A recently released ex-convict and his loyal wife go on the run after a heist goes wrong.
Steve McQueen
Carter "Doc" McCoy
Ali MacGraw
Carol McCoy
Ben Johnson
Jack Beynon
Sally Struthers
Fran Clinton
Al Lettieri
Rudy Butler
Slim Pickens
Cowboy
Richard Bright
The Thief
Jack Dodson
Harold Clinton
Dub Taylor
Laughlin
Bo Hopkins
Frank Jackson
Roy Jenson
Cully
John Bryson
The Accountant
Bill Hart
Swain
Tom Runyon
Hayhoe
Whitney Jones
The Soldier
Raymond King
Boy on Train
Ivan Thomas
Boy on Train
C.W. White
Boy's Mother
Brenda W. King
Boys' Mother
W. Dee Kutach
Parole Board Chairman
Brick Lowry
Parole Board Commissioner
Martin Colley
McCoy's Lawyer
O.S. Savage
Field Captain
Dick Crockett
Bank Guard
A.L. Camp
Hardware Store Owner
Bob Veal
TV Shop Proprietor
Bruce Bissonette
Sporting Goods Salesman
Maggie Gonzalez
Carhop
Jim Kannon
Cannon
Doug Dudley
Max
Stacy Newton
Stacy
Tommy Bush
Cowboy's Helper
Stephen Douglas Butler
Teen at Drive-Up-Diner (uncredited)
R.C. Keene
Beacon City Parade / Robbery Witness (uncredited)
Margaret Mazzola
Car Hop #1 (uncredited)
Hal Smith
Radio Announcer (voice) (uncredited)
Tommy Splittgerber
Train Station Ticket Agent (uncredited)
Director
Sam Peckinpah
Novel
Jim Thompson
Screenplay
Walter Hill
September 27, 2024
6
**_Steve McQueen, Ali MacGraw and others chasing a bag of cash in Texas_**
A prisoner in Huntsville (McQueen) is released early due to his wife (MacGraw) making a deal with a corrupt official (Ben Johnson). The cost of his freedom is to head a bank heist in San Marcos with the officer’s questionable henchmen (Al Lettieri and Bo Hopkins). O, what a tangled web we weave.
“The Getaway” (1972) is a crime thriller written by Walter Hill based on Jim Thompson’s book and was director Sam Peckinpah’s second most successful film at the box office, after “Convoy” six years later. It was remade in 1994 with Alec Baldwin and influenced soon-to-come movies like “The Outfit,” "Dirty Mary, Crazy Larry," "Thunderbolt and Lightfoot" and “The Gauntlet,” as well as later ones like “No Country for Old Men.”
If you like those flicks, you’ll appreciate this one, although it ranks with the least of ’em IMHO. Why? Because the bank job is unnecessarily convoluted, not to mention expensive, with the myriad pre-caper photographs, a cliched last-minute briefing session in a basement, severing electrical cables in the sewer tunnels and even diversionary explosions. Why Sure! Then there’s the curious train station sequence with a convenient con man that’s inserted into the midsection, which I admit is entertaining in a Hitchcockian way.
Lastly, despite some amusing bits, the proceedings are shrouded by a pessimistic and ugly perspective. I get that the protagonists are antiheroes, but the film needed more glimmerings of nobility and love, and less murderous venality. “Pulp Fiction” is a good example.
Ali looks good on the feminine front and is, thankfully, way less annoying than her character in “Love Story.” Blonde Sally Struthers eventually appears and never looked better at 23 during shooting, but her character is a ditzy turnoff.
McQueen would marry costar MacGraw seven months after the movie’s release, but their marriage would only last five years.
It runs 2 hours, 2 minutes, and was shot entirely in Texas at Huntsville (prison), San Marcos (bank robbery), San Antonio (train station), Fabens (city street confrontation) and El Paso (Laughlin Hotel).
GRADE: B-/C+
Status:
Released
Original Language:
English
Budget:
$3,352,254.00
Revenue:
$36,734,619.00