In both my Les Miserables and Moulin Rouge! pieces, I made some comment about the
musical as the genre that receives the least love in the modern era. I
stand by that, but I acknowledge there is one other genre for which you could
potentially make a similar case. I am referring of course to the western film.
See, musicals at least have Disney keeping them on life alert, and maybe one day we’ll get the Wicked movie Universal has been promising us for ten years [FUTURE EDIT: All good things, folks]. But westerns don’t really have a place in the modern film world. Occasionally we’ll get a film like No Country for Old Men which use similar aesthetics and themes, but they are heavily modified from the gun-blazing-horseback-racing-wide-open-desert westerns of old. Those died, oddly enough, around the same time musicals fell out of fashion.
Professors Susan Kord and Elizabeth Krimmer describe the western problem, saying:
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The Lego Movie (2014) |
Hollywood in the mid-late 1960s was undergoing a massive identity crisis with things like the breakdown of the studio system. But the artform also had to start serving an audience whose filmgoing appetites were rapidly changing in the wake of widespread civil protest and general social malaise. There were a lot of casualties in Hollywood during this time, westerns were only part of that lineup. One of the
last western movies to make its mark was George Roy Hill’s
1969 film, Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid.
This movie imagines the
final days of the real-life bank robbers whose adventures in high-stakes crime
in the late 19th century formed the basis of wild west legend.
Here’s a film about two cowboys who realize that the wild west is disappearing beneath their feet just as western films are losing their foothold in the imagination of the masses and trying to find if there’s still a place for them. Foreshadowing the eventual extinguishing of the genre, Butch and Sundance will ultimately lose this fight.
And yet, Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid found a sort of second life in the wake of the film's release. In 2003 the film was ranked as the 73rd greatest American Film by AFI and the 7th greatest Western. (The Professor would probably rank it even higher on both counts.) The Sundance Film Festival, the largest independent film festival in the US, was named by Robert Redford's company after his character in this film. The Professor encountered this movie more than once in his academic study of film, even writing his final paper in Intro to Film Theory on the subject. Did Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid ever actually die? (No, this isn't a conspiracy post about cowboys getting kidnapped by aliens or whatever. This aint that kind of blog.)
Answering that question is about as complicated as answering the question of did westerns ever die. Like westerns, Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid were overtaken by the tidal wave of progress. But, also like westerns, their death only launched their immortality.
Once Upon a Time in the
West
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The Searchers (1956) |
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Midnight Cowboy (1969) |
In his piece for The Atlantic, "How the Western was Lost (and why it matters)" Michael Agresta notes:
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The Professionals (1966) |
“The
other great theme of the Western, after that of the conquering of native
peoples and the establishment of civilization in the desert, is that of loss
and of nostalgia for a certain way of life--the early freedoms of the West, the
idea of riding across an unfenced landscape, the infinite possibilities of the
frontier. That ‘West,’ of course, is already gone, fallen, conquered. It has
been for decades, even though holding onto some sense of it seems crucial to
our identity as Americans. Movie Westerns have been tracking that loss for a
century.”
Agresta’s comment also foreshadows where westerns run into their first problem with modern audiences. Did you catch it?
Westerns are known for being a uniquely American genre. Their
setting places the stories in an environment that is unmistakably American and
appeals to a sense of pride that is specific to the descendants of the American
settlers. And as the American melting pot continues to house peoples of many
nationalities and origins, the settling of the wild west becomes a smaller part
of the American story.
Moreover, in this era of manifest destiny,
who was it doing most of the conquering and settling? White men. And who were
they often conquering and settling? Everyone else. But especially Native
Americans, who may or may not feature in westerns. In the interest of being
fair, classical westerns weren’t necessarily more racist than any other movie
or genre of that time, they were subject to a pre-critical race theory world
just like everyone else, but it’s harder to ignore their offenses given
that the plots of the films themselves were focalized on racial relations,
particularly Native Americans.
