but Peckinpaw used a 46 year-old Warren Oates. The man looks like an accountant on a serious bender. He is surprising material for the part of a daring bounty hunter/mercenary. That is what makes his feats of heroics and daring so much more stunning and over the top. You expect Clint Eastwood to get out of narrow scrapes, not this guy. And every role is cast perfectly. Believable people doing unbelievable things out of desperation.
The film is liberally laced with violence, but the gore is simply hinted at, forcing the viewer’s imagination to get involved. We never see the decapitated head of Alfredo Garcia. We are shown a gooey sack covered in flies and how its stench affects those around it, but never its decaying visage. The picture in my head of what is in the bag is far more terrible than anything Peckinpaw could have put on film. He, knowing that, allowed his audience to gross themselves out, rather than handing them a cheap thrill.
The most shockingly brutal moment in the movie isn’t even shown to the audience, all we have is an external shot of the Don’s compound and our ears to figure out what is happening. The gun-shot crack of The Don’s daughter’s arm breaking in the hands of his henchman, followed by her pitiful scream and her defeated utterance of the name of her forbidden lover made my blood run cold. This is the opening sequence and I’m hooked, already plotting on hitting Netflix for more Sam Peckinpaw the moment the credits roll.
The man can tell a story. He uses reality and imagination in such a way that his audience must relinquish themselves completely to his tale and focus unwaveringly on the gritty details. In those details lie the depth of individual character and breadth of human emotion that Peckinpaw builds his stories on.

