Welcome to day 3 of Billy the Kid Week 2010. I’ll be reviewing Billy the Kid movies all week. Day 1 I reviewed Howard Hughes’ The Outlaw starring Jane Russell. Day 2 I reviewed The Left Handed Gun starring Paul Newman. Today I look back at a classic Billy the Kid western from the early ’70s directed by one of the last great directors of the genre, Sam Peckinpah, who also directed the wonderful The Wild Bunch. The movie is 1973’s Pat Garrett and Billy the Kid.

Directed by legendary director Sam Peckinpah (The Wild Bunch) and starring James Coburn as Pat Garrett and Kris Kristofferson as Billy the Kid. This movie also contains the motion picture debut of Bob Dylan in the small role of Alias. Dylan would also score the soundtrack (his first music score) and created “Knocking on Heaven’s Door” for this movie. This particular movie is legendary for the “behind the scenes” battles between Peckinpah and MGM studio head James Aubrey. Aubrey did everything he could to undermine Peckinpah who, to be fair, was battling a severe bout of alcoholism which would plague him for the rest of his life.
Aubrey constantly questioned Peckinpah’s camera setups, time to shoot scenes and would continually tell Peckinpah to remove certain scenes he felt were unnecessary. Peckinpah convinced the cast and crew to work covertly on lunch breaks and weekends to complete all the scenes he wanted shot. When principal photography was finished, the picture was 21 days late and over $1 million over budget. Peckinpah’s final cut of the film was 124 minutes. However, the studio was so unhappy they took the film away from him and re-cut it to 102 minutes and released it. The film was a box office failure. Peckinpah’s 124 minute director’s cut was restored in the early ’80s on home video and laserdisc. Eventually public opinion on the movie was turned and people began considering the movie to be an overlooked masterpiece, on par with The Wild Bunch.

Before a few days ago, I’d never watched this movie. I was aware of it, I planned on watching it many years ago during my Billy the Kid movie marathons, but I just never got around to it. I was glad that I now had the chance to see it. Honestly, this movie is better than the previous two movies I reviewed, but it’s still not one of my favorites.


