It should also be noted that not all westerns employed this Cowboys vs Indians narrative. Just as many, like True Grit (1969), presented white outlaws as the main antagonists. Other films that did feature Native Americans, like Fort Apache (1948) acknowledged the greed of the white man and condemned characters who did not show due respect for the rights of the natives. Later westerns like Dances with Wolves (1990) presented the topic of colonization from the perspective of the Indians. It’s a complex subject.
When I come across modern audiences who pass on or outright reject westerns as a whole, they will usually report taking issue with the genre's romanticization of not only this country's bloody history but the figures who forged it. But many of classic Hollywood's most revered westerns actually employed a more critical look at the American story. John Ford's The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance, for example, questions whether those credited for bringing civilization and order to this great nation, were actually as great, noble, or powerful as the history books suggest.
There is truth to the idea that the western film serves as a kind of temple of reverence for the American legacy, but popular imagination has also distorted how the genre crafted that image. Even when the cowboys are the good guys, there's usually some shadow tinging that scarlet sunset. The eye with which films like "Liberty Valance" viewed history are generally better classified as critical rather than outright scathing, and I think that is where some modern viewers find their examination unsatisfactory. But it is this duality that makes them such essential documents.
That kind of internal examination is certainly on display here as well. Butch and Sundance slide on a sort of rapscallion nirvana, but their race to stay alive forces them to acknowledge their own handicaps, the things that ought to disqualify them from their pedigree. When faced with the choice to surrender or trying escaping into a raging river, Sundance confesses that he can't swim. Butch? Well, he's never shot a person before. The celebrity they have been floating on has had holes all along.
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The Big Trail (1930) |
What's ironic is that the same era which would render the genre irrelevant gave this film some really fun toys to play with. Early John Ford westerns didn’t necessarily think to deify their subjects by starting the film out in black and white or sepia tones and then transitioning into color. This sort of thing made movies like 2001: A Space Odyssey “high art.” These same techniques didn’t make "Butch and Sundance" arthouse--they just made it more fun.
The film oscillates between these naturalistic sequences with no score alongside these borderline avant-garde segments, like the Coney Island bit showcases the passage of time with carnival music and still photographs. It’s in these more artistic sequences, including the film's voyeuristic intro, that you really start to miss what the genre could have been had it been allowed to survive in some form and greet new Hollywood along with everyone else.
But because the western is, as Kord and Kramer say, “saddled in the past,” the new wave of Hollywood never really bothered to find new ways to tear the genre apart and put it back together. This would make Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid a very rare entry into the genre, and all the more precious for it.
This is the world in which Butch and Sundance find themselves. This is the world in which they must fight for the right to exist. This film asks whether they are legends or merely relics.
Two-Bit Outlaws
One of the generally agreed upon strengths of the film is the dynamic between the title characters, and with that the charisma of the lead actors, Paul Newman and Robert Redford. Both dudes have such diametrically opposite energy that any scenario where they have to work together is just going to have chemical reactions abounding. You could easily imagine following these characters all across the frontier.
Said Director George Roy Hill of the historical outlaws: “I don’t know exactly how [Butch Cassidy] did it, but he led and controlled the most vicious gang in the west at the time and still somehow remained the most affable and good-natured outlaw in frontier history. Everybody liked him, even the Pinkerton men . . .
“Sundance was Butch’s opposite in almost every way. He was a deadly killer, a man of sudden violences, and titanic drunks. He had no friends really, except Butch, and the extraordinary thing was the closeness of their friendship and the fact that it lasted all their lives.”
Of lead actors Paul
Newman and Robert Redford, Hill said: “Actors can sometimes be a terrible pain
in the ass with their jealousy of each other. But on this one, even though they
didn’t know each other before they started, Bob and Paul consciously established
a relationship that was excellent. It included Redford’s having to laugh at all
of Newman’s god-awful jokes, and Newman had to put up with Redford showing up
anywhere from ten to fifteen minutes late all the time. But to have that kind
of relationship offscreen is damned important because it’ll show up onscreen as
well.”
