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Sam Peckinpah

David Samuel Peckinpah (/ˈpɛkɪnˌpɑː/;[1] February 21, 1925 – December 28, 1984) was an American film director and screenwriter. His 1969 Western epic The Wild Bunch received an Academy Award nomination and was ranked No. 80 on the American Film Institute's top 100 list. His films employed a visually innovative and explicit depiction of action and violence as well as a revisionist approach to the Western genre.

Sam Peckinpah
Peckinpah on the set of The Wild Bunch in 1968
Born
David Samuel Peckinpah

(1925-02-21)February 21, 1925
DiedDecember 28, 1984(1984-12-28) (aged 59)
Alma materCalifornia State University, Fresno, B.A. 1948
University of Southern California, M.A. 1952
Occupations
  • Film director
  • screenwriter
Years active1957–1984
Spouse(s)Marie Selland (1947–1960)
Begoña Palacios (1964–1967; 1974–1984)
Joie Gould (1971–1972)
Children5

Peckinpah's films deal with the conflict between values and ideals, as well as the corruption and violence in human society. His characters are often loners or losers who desire to be honorable but are forced to compromise in order to survive in a world of nihilism and brutality. He was given the nickname "Bloody Sam" owing to the violence in his films.

Peckinpah's combative personality, marked by years of alcohol and drug abuse, affected his professional legacy. The production of many of his films included battles with producers and crew members, damaging his reputation and career during his lifetime. Peckinpah's other films include Ride the High Country (1962), Major Dundee (1965), The Ballad of Cable Hogue (1970), Straw Dogs (1971), The Getaway (1972), Pat Garrett and Billy the Kid (1973), Bring Me the Head of Alfredo Garcia (1974), Cross of Iron (1977) and Convoy (1978).

Family origins edit

The Peckinpahs originated from the Frisian Islands in the northwest of Europe. Both sides of Peckinpah's family migrated to the American West by covered wagon in the mid-19th century.[2] Peckinpah and several relatives often claimed Native American ancestry, but this has been denied by surviving family members.[3] Peckinpah's great-grandfather, Rice Peckinpaugh, a merchant and farmer in Indiana, moved to Humboldt County, California, in the 1850s, working in the logging business, and changed the spelling of the family name to "Peckinpah".[4][5]

Peckinpah Meadow and Peckinpah Creek, where the family ran a lumber mill on a mountain in the High Sierra east of North Fork, California, have been officially named on U.S. geographical maps.[3] Peckinpah's maternal grandfather was Denver S. Church, a cattle rancher, Superior Court judge and United States Congressman of a California district including Fresno County.[6]

Sam Peckinpah's nephew is David Peckinpah, who was a television producer and director, as well as a screenwriter.[7] He was a cousin of former New York Yankees shortstop Roger Peckinpaugh.[8]

Life edit

David Samuel Peckinpah was born February 21, 1925, to David Edward (1895–1960) and Fern Louise (née Church) Peckinpah (1893–1983) in Fresno, California, where he attended both grammar school and high school.[9] He had an elder brother, Denver Charles (1916–1996).[10] He spent much time skipping classes with his brother to engage in cowboy activities on their grandfather Denver Church's ranch, including trapping, branding, and shooting. During the 1930s and 1940s, Coarsegold and Bass Lake were still populated with descendants of the miners and ranchers of the 19th century. Many of these descendants worked on Church's ranch. At that time, it was a rural area undergoing extreme change, and this exposure is believed to have affected Peckinpah's Western films later in life.[11]

He played on the junior varsity football team while at Fresno High School, but frequent fighting and discipline problems caused his parents to enroll him in the San Rafael Military Academy for his senior year.[12]

In 1943, he joined the United States Marine Corps. Within two years, his battalion was sent to China with the task of disarming Japanese soldiers and repatriating them following World War II. While his duty did not include combat, he claimed to have witnessed acts of war between Chinese and Japanese soldiers. According to friends, these included several acts of torture and the murder of a laborer by sniper fire. The American Marines were not permitted to intervene. Peckinpah also claimed he was shot during an attack by Communist forces. Also during his final weeks as a Marine, he applied for discharge in Beijing, so he could marry a local woman, but was refused. His experiences in China reportedly deeply affected Peckinpah, and may have influenced his depictions of violence in his films.[13]

After being discharged in Los Angeles, he attended California State University, Fresno, where he studied history. While a student, he met and married his first wife, Marie Selland, in 1947. A drama major, Selland introduced Peckinpah to the theater department and he became interested in directing for the first time. During his senior year, he adapted and directed a one-hour version of Tennessee Williams' The Glass Menagerie.

After graduation in 1948, Peckinpah enrolled in graduate studies in drama at University of Southern California. He spent two seasons as the director in residence at Huntington Park Civic Theatre near Los Angeles before obtaining his master's degree. He was asked to stay another year, but Peckinpah began working as a stagehand at KLAC-TV in the belief that television experience would eventually lead to work in films. Even during this early stage of his career, Peckinpah was developing a combative streak. Reportedly, he was kicked off the set of The Liberace Show for not wearing a tie, and he refused to cue a car salesman during a live feed because of his attitude towards stagehands.[14]

In 1954, Peckinpah was hired as a dialogue coach for the film Riot in Cell Block 11. His job entailed acting as an assistant for the movie's director, Don Siegel. The film was shot on location at Folsom Prison. Reportedly, the warden was reluctant to allow the filmmakers to work at the prison until he was introduced to Peckinpah. The warden knew of his influential family from Fresno and was immediately cooperative. Siegel's location work and his use of actual prisoners as extras in the film made a lasting impression on Peckinpah. He worked as a dialogue coach on four additional Siegel films: Private Hell 36 (1954), An Annapolis Story (1955, and co-starring L. Q. Jones), Invasion of the Body Snatchers (1956) and Crime in the Streets (1956).[15]

Invasion of the Body Snatchers, in which Peckinpah appeared as Charlie the meter reader, starred Kevin McCarthy and Dana Wynter. It became one of the most critically praised science fiction films of the 1950s. Peckinpah claimed to have done an extensive rewrite on the film's screenplay, a statement which remains controversial.[16]

Throughout much of his adult life, Peckinpah was affected by alcoholism, and, later, other forms of drug addiction. According to some accounts, he also suffered from mental illness, possibly manic depression or paranoia.[17] It is believed his drinking problems began during his service in the military while stationed in China, when he frequented the saloons of Tianjin and Beijing.[18] After divorcing Selland, the mother of his first four children, in 1960, he married Mexican actress Begoña Palacios in 1964. A stormy relationship developed, and over the years they married on three separate occasions. They had one daughter together.[19][20] His personality reportedly often swung between a sweet, softly-spoken, artistic disposition, and bouts of rage and violence, during which he verbally and physically abused himself and others. An experienced hunter, Peckinpah was fascinated with firearms and was known to shoot the mirrors in his house while abusing alcohol, an image which occurs several times in his films.[21]