And it does. Butch and Sundance have some of the greatest chemistry in film history (Newman and Redford would go on to work with each other again in 1973’s The Sting). With any film you want the relationship between the characters to feel organic. But the relationship between Butch and Sundance has implications beyond just these two clowns just being funny for the audience. Their unconventional bond becomes this sort of focal point for the vanishing west.
The resemblances between our leads here and traditional western heroes are very focalized. Butch and Sundance are not overflowing with righteousness or patriotism. They mostly just look out for themselves while robbing their local banks and passing locomotives. And they're also not above loading the dice to get a favorable outcome.
Their real defining characteristic, the one virtue they do have covered, is the loyalty they have to one another. These two characters embody everything we love about westerns through their boldness, their charisma, their cleverness, and their sense of brotherhood. We hope these two will pull off one final grand escape because we're not sure if the new frontier will have room for such antiquated qualities.
And this is another area where it’s easy to cry “whitewashing,” but the parts of the wild west that the film reminisces on … they don’t really have much to do with the displacement of native communities or the institutions that have enabled systemic abuses. Butch and Sundance are criminals, yes, but they exist within a very liminal bound of lawlessness. They don’t kill anyone, and the victims of their exploits are large corporations. Their story isn’t really about the preservation of any kind of patriarchal status quo. Really, it’s the opposite.
You could almost compare the cowboy outlaw archetype to something like the depiction of piracy in “Pirates of the Caribbean.” We celebrate the lawlessness of Jack Sparrow, knowing that real life pirates killed women and children, because they exist in the popular imagination as the face to adventure and liberation. Like outlaws, pirates were counteragents in the rigid societies they were a part of. They represented freedom that felt out of reach to members within that society, and maybe still do.
That’s also probably why both movies are the same kind of fun. Both move between modes of high tension and genuine levity without compromising on either. And even as both films are billed on their high-octane action, they both make full use of snappy dialogue and character interaction. Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid, and its antiheroes, would serve as a model for lots of action-adventure films in the post-classical landscape, a world it would never partake in itself (but I'm getting ahead of myself ...)
“John Wayne Don’t Run
Away!”
There’s a scene early on in the film wherein the town marshal unsuccessfully attempts to rally the townsfolk into charging Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid out of town. The townspeople know better than to think they have the manpower to force the bandits out of town, and they’re more or less resigned to their occupancy. The failed rally soon gives way to a bicycle salesman upstaging the marshal as he pitches this new invention to the town, and Butch and Sundance laugh the whole thing off from the safety of their balcony.
There’s a sad irony to this scene
as bicycles, like the one the salesman is hyping, will soon overtake the
horse as the standard mode of transportation. A world that has moved on from
horseback certainly has no place for two-bit outlaws like Butch and Sundance.
In their desert
paradise, Butch and Sundance don’t really worry about being outgrown or
overtaken. Charismatic and masters in the field, their bank and train robberies
feel more like house calls. When they’re not staking their next job, Butch and
Sundance are surveying the local bars and brothels with their gang or taking
turns romancing schoolteacher Etta Place (who is actually a very fun character
brought to life beautifully by Katherine Ross but unfortunately she doesn’t get
a lot of coverage in this essay, which I lament). It’s a paradise, yes, but it’s
one that can’t last.
The iron hand that threatens
to propel Butch and Sundance out of the West is the enigmatic Lefors and his
task force of lawmen. Lefors and his men are presented as almost supernatural
forces. We never see the faces of any of the horsemen for example. The task
force is introduced in the form of a black train car spouting a cloud of black
smoke, the grinding of its many mechanical parts screeching loudly. In this
way, Butch and Sundance are fleeing less from a character than a concept. They are fleeing from the force of progress itself. And progress is merciless, killing off
their entire posse and chasing them through the desert for nights on end. Their
wits and guns are useless against the turning of the wheel.
Their ally, Sheriff Bledsoe, says it best: “You should have let yourself get killed a long time ago when you had the chance. See, you may be the biggest thing that ever hit this area ... but you're still nothing but two-bit outlaws on the dodge. It's over, don't you get that? Your times is over and you're gonna die bloody, and all you can do is choose where. Butch and Sundance will spend the rest of the film trying to prove this wrong. Their efforts steer them, and Etta, into Bolivia where they think they will be beyond the reach of Lefors and his task force, or any form of authority.
When critics complained about this film being so diametrically
different from your standard western, they usually pointed to this plot point.
From Turner Classic Movies’ Overview of the film:
“The
finished script of Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid was shopped around to
several studios. One executive famously rejected it because of the flight to
South America. He wanted the outlaws to stay in the U.S. and fight the super-posse
to the death. When Goldman argued it really happened the way he wrote it, the
executive insisted he didn't care because ‘John Wayne don't run away.’”
There’s a biting sense
of poetic justice that Butch and Sundance ultimately have to break a sort of cowboy’s
code in order to stay alive in a post-western world.
Once in Bolivia, the
three of them attempt to restart their robbing spree, rehearsing their hold-up scripts in Spanish, and for a time they are successful. But as the
authorities continue to close in on them, Butch and Sundance are forced to compromise
more and more until they hang up their bandit guns for real working-class jobs,
and it is here as they try wearing the guise of modernity that they are
confronted with their incompatibility with this new world.
While transporting gold
down the mountain for a job, Butch and Sundance are ambushed by bandits who
kill their guide, and it becomes clear that the only way they will survive is
if they take on their assailants, but it will require both of them to shoot. It is here Butch confesses that through all their conquests, he has never actually killed a man before. (As far as we know,
this reflect the reality of the historical figure, who was never documented as having shot or killed anyone during their plundering.) Surrendering himself to
this inescapable course of action, Butch kills the bandits—and with them a key
part of his own code, his identity.
Butch and Sundance walk away from this skirmish defeated. Yes, they’re alive, but they see for themselves how just how unfit they are for this world. It’s clear that violence will follow them wherever they go. The world in which they can just smooth talk their way out of an uncomfortable situation no longer exists. Now they know what surviving in this new age would cost them.
And depicting that deterioration is what stops the film from feeling arrogant or conceited. It pops its own bubble. This also reveals the use of something like film in the first place in documenting the loss of something we traded when the automobile replaced the horse. This is made more imperative since no one in this party can articulate their own feelings about this imminent sense of demise.
Etta cannot bear to name their last interaction for what it is: a goodbye. And they cannot ask her to. She has to cut ties under the pretense of going back home "ahead of them." Butch and Sundance know they are about to die, and die together, but parsing through those emotions is the one skill set they are not trained in. That is the curse of those who rode the frontier. Being tough enough to make it out in the wild west means denying the parts of yourself you might call a heart. Even more than building any kind of memorial to them, or the landscape over which they ruled, putting this all into a film creates a space where someone can experience the emotions that the situation demands.
Butch and Sundance eventually meet their end at the hands of the law when the local
police force recognize them at a marketplace. Butch and Sundance instantly come
under gunfire and fight for their lives. They find momentary refuge inside a
store, but the police summon an army to exterminate these outlaws once and for all.
As the gunmen gather outside, Butch offers up one more crazy idea: Australia.
Once they’ve outrun this new assailant, they’ll make one last escape to
Australia. With that, Butch and Sundance dash out of their hiding place, right into a rainstorm of bullets.
The frame freezes while we hear the chief give orders to shoot, and
the roar of gunfire plays over the still image of Butch and Sundance. The frame dissolves into sepia tones as the exit music
plays and we linger on the image Butch Cassidy and the
Sundance Kid, their final act of bravery cementing itself into legend right before our eyes.