Peckinpah's reputation as a hard-living brute with a taste for violence, inspired by the content in his most popular films and in many ways perpetuated by himself, affected his artistic legacy.[22] His friends and family have claimed this does a disservice to a man who was actually more complex than generally credited. He used such actors as Warren Oates, L. Q. Jones, R. G. Armstrong, James Coburn, Ben Johnson, and Kris Kristofferson, and collaborators (Jerry Fielding, Lucien Ballard, Gordon Dawson, and Martin Baum) in many of his films, and several of his friends and assistants stuck by him to the end of his life.[citation needed]

Peckinpah spent a great deal of his life in Mexico after his marriage to Palacios, eventually buying property in the country. He was fascinated by the Mexican lifestyle and Mexican culture, and he often portrayed it with an unusual sentimentality and romanticism in his films.[23]

From 1979 until his death, Peckinpah lived at the Murray Hotel in Livingston, Montana.[24] Peckinpah was seriously ill during his final years, as a lifetime of hard living caught up with him.[citation needed] Regardless, he continued to work until his last months. He died of heart failure at age 59 on December 28, 1984, in Inglewood, California.[25] At the time, he was working on the script for On the Rocks,[26] a projected independent film to be shot in San Francisco.[27]

Television career edit

On the recommendation of Don Siegel, Peckinpah established himself during the late 1950s as a scriptwriter of western series of the era, selling scripts to Gunsmoke, Have Gun – Will Travel, Broken Arrow, Klondike, The Rifleman, and Dick Powell's Zane Grey Theatre, the latter Four Star Television productions. [28] He wrote one episode "The Town" (December 13, 1957) for the CBS series, Trackdown.[29]

Peckinpah wrote a screenplay from the novel The Authentic Death of Hendry Jones, a draft that evolved into the 1961 Marlon Brando film One-Eyed Jacks.[30] His writing led to directing, and he directed a 1958 episode of Broken Arrow (generally credited as his first official directing job) and several 1960 episodes of Klondike, (co-starring James Coburn, L. Q. Jones, Ralph Taeger, Joi Lansing, and Mari Blanchard). He also directed the CBS sitcom Mr. Adams and Eve, starring Howard Duff and Ida Lupino.[31][32]

In 1958, Peckinpah wrote a script for Gunsmoke that was rejected due to content. He reworked the screenplay, titled The Sharpshooter, and sold it to Zane Grey Theater. The episode received popular response and became the television series The Rifleman, starring Chuck Connors. Peckinpah directed four episodes of the series (with guest stars R. G. Armstrong and Warren Oates), but left after the first year. The Rifleman ran for five seasons and achieved enduring popularity in syndication.[33][34]

The Westerner edit

 
Brian Keith with Spike in The Westerner (1960)

During this time, he also created the television series The Westerner for Four Star Television, starring Brian Keith and in three episodes also featuring John Dehner. Peckinpah wrote and directed a pilot called Trouble at Tres Cruzes, which was aired in March 1959 before the actual series was made in 1960. Peckinpah acted as producer of the series, having a hand in the writing of each episode and directing five of them. Critically praised, the show ran for only 13 episodes before cancellation mainly due to its gritty content detailing the drifting, laconic cowboy Dave Blassingame (Brian Keith). Especially noteworthy are the episodes Jeff and Hand on the Gun, extraordinary in their depiction of violence and their imaginative directing, forerunners of his later feature films. Despite its short run, The Westerner and Peckinpah were nominated by the Producers Guild of America for Best Filmed Series. An episode of the series eventually served as the basis for Tom Gries' 1968 film Will Penny starring Charlton Heston. The Westerner, which has since achieved cult status, further established Peckinpah as a talent to be reckoned with.[35][36][37][38]

In 1962, Peckinpah directed two hour-long episodes for The Dick Powell Theater. In the second of these, The Losers, an updated remake of The Westerner set in the present day with Lee Marvin as Dave Blassingame and Keenan Wynn as Dehner's character Bergundy Smith, he mixed slow motion, fast motion and stills together to capture violence, a technique famously put to more sophisticated use in 1969s The Wild Bunch.[39]

Early film career edit

The Deadly Companions edit

After cancellation of The Westerner, Brian Keith was cast as the male lead in the 1961 Western film The Deadly Companions. He suggested Peckinpah as director and the project's producer Charles B. Fitzsimons accepted the idea. By most accounts, the low-budget film shot on location in Arizona was a learning process for Peckinpah, who feuded with Fitzsimons (brother of the film's star Maureen O'Hara) over the screenplay and staging of the scenes. Reportedly, Fitzsimons refused to allow Peckinpah to give direction to O'Hara. Unable to rewrite the screenplay or edit the picture, Peckinpah vowed to never again direct a film unless he had script control. The Deadly Companions passed largely without notice and is the least known of Peckinpah's films.[40][41]

Ride the High Country edit

His second film, Ride the High Country (1962), was based on the screenplay Guns in the Afternoon written by N.B. Stone, Jr. Producer Richard Lyons admired Peckinpah's work on The Westerner and offered him the directing job. Peckinpah did an extensive rewrite of the screenplay, including personal references from his own childhood growing up on Denver Church's ranch, and even naming one of the mining towns "Coarsegold." He based the character of Steve Judd, a once-famous lawman fallen on hard times, on his own father David Peckinpah. In the screenplay, Judd and old friend Gil Westrum are hired to transport gold from a mining community through dangerous territory. Westrum hopes to talk Judd into taking the gold for themselves. Along the way, following Judd's example, Westrum slowly realizes his own self-respect is far more important than profit. During the final shootout, when Judd and Westrum stand up to a trio of men, Judd is fatally wounded but his death serves as Westrum's salvation, a Catholic tragedy woven from the cloth of the Western genre. This sort of salvation became a major theme in many Peckinpah's later films. Starring aging Western stars Joel McCrea and Randolph Scott in their final major screen roles, the film initially went unnoticed in the United States but was an enormous success in Europe. Beating Federico Fellini's for first prize at the Belgium Film Festival, the film was hailed by foreign critics as a brilliant reworking of the Western genre. New York critics also discovered Peckinpah's unusual Western, with Newsweek naming Ride the High Country the best film of the year and Time placing it on its ten-best list. By some critics, the film is admired as one of Peckinpah's greatest works.[42][43]

Major Dundee edit

Peckinpah's next film, Major Dundee (1965), was the first of Peckinpah's many unfortunate experiences with the major studios that financed his productions. Based on a screenplay by Harry Julian Fink, the film was to star Charlton Heston. Peckinpah was hired as director after Heston viewed producer Jerry Bresler's private screening of Ride the High Country. Heston liked the film and called Peckinpah, saying, "I'd like to work with you."[44] The sprawling screenplay told the story of Union cavalry officer Major Dundee who commands a New Mexico outpost of Confederate prisoners. When an Apache war chief wipes out a company and kidnaps several children, Dundee throws together a makeshift army, including unwilling Confederate veterans, black Federal soldiers, and traditional Western types, and takes off after the Indians. Dundee becomes obsessed with his quest and heads deep into the wilderness of Mexico with his exhausted men in tow.

Filming began without a completed screenplay, and Peckinpah chose several remote locations in Mexico, causing the film to go heavily overbudget. Intimidated by the size and scope of the project, Peckinpah reportedly drank heavily each night after shooting. He also fired at least 15 crew members. At one point, Peckinpah's mean streak and abusiveness towards the actors so enraged Heston that the normally even-tempered star threatened to run the director through with his cavalry saber if he did not show more courtesy to the cast. Shooting ended 15 days over schedule and $1.5 million more than budgeted with Peckinpah and producer Bresler no longer on speaking terms. The movie, detailing themes and sequences Peckinpah mastered later in his career, was taken away from him and substantially reedited. An incomplete mess which today exists in a variety of versions, Major Dundee performed poorly at the box office and was trashed by critics (though its standing has improved over the years). Peckinpah maintained, nonetheless, throughout his life that his original version of Major Dundee was among his best films, but his reputation was severely damaged.[45][46][47]

Peckinpah was next signed to direct The Cincinnati Kid, a gambling drama about a young prodigy who takes on an old master during a big New Orleans poker match. Before filming started, producer Martin Ransohoff began to receive phone calls about the Major Dundee ordeal and was told Peckinpah was impossible to work with. Peckinpah decided to shoot in black and white and was hoping to transform the screenplay into a social realist saga about a kid surviving the tough streets of the Great Depression. After four days of filming, which reportedly included some nude scenes, Ransohoff disliked the rushes and immediately fired him.[48] Eventually directed by Norman Jewison and starring Steve McQueen, the film went on to become a 1965 hit.[49][50]

Noon Wine edit

Peckinpah caught a lucky break in 1966 when producer Daniel Melnick needed a writer and director to adapt Katherine Anne Porter's short novel Noon Wine for television. Melnick was a big fan of The Westerner and Ride the High Country, and had heard Peckinpah had been unfairly fired from The Cincinnati Kid. Against the objections of many within the industry, Melnick hired Peckinpah and gave him free rein. Peckinpah completed the script, which Porter enthusiastically endorsed, and the project became an hour-long presentation for ABC Stage 67.

Taking place in turn of the century West Texas, Noon Wine was a dark tragedy about a farmer's act of futile murder which leads to suicide. Starring Jason Robards and Olivia de Havilland, the film was a critical hit, with Peckinpah nominated by the Writers Guild for Best Television Adaptation and the Directors Guild of America for Best Television Direction. Robards kept a personal copy of the film in his private collection for years as he considered the project to be one of his most satisfying professional experiences. A rare film which had no home video release until 2014, Noon Wine is today considered one of Peckinpah's most intimate works, revealing his dramatic potential and artistic depth.[51][52][53]

International fame edit

The Wild Bunch edit

The surprising success of Noon Wine laid the groundwork for one of the most explosive comebacks in film history. In 1967, Warner Bros.-Seven Arts producers Kenneth Hyman and Phil Feldman were interested in having Peckinpah rewrite and direct an adventure film, The Diamond Story. An alternative screenplay written by Roy Sickner and Walon Green was the western The Wild Bunch. At the time, William Goldman's screenplay Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid had recently been purchased by 20th Century Studios.

It was quickly decided that The Wild Bunch, which had several similarities to Goldman's work, would be produced in order to beat Butch Cassidy to the theaters.[54] By the fall of 1967, Peckinpah was rewriting the screenplay into what became The Wild Bunch. Filmed on location in Mexico, Peckinpah's epic work was inspired by a number of forces—his hunger to return to films, the violence seen in Arthur Penn's Bonnie and Clyde, America's growing frustration with the Vietnam War, and what he perceived to be the utter lack of reality seen in Westerns up to that time. He set out to make a film which portrayed not only the vicious violence of the period, but the crude men attempting to survive the era. During this period, Peckinpah said that his life was changed by seeing Carlos Saura's La Caza (1966), which profoundly influenced his subsequent oeuvre.[55][56]

The film detailed a gang of veteran outlaws on the Texas/Mexico border in 1913 trying to survive within a rapidly approaching modern world. The Wild Bunch is framed by two ferocious and infamous gunfights, beginning with a failed robbery of the railway company office and concluding with the outlaws battling the Mexican army in suicidal vengeance prompted by the brutal torture and murder of one of their members.[57]

Irreverent and unprecedented in its explicit detail, the 1969 film was an instant success. Multiple scenes attempted in Major Dundee, including slow motion action sequences, characters leaving a village as if in a funeral procession and the use of inexperienced locals as extras, were perfected in The Wild Bunch. Many critics denounced its violence as sadistic and exploitative. Other critics and filmmakers hailed the originality of its unique rapid editing style, created for the first time in this film and ultimately becoming a Peckinpah trademark, and praised the reworking of traditional Western themes. It was the beginning of Peckinpah's international fame, and he and his work remained controversial for the rest of his life.[58] The film was ranked No. 80 on the American Film Institute's top 100 list of the greatest American films ever made and No. 69 as the most thrilling, but the controversy has not diminished.[59]

The Wild Bunch was re-released for its 25th anniversary, and received an NC-17 rating from the MPAA.[60] Peckinpah received his only Academy Award nomination (for Best Original Screenplay) for this film.[61]

The Ballad of Cable Hogue edit

Defying audience expectations, as he often did, Peckinpah immediately followed The Wild Bunch with the elegiac, funny and mostly non-violent 1970 Western The Ballad of Cable Hogue. Using many of the same cast (L. Q. Jones, Strother Martin) and crew members of The Wild Bunch, the film covered three years in the life of small-time entrepreneur Cable Hogue (Jason Robards) who decides to make his living by remaining in the desert after having miraculously discovered water when he had been abandoned there to die. He opens his business along a stagecoach line, only to see his dreams end with the appearance of the first automobile on the horizon.

Shot on location in the Valley of Fire in Nevada, the film was plagued by poor weather, Peckinpah's renewed drinking and his brusque firing of 36 crew members. The chaotic filming wrapped 19 days over schedule and $3 million over budget, effectively terminating his tenure with Warner Bros.-Seven Arts. In retrospect, it was a damaging career move as Deliverance and Jeremiah Johnson, critical and enduring box office hits, were in development at the time and Peckinpah was considered the first choice to direct both films.[62]

Largely ignored upon its initial release, The Ballad of Cable Hogue has been rediscovered in recent years and is often held up by critics as exemplary of the breadth of Peckinpah's talents. They claim that the film proves Peckinpah's ability to make unconventional and original work without resorting to explicit violence. Over the years, Peckinpah cited the film as one of his favorites.[63][64][65]

Straw Dogs edit

His alienation from Warner Brothers once again left him with a limited number of directing jobs. Peckinpah traveled to England to direct Straw Dogs (1971), one of his darkest and most psychologically disturbing films. Produced by Daniel Melnick, who had previously worked with Peckinpah on Noon Wine, the film's screenplay was based on the novel The Siege of Trencher's Farm by Gordon Williams.