Referring back to TCM’s overview of
the making of the film:
“While
writing Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid, Goldman said he had in mind the
notion of ‘stupid courage,’ ... That notion
emerged in his screenplay in the famous jump off the cliff into the rapids and
the final dialogue scene in which Butch and Sundance, trapped and badly
wounded, tend to their injuries and talk blithely about their next move before
charging into the open with guns blazing for what is quite likely their fatal
last stand.”
Of the
finale, Goldman said “It's the best ending I've ever been involved with.”
There’s a mercy in freezing the image the moment before the bullets ravage their bodies, but it’s also loaded with symbolism. Literally their lives end when the rain of gunfire consumes them, but that's not what they will be remembered for. Even when they were "running away," they never surrendered. That final stand, that final moment of "stupid courage," will be their legacy.
Ultimately, the wheel of progress doesn’t stop, and not everyone can turn with it. Frontiers are settled. Societal interests change. Genres fall out of fashion. When this happens, we can either try to assimilate, or we can remain faithful to our inner truth. Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid imagines what happens when you choose to go down with the ship. By refusing to submit to the authorities, Butch and Sundance lose their lives, but they consecrate the western spirit that they lived for, and this spirit will live on long after they, and the mythical wild West, are gone.
Beyond the Sunset
Around the time Westerns started falling out favor, the space race was heating up, and outer space became the ultimate stage for our collective imaginations. TV sci-fi epics like Star Trek and Lost in Space took the place of John Ford western epics.
This is actually a very logical progression as outer space is one frontier we haven’t
yet conquered. But the uncomfortable truth that
space epics will never acknowledge is that such films and series borrowed
heavily from the western genre. (The final frontier? That’s not a
coincidence.) That’s true of today as well. Characters like the 2009 version of
Captain Kirk or Guardians of the Galaxy's Peter Quill certainly take inspiration from lovable western rogues like Butch and Sundance. Even when we’ve lost interest
in the wild west, we still describe our aspirations and ambitions using the
vocabulary of the western.
These examples speak to an unacknowledged fascination with the refining fires of the open deserts overflowing with lawlessness. Even when we're "over" westerns, we will never stop depending on them.
Could westerns proper
ever make a comeback? It’s always possible, but like Krimmer and Kord said,
they are saddled with a reputation of being outdated and irrelevant. The
closest things we see are genre parody/mashups like Cowboys vs Aliens, neo-westerns like Hell or High Water, or whatever you want
to call The Ballad of Buster Scruggs.
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Shenandoah (1965) |
Even so, claiming that
westerns could never ride again supposes that America’s story is done. Even if
we are no longer a country on the rise, we are still a country with a legacy,
much of which was formed out on the open West. Yes, modern installments would
naturally have to adapt to contemporary sensibilities (likely sharing the
frontier with neglected communities) but that’s not too far removed from
musicals doing away with blackface or similar examples of genres adapting to modern ideologies. Who knows, maybe in two hundred years after space
travel has become commonplace, space films will fade into irrelevance
themselves and a renewed sense of nostalgia for the wild wild west will bring
us back to John Wayne and the age of the cowboys.
Returning to Agresta’s
piece for The Atlantic.
“For a century plus, we have relied on Westerns to teach us our history and reflect our current politics and our place in the world. We can ill afford to lose that mirror now, especially just because we don't like what we see staring back at us.”
I think it’s fair to mourn the death of Butch and
Sundance, not simply as characters but as the flagbearers of a certain kind of liberation. And yet, one
wonders, if Butch and Sundance could see the frontier they left
behind, if they could see their successors now
blazing across the stars, would anything make them more satisfied?
--The Professor
Thanks Professor. I love this movie, but it is sweeter now for having read your review. I will never see it the same. This is a philosophical and thought provoking review. Really enjoyed reading it. Can't wait to rewatch the movie!
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