It starred Dustin Hoffman as David Sumner, a timid American mathematician who leaves the chaos of college anti-war protests to live with his young wife Amy (Susan George) in her native village in Cornwall, England. Resentment of David's presence by the locals slowly builds to a shocking climax when the mild-mannered academic is forced to violently defend his home. Peckinpah rewrote the existing screenplay, inspired by the books African Genesis and The Territorial Imperative by Robert Ardrey, which argued that man was essentially a carnivore who instinctively battled over control of territory.[66]

The character of David Sumner, taunted and humiliated by the violent town locals, is eventually cornered within his home where he loses control and kills several of the men during the violent conclusion. Straw Dogs deeply divided critics, some of whom praised its artistry and its confrontation of human savagery, while others attacked it as a misogynistic and fascistic celebration of violence.[67]

Much of the criticism centered on Amy's complicated and lengthy rape scene, which Peckinpah reportedly attempted to base on his own personal fears rooted in past failed marriages. To this day, the scene is attacked by some critics as an ugly male-chauvinist fantasy.[68] The film was for many years banned on video in the UK.[69][70][71]

Junior Bonner edit

Despite his growing alcoholism and controversial reputation, Peckinpah was prolific during this period of his life. In May 1971, weeks after completing Straw Dogs, he returned to the United States to begin work on Junior Bonner. The lyrical screenplay by Jeb Rosenbrook, depicting the changing times of society and binding family ties, appealed to Peckinpah's tastes. He accepted the project, at the time concerned with being typed as a director of violent action. The film was his final attempt to make a low-key, dramatic work in the vein of Noon Wine and The Ballad of Cable Hogue.

Filmed on location in Prescott, Arizona, the story covered a week in the life of aging rodeo rider Junior "JR" Bonner (Steve McQueen) who returns to his hometown to compete in an annual rodeo competition. Promoted as a Steve McQueen action vehicle, the film's reviews were mixed and the film performed poorly at the box office. Peckinpah remarked, "I made a film where nobody got shot and nobody went to see it." The film's reputation has grown over the years as many critics consider Junior Bonner to be one of Peckinpah's most sympathetic works, while also noting McQueen's earnest performance.[72][73]

The Getaway edit

Eager to work with Peckinpah again, Steve McQueen presented him Walter Hill's screenplay to The Getaway. Based on the Jim Thompson novel, the gritty crime thriller detailed lovers on the run following a dangerous robbery. Both Peckinpah and McQueen needed a hit, and they immediately began working on the film in February 1972.[74] Peckinpah had no pretensions about making The Getaway, as his only goal was to create a highly polished thriller to boost his market value.[75] McQueen played Doc McCoy, a convicted robber who colludes with corrupt businessman Jack Beynon (Ben Johnson) to be released from prison and later masterminds a bank heist organized by Beynon.

A series of double-crosses ensues and Doc and his wife Carol (MacGraw) attempt to flee from their pursuers to Mexico. Replete with explosions, car chases and intense shootouts, the film became Peckinpah's biggest financial success to date earning more than $25 million at the box office.[76] Though strictly a commercial product, Peckinpah's creative touches abound throughout, most notably during the intricately edited opening sequence when McQueen's character is suffering from the pressures of prison life.[77] The film remains popular and was remade in 1994,[78][79][80] starring Alec Baldwin and Kim Basinger.

Later career edit

The year 1973 marked the beginning of the most difficult period of Peckinpah's life and career. While still filming The Getaway in El Paso, Texas, Peckinpah sneaked across the border into Juarez in April 1972 and married Joie Gould. He had met Gould in England while filming Straw Dogs, and she had since been his companion and a part-time crew member. Peckinpah's intake of alcohol had increased dramatically while making The Getaway, and he became fond of saying, "I can't direct when I'm sober." He began to have violent mood swings and explosions of rage, at one point assaulting Gould. After four months, she returned to England and filed for divorce. Devastated by the breakup, Peckinpah fell into a self-destructive pattern of almost continuous alcohol consumption, and his health was unstable for the remainder of his life.[81]

Pat Garrett and Billy the Kid edit

It was in this state of mind that Peckinpah agreed to make Pat Garrett and Billy the Kid (1973) for Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. Based on the screenplay by Rudolph Wurlitzer, who had previously penned Two-Lane Blacktop, a film admired by Peckinpah, the director was convinced that he was about to make his definitive statement on the Western genre.[82] The script offered Peckinpah the opportunity to explore themes that appealed to him: two former partners forced by changing times onto opposite sides of the law, manipulated by corrupt economic interests. Peckinpah rewrote the screenplay, establishing Pat Garrett and Billy the Kid as friends, and attempted to weave an epic tragedy from the historical legend. Filmed on location in the Mexican state of Durango, the film starred James Coburn and Kris Kristofferson in the title roles, with a huge supporting cast including Bob Dylan, who composed the film's music, Jason Robards, R. G. Armstrong, Richard Jaeckel, Jack Elam, Chill Wills, Katy Jurado, Matt Clark, L. Q. Jones, Rutanya Alda, Slim Pickens, and Harry Dean Stanton.[83] From the beginning, Peckinpah began to have clashes with MGM and its president James Aubrey, known for his stifling of creative interests and eventual dismantling of the historic movie company.[84] Numerous production difficulties, including an outbreak of influenza and malfunctioning cameras, combined with Peckinpah's alcoholism, resulted in one of the most troubled productions of his career. Principal photography finished 21 days behind schedule and $1.6 million over budget. Enraged, Aubrey severely cut Peckinpah's film from 124 to 106 minutes, resulting in Pat Garrett and Billy the Kid being released in a truncated version largely disowned by cast and crew members. Critics complained that the film was incoherent, and the experience soured Peckinpah forever on Hollywood. In 1988, however, Peckinpah's director's cut was released on video and led to a reevaluation, with many critics hailing it as a mistreated classic and one of the era's best films. Filmmakers, including Martin Scorsese, have praised the film as one of the greatest modern Westerns.[85][86]

Bring Me the Head of Alfredo Garcia edit

In the eyes of his admirers, Bring Me the Head of Alfredo Garcia (1974) was the "last true Peckinpah film." The director himself claimed that it was the only one of his films to be released exactly as he intended it. A project in development for many years and based on an idea by Frank Kowalski, Peckinpah wrote the screenplay with the assistance of Kowalski, Walter Kelley and Gordon Dawson. An alcohol-soaked fever dream involving revenge, greed and murder in the Mexican countryside, the film featured Bennie (Warren Oates) as a thinly disguised self-portrait of Peckinpah, and co-starred a burlap bag containing the severed head of a gigolo being sought by a Mexican patrone for having impregnated his young granddaughter. Bennie is offered a reward of ten thousand dollars for Alfredo's death or proof thereof and Alfredo's head is demanded as proof that the contract has been fulfilled. The macabre drama was part black comedy, action film and tragedy, with a warped edge rarely seen in Peckinpah's works. Most critics were repulsed, and it was listed in the book The 50 Worst Films of All Time by Harry Medved and Randy Dreyfuss.[87] One of the few critics to praise the film was Roger Ebert, and in fact, the film's reputation has grown in recent years, with many noting its uncompromising vision as well as its anticipation of the violent black comedy which became famous in the works of such directors as David Lynch and Quentin Tarantino.[88] While a failure at the box office, the film today has a cult following. In 1991, UCLA's film school organized a festival of great but forgotten American films, and included Bring Me the Head of Alfredo Garcia in the program.[89][90] It is reportedly Takeshi Kitano's favorite film.

The Killer Elite edit

His career now suffering from consecutive box office failures, Peckinpah once again was in need of a hit on the level of The Getaway. For his next film, he chose The Killer Elite (1975), an action-filled espionage thriller starring James Caan and Robert Duvall as rival American agents. Filmed on location in San Francisco, Peckinpah allegedly discovered cocaine for the first time thanks to Caan and his entourage.[91] This led to increased paranoia and his once legendary dedication to detail deteriorated. Producers also refused to allow Peckinpah to rewrite the screenplay for the first time since his debut film The Deadly Companions. Frustrated, the director spent large amounts of time in his on-location trailer, allowing assistants to direct many scenes. At one point he overdosed on cocaine, landing himself in a hospital and receiving a second pacemaker. The film was completed and was reasonably successful at the box office, although critics panned it. Today, the film is considered one of Peckinpah's weakest films, and an example of his decline as a major director.[92][93]

Cross of Iron edit

Still renowned in 1975, Peckinpah was offered the opportunity to direct the eventual blockbusters King Kong (1976) and Superman (1978).[94] He turned down both offers and chose instead the bleak and vivid World War II drama Cross of Iron (1977). The screenplay was based on a novel about a platoon of German soldiers in 1943 on the verge of utter collapse on the Taman Peninsula on the Eastern Front. The German production was filmed in Yugoslavia. Working with James Hamilton and Walter Kelley, Peckinpah rewrote the screenplay and screened numerous Nazi documentaries in preparation. Almost immediately, Peckinpah realized he was working on a low-budget production, as he had to spend $90,000 of his own money to hire experienced crew members. While not suffering from the cocaine abuse which marked The Killer Elite, Peckinpah continued to drink heavily, causing his direction to become confused and erratic. The production abruptly ran out of funds, and Peckinpah was forced to completely improvise the concluding sequence, filming the scene in one day. Co-starring James Mason, Maximilian Schell, David Warner and Senta Berger, Cross of Iron was noted for its opening montage utilizing documentary footage as well as the visceral impact of the unusually intense battle sequences. The film was a huge box office success in Europe, inspiring the sequel Breakthrough starring Richard Burton.[95] Cross of Iron was reportedly a favorite of Orson Welles, who said that after All Quiet on the Western Front it was the finest anti-war film he had ever seen.[96] The film performed poorly in the U.S., ultimately eclipsed by Star Wars, though today it is highly regarded and considered the last instance of Peckinpah's once-great talent.[97][98]

Convoy edit

Hoping to create a blockbuster, Peckinpah decided to take on Convoy (1978). His associates were perplexed, as they felt his choice to direct such substandard material was a result of his renewed cocaine use and continued alcoholism. Based on the hit song by C. W. McCall, the film was an attempt to capitalize on the huge success of Smokey and the Bandit (1977). In spite of his addictions, Peckinpah felt compelled to turn the genre exercise into something more significant. Unhappy with the screenplay written by B.W.L. Norton, Peckinpah tried to encourage the actors to re-write, improvise and ad-lib their dialogue. In another departure from the script, Peckinpah attempted to add a new dimension by casting a pair of black actors as members of the convoy, Madge Sinclair as Widow Woman and Franklyn Ajaye as Spider Mike. Filmed in New Mexico and starring Kris Kristofferson, Ali MacGraw and Ernest Borgnine, Convoy turned out to be yet another troubled Peckinpah production, with the director's health a continuing problem. Friend and actor James Coburn was brought in to serve as second unit director, and he filmed many of the scenes while Peckinpah remained in his on-location trailer. The film wrapped in September 1977, 11 days behind schedule and $5 million over budget. Surprisingly, Convoy was the highest-grossing picture of Peckinpah's career, notching $46.5 million at the box office, but was panned by many critics, leaving his reputation seriously damaged. For the first time in almost a decade, Peckinpah finished a picture and found himself unemployed.[99][100]

2nd unit work on Jinxed! edit

For the next three years, Peckinpah remained a professional outcast. But during the summer of 1981, his original mentor Don Siegel gave him a chance to return to filmmaking. While shooting Jinxed!, a comedy drama starring Bette Midler and Rip Torn, Siegel asked Peckinpah if he would be interested in directing 12 days of second unit work. Peckinpah immediately accepted, and his earnest collaboration, while uncredited, was noted within the industry. For the final time, Peckinpah found himself back in the directing business.[101][102][103]

The Osterman Weekend edit

By 1982, Peckinpah's health was poor. Producers Peter S. Davis and William N. Panzer were undaunted, as they felt that having Peckinpah's name attached to The Osterman Weekend (1983) would lend the suspense thriller an air of respectability. Peckinpah accepted the job but reportedly hated the convoluted screenplay based upon Robert Ludlum's novel, which he also disliked. Multiple actors in Hollywood auditioned for the film, intrigued by the opportunity. Many of those who signed on, including John Hurt, Burt Lancaster and Dennis Hopper, did so for less than their usual salaries for a chance to work with the legendary director. By the time shooting wrapped in January 1983 in Los Angeles, Peckinpah and the producers were hardly speaking. Nevertheless, Peckinpah brought the film in on time and on budget, delivering his director's cut to the producers. Davis and Panzer were unhappy with Peckinpah's version, which included an opening sequence of two characters making love. The producers changed the opening and also deleted other scenes they deemed unnecessary. Peckinpah's final film was critically panned. It grossed $6.5 million in the United States (nearly recouping its budget) and did well in Europe and on the new home-video market.[103][104]

Julian Lennon music videos edit

Peckinpah's last work as a filmmaker was undertaken two months before his death. He was hired by producer Martin Lewis to shoot two music videos featuring Julian Lennon—"Valotte" and "Too Late For Goodbyes." The critically acclaimed videos led to Lennon's nomination for Best New Video Artist at the 1985 MTV Video Music Awards.[105][106]

Documentaries edit

  • Peckinpah has been the subject of four documentaries; the BBC production Sam Peckinpah: Man of Iron (1992), directed by Paul Joyce; Sam Peckinpah's West: Legacy of a Hollywood Renegade (1994); The Wild Bunch: An Album in Montage (1996), directed by Paul Seydor; and the TCM production Peckinpah Suite (2019), which focused on Peckinpah's daughter, Lupita Peckinpah. The Wild Bunch: An Album in Montage was nominated for an Academy Award as Best Documentary Short Subject.
  • Over a 4-year period German film maker Mike Siegel produced and directed Passion & Poetry – The Ballad of Sam Peckinpah a two-hour long film about Sam Peckinpah which includes rare Peckinpah interviews and statements. In 2009 the two-disc special edition with a running time of 270 minutes was released on DVD.

In popular culture edit

Filmography edit

Films edit

Year Title Credited as Notes
Director Writer Actor Other Role
1961 The Deadly Companions Yes No No No
1962 Ride the High Country Yes Uncredited No No
1965 Major Dundee Yes Yes No No
1969 The Wild Bunch Yes Yes No No
1970 The Ballad of Cable Hogue Yes No No Yes Producer
1971 Straw Dogs Yes Yes No No
1972 Junior Bonner Yes No Yes No Role: Man in Palace Bar (uncredited)
The Getaway Yes No No No
1973 Pat Garrett and Billy the Kid Yes No Yes No Role: Will (uncredited)
1974 Bring Me the Head of Alfredo Garcia Yes Yes No No
1975 The Killer Elite Yes No No No
1977 Cross of Iron Yes No No No
1978 Convoy Yes No Yes No Role: TV Reporter (uncredited)
1983 The Osterman Weekend Yes No Yes No Role: Danforth's Aide (uncredited)

Other film work edit

Year Title Credited as Notes
Writer Actor Other Role
1954 Riot in Cell Block 11 No No Yes Production Assistant (uncredited)
Private Hell 36 No No Yes Dialogue Director
1955 Dial Red O No Yes Yes Dialogue Coach
Role: Cook in Diner (uncredited)
The Blue and the Gold No Yes Yes Dialogue Coach
Role: Pilot (uncredited)
Wichita No Yes No Role: Bank Teller (uncredited)
1956 World Without End No No Yes Dialogue Coach (uncredited)
Crime in the Streets No No Yes Dialogue Director
Invasion of the Body Snatchers No Yes No Role: Charlie
1961 One-Eyed Jacks Uncredited No No
1965 The Glory Guys Yes No No
1968 Villa Rides Yes No No
1972 Morbo No No Yes Script Supervisor (uncredited)
1978 China 9, Liberty 37 No Yes No Role: Wilbur Olsen
1979 The Visitor No Yes No Role: Dr. Sam Collins
1982 Jinxed! No No Yes Second Unit Director (uncredited)

Television edit

Music videos edit

Year Title Artist
1984 "Valotte" Julian Lennon
"Too Late for Goodbyes"

Notes edit

  1. ^ "Peckinpah", Random House Webster's Unabridged Dictionary
  2. ^ Current Biography 1973, p. 327.
  3. ^ a b Simmons, p. 3.
  4. ^ Weddle, p. 15.
  5. ^ Fine, p. 12.
  6. ^ Weddle, p. 16.
  7. ^ David E. Peckinpah & IMDB.
  8. ^ Simmons, p. 5.
  9. ^ FilmReference.
  10. ^ "Director Sam Peckinpah, the rugged auteur director of films..." UPI. Retrieved February 14, 2022.
  11. ^ Simmons, pp. 10–11.
  12. ^ Simmons, p. 18.
  13. ^ Weddle, pp. 52–59.
  14. ^ Weddle, pp. 104–05.
  15. ^ Weddle, pp. 116–119.
  16. ^ Weddle, p. 120.
  17. ^ Weddle, pp. 499–500.
  18. ^ Weddle, p. 56.
  19. ^ Simmons, pp. 63–64.
  20. ^ "LUPITA PECKINPAH TALKS ABOUT HER FATHER, SAM PECKINPAH". Money-into-light.com. Retrieved July 9, 2022.
  21. ^ Weddle, pp. 163, 479.
  22. ^ Weddle, p. 380.
  23. ^ Rowl, Paul; s. "LUPITA PECKINPAH TALKS ABOUT HER FATHER, SAM PECKINPAH". Retrieved December 6, 2022.
  24. ^ Cohen, pp. 77–80.
  25. ^ Weddle, p. 550.
  26. ^ McCarthy, Todd. "Sam Peckinpah, Controversial Director, Dead At 59". Variety. January 2, 1985. Retrieved January 14, 2017.
  27. ^ Harrington, Richard. "Sam Peckinpah, Director Of 'Wild Bunch,' Dies at 59". The Washington Post. December 29, 1984. Retrieved January 14, 2017.
  28. ^ Sam Peckinpah & IMDB.
  29. ^ Weddle, p. 126.
  30. ^ Simmons, p. 28.
  31. ^ Simmons, pp. 28–29.
  32. ^ Klondike & IMDB.
  33. ^ Simmons, pp. 29–30.
  34. ^ Rifleman & IMDB.
  35. ^ Simmons, pp. 31–34.
  36. ^ Westerner & IMDB.
  37. ^ Westerner Trivia & IMDB.
  38. ^ Weddle, pp. 168–184.
  39. ^ Simmons, pp. 55–6.
  40. ^ Weddle, pp. 197–198.
  41. ^ Simmons, pp. 36–39.
  42. ^ Weddle, pp. 198–219.
  43. ^ Simmons, pp. 41–54.
  44. ^ Fine, p. 84.
  45. ^ Weddle, pp. 229–44.
  46. ^ Simmons, pp. 55–72.
  47. ^ Major Dundee Trivia & IMDB.
  48. ^ Carroll.
  49. ^ Weddle, pp. 257–63.
  50. ^ Simmons, pp. 73–81.
  51. ^ Weddle, pp. 280–95.
  52. ^ Simmons, pp. 76–80.
  53. ^ Noon Wine & IMDB.
  54. ^ Weddle, pp. 307–309.
  55. ^ . Time Out London. Archived from the original on August 7, 2018. Retrieved August 7, 2018.
  56. ^ Kinder, Marsha (2001). "the Cultural Reinscription of The Wild Bunch" (PDF). In Slocum, John David (ed.). Violence and American Cinema (PDF). Psychology Press. pp. 64–100. ISBN 9780415928106. ISSN 2577-7610. Retrieved August 7, 2018.
  57. ^ Weddle, pp. 310–31.
  58. ^ Weddle, pp. 376–377.
  59. ^ AFI 100.
  60. ^ Wild Bunch Trivia & IMDB.
  61. ^ "The 42nd Academy Awards". Academy Awards. Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences. April 7, 1970. Retrieved August 7, 2018.
  62. ^ Weddle, pp. 391–92.
  63. ^ Weddle, pp. 383–89.
  64. ^ Simmons, pp. 108–20.
  65. ^ Cable Hogue Trivia & IMDB.
  66. ^ Weddle, p. 396.
  67. ^ Weddle, p. 427.
  68. ^ Weddle, pp. 399–400.
  69. ^ Weddle, pp. 393–403.
  70. ^ Simmons, pp. 121–38.
  71. ^ Straw Dogs Trivia & IMDB.
  72. ^ Weddle, pp. 428–34.
  73. ^ Simmons, pp. 139–53.
  74. ^ Weddle, p. 434.
  75. ^ Weddle, p. 436.
  76. ^ Getaway Box Office & IMDB.
  77. ^ Weddle, p. 439.
  78. ^ Getaway & IMDB.
  79. ^ Simmons, pp. 154–68.
  80. ^ Weddle, p. 442.
  81. ^ Weddle, pp. 444–450.
  82. ^ Weddle, p. 453.
  83. ^ Pat Garrett & IMDB.
  84. ^ Weddle, p. 463.
  85. ^ Weddle, p. 483.
  86. ^ Simmons, pp. 169–188.
  87. ^ Medved, pp. 51–55.
  88. ^ Ebert review.
  89. ^ Weddle, pp. 492–498.
  90. ^ Simmons, pp. 189–208.
  91. ^ Weddle, p. 499.
  92. ^ Weddle, pp. 498–500.
  93. ^ Simmons, pp. 209–224.
  94. ^ Weddle, p. 504.
  95. ^ Breakthrough & IMDB.
  96. ^ Simmons, p. 236.
  97. ^ Weddle, pp. 504–513.
  98. ^ Simmons, pp. 225–237.
  99. ^ Weddle, pp. 514–518.
  100. ^ Simmons, pp. 232–236.
  101. ^ Jinxed! & IMDB.
  102. ^ Weddle, pp. 534–535.
  103. ^ a b Simmons, p. 239.
  104. ^ Weddle, pp. 535–537.
  105. ^ Weddle, pp. 541–543.
  106. ^ MTV.
  107. ^ SNL Episodes & IMDB.
  108. ^ Weddle, p. 428.
  109. ^ "The Truth About Benny Hill, Collins, Andrew". Sabotagetimes.com. Retrieved February 22, 2020.
  110. ^ Zacharek, Stephanie (August 11, 2000). "Cecil B. DeMented". Salon.com. Retrieved August 23, 2019.
  111. ^ "Kris Kristofferson - A Moment of Forever Album Reviews, Songs & More". AllMusic. Retrieved July 9, 2022.

References edit

  • Simmons, Garner (1982). Peckinpah, A Portrait in Montage. University of Texas Press. ISBN 0-292-76493-6.
  • Weddle, David (1994). If They Move... Kill 'Em! The Life and Times of Sam Peckinpah. Grove Press. ISBN 0-8021-1546-2.
  • Current Biography. H. W. Wilson. 1973. ISBN 0-8242-0543-X.
  • "David E. Peckinpah". Internet Movie Database. Retrieved July 23, 2007.
  • "(David) Sam Peckinpah Biography (1925–)". FilmReference.com. Retrieved September 3, 2011.
  • "Sam Peckinpah". Internet Movie Database. Retrieved September 27, 2007.
  • "Biography: Sam Peckinpah". Internet Movie Database. Retrieved July 28, 2007.
  • Cohen, Stan (2004). "The Murray Hotel". Montana's Grandest-Historic Hotels and Resorts of the Treasure State. Missoula, Montana: Pictorial Histories Publishing Company. ISBN 1-57510-111-4.
  • "Full cast and crew for Klondike". Internet Movie Database. Retrieved September 27, 2007.
  • "Episode list for The Rifleman". Internet Movie Database. Retrieved September 27, 2007.
  • "The Westerner". Internet Movie Database. Retrieved September 27, 2007.
  • "Trivia for The Westerner". Internet Movie Database. Retrieved September 27, 2007.
  • "Trivia for Major Dundee". Internet Movie Database. Retrieved September 27, 2007.
  • Carroll, E. Jean (March 1982). "Last of the Desperadoes: Dueling with Sam Peckinpah". Rocky Mountain Magazine.
  • Fine, Marshall (1991). Bloody Sam. Donald I. Fine Books. ISBN 978-1-55611-236-2.
  • "Noon Wine". Internet Movie Database. Retrieved September 27, 2007.
  • . afi.com. Archived from the original on July 16, 2011. Retrieved September 27, 2007.
  • "Trivia for The Wild Bunch". Internet Movie Database. Retrieved September 27, 2007.
  • "Trivia for The Ballad of Cable Hogue". Internet Movie Database. Retrieved September 27, 2007.
  • "Trivia for Straw Dogs". Internet Movie Database. Retrieved September 27, 2007.
  • "Box office/business for The Getaway". Internet Movie Database. Retrieved September 27, 2007.
  • "The Getaway". Internet Movie Database. Retrieved September 27, 2007.
  • "Pat Garrett and Billy the Kid". Internet Movie Database. Retrieved September 27, 2007.
  • Medved, Harry (1978). The 50 Worst Films of All Time. Warner Books. ISBN 0-446-38119-5.
  • . suntimes.com. October 28, 2001. Archived from the original on September 20, 2012. Retrieved October 6, 2007.
  • "Breakthrough". Internet Movie Database. Retrieved November 9, 2007.
  • "Rock on the Net: 1985 MTV Video Music Awards". rockonthenet.com. Retrieved November 9, 2007.
  • "Sam Peckinpah: Man of Iron". Internet Movie Database. Retrieved November 9, 2007.
  • "The Wild Bunch: An Album in Montage". Internet Movie Database. Retrieved November 9, 2007.
  • "Episode list for Saturday Night Live". Internet Movie Database. Retrieved November 9, 2007.
  • "Memorable quotes for Fletch". Internet Movie Database. Retrieved November 9, 2007.
  • "Trivia for Cecil B. DeMented". Internet Movie Database. Retrieved November 9, 2007.
  • "Movie connections for Chopping Mall". Internet Movie Database. Retrieved November 20, 2007.
  • "Combined credits for Jinxed!". Internet Movie Database. Retrieved March 6, 2012.

Further reading edit

  • Bliss, Michael (2012). Peckinpah Today: New Essays on the Films of Sam Peckinpah. Southern Illinois University Press. ISBN 978-0-8093-3106-2.
  • Simons, John L. (2011). Peckinpah's Tragic Westerns: A Critical Study. McFarland. ISBN 978-0-7864-6133-2.
  • Hayes, Kevin J. (2008). Sam Peckinpah: Interviews. University Press of Mississippi. ISBN 978-1-934110-64-5.
  • Engel, Leonard (2003). Sam Peckinpah's West: New Perspectives. University of Utah Press. ISBN 0-87480-772-7.
  • Mesce, Bill Jr. (2001). Peckinpah's Women: A Reappraisal of the Portrayal of Women in the Period Westerns of Sam Peckinpah. Scarecrow Press. ISBN 0-8108-4066-9.
  • Seydor, Paul (1999). Peckinpah: The Western Films, A Reconsideration. University of Illinois Press. ISBN 0-252-06835-1.
  • Dukore, Bernard F. (1999). Sam Peckinpah's Feature Films. University of Illinois Press. ISBN 0-252-06802-5.
  • Bliss, Michael (1993). Justified Lives: Morality and Narrative in the Films of Sam Peckinpah. Southern Illinois University Press. ISBN 0-8093-1823-7.
  • Evans, Max (1972). Sam Peckinpah: Master of Violence. Dakota Press. ISBN 0-88249-011-7.

External links edit

  • Sam Peckinpah at IMDb
  • Black, Stacy (October 2009). . American Movie Classics. Archived from the original on July 29, 2017. Retrieved July 28, 2017.
  • Sam Peckinpah papers, 1936-1985. Margaret Herrick Library: Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences. Collection 91.
  • "Sam Peckinpah". Fan Forum.
  • "Sam Peckinpah – Radio Documentary". One Act Plays and Monologues. 1969.
  • "Tribute to Sam Peckinpah". ConvoyTM. 1994.
  • Kael, Pauline (November 19, 1999). "A Glorious High". Austin Chronicle.
  • Murray, Gabrielle (May 2002). "Sam Peckinpah". Senses of Cinema. Great Directors (20).
  • Ebert, Roger (September 29, 2002). "The Wild Bunch". Sun Times. Review.
  • Childs, Hayden (2003). . The High Hat. Nitrate (Special feature) (2). Archived from the original on November 15, 2007. Retrieved January 30, 2006. Essays about Sam Peckinpah's films
  • Cremean, Paul (May 23, 2006). "[Sam] Peckinpah's West versus [Michael] Mann's Metropolis". Cremmers.
  • "The Films of Sam Peckinpah". Filmkuratorium.

peckinpah, david, samuel, peckinpah, ɑː, february, 1925, december, 1984, american, film, director, screenwriter, 1969, western, epic, wild, bunch, received, academy, award, nomination, ranked, american, film, institute, list, films, employed, visually, innovat. David Samuel Peckinpah ˈ p ɛ k ɪ n ˌ p ɑː 1 February 21 1925 December 28 1984 was an American film director and screenwriter His 1969 Western epic The Wild Bunch received an Academy Award nomination and was ranked No 80 on the American Film Institute s top 100 list His films employed a visually innovative and explicit depiction of action and violence as well as a revisionist approach to the Western genre Sam PeckinpahPeckinpah on the set of The Wild Bunch in 1968BornDavid Samuel Peckinpah 1925 02 21 February 21 1925Fresno California U S DiedDecember 28 1984 1984 12 28 aged 59 Inglewood California U S Alma materCalifornia State University Fresno B A 1948University of Southern California M A 1952OccupationsFilm directorscreenwriterYears active1957 1984Spouse s Marie Selland 1947 1960 Begona Palacios 1964 1967 1974 1984 Joie Gould 1971 1972 Children5Peckinpah s films deal with the conflict between values and ideals as well as the corruption and violence in human society His characters are often loners or losers who desire to be honorable but are forced to compromise in order to survive in a world of nihilism and brutality He was given the nickname Bloody Sam owing to the violence in his films Peckinpah s combative personality marked by years of alcohol and drug abuse affected his professional legacy The production of many of his films included battles with producers and crew members damaging his reputation and career during his lifetime Peckinpah s other films include Ride the High Country 1962 Major Dundee 1965 The Ballad of Cable Hogue 1970 Straw Dogs 1971 The Getaway 1972 Pat Garrett and Billy the Kid 1973 Bring Me the Head of Alfredo Garcia 1974 Cross of Iron 1977 and Convoy 1978 Contents 1 Family origins 2 Life 3 Television career 3 1 The Westerner 4 Early film career 4 1 The Deadly Companions 4 2 Ride the High Country 4 3 Major Dundee 4 4 Noon Wine 5 International fame 5 1 The Wild Bunch 5 2 The Ballad of Cable Hogue 5 3 Straw Dogs 5 4 Junior Bonner 5 5 The Getaway 6 Later career 6 1 Pat Garrett and Billy the Kid 6 2 Bring Me the Head of Alfredo Garcia 6 3 The Killer Elite 6 4 Cross of Iron 6 5 Convoy 6 5 1 2nd unit work on Jinxed 6 6 The Osterman Weekend 6 6 1 Julian Lennon music videos 7 Documentaries 8 In popular culture 9 Filmography 9 1 Films 9 2 Other film work 9 3 Television 9 4 Music videos 10 Notes 11 References 12 Further reading 13 External linksFamily origins editThe Peckinpahs originated from the Frisian Islands in the northwest of Europe Both sides of Peckinpah s family migrated to the American West by covered wagon in the mid 19th century 2 Peckinpah and several relatives often claimed Native American ancestry but this has been denied by surviving family members 3 Peckinpah s great grandfather Rice Peckinpaugh a merchant and farmer in Indiana moved to Humboldt County California in the 1850s working in the logging business and changed the spelling of the family name to Peckinpah 4 5 Peckinpah Meadow and Peckinpah Creek where the family ran a lumber mill on a mountain in the High Sierra east of North Fork California have been officially named on U S geographical maps 3 Peckinpah s maternal grandfather was Denver S Church a cattle rancher Superior Court judge and United States Congressman of a California district including Fresno County 6 Sam Peckinpah s nephew is David Peckinpah who was a television producer and director as well as a screenwriter 7 He was a cousin of former New York Yankees shortstop Roger Peckinpaugh 8 Life editThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Sam Peckinpah news newspapers books scholar JSTOR March 2018 Learn how and when to remove this template message David Samuel Peckinpah was born February 21 1925 to David Edward 1895 1960 and Fern Louise nee Church Peckinpah 1893 1983 in Fresno California where he attended both grammar school and high school 9 He had an elder brother Denver Charles 1916 1996 10 He spent much time skipping classes with his brother to engage in cowboy activities on their grandfather Denver Church s ranch including trapping branding and shooting During the 1930s and 1940s Coarsegold and Bass Lake were still populated with descendants of the miners and ranchers of the 19th century Many of these descendants worked on Church s ranch At that time it was a rural area undergoing extreme change and this exposure is believed to have affected Peckinpah s Western films later in life 11 He played on the junior varsity football team while at Fresno High School but frequent fighting and discipline problems caused his parents to enroll him in the San Rafael Military Academy for his senior year 12 In 1943 he joined the United States Marine Corps Within two years his battalion was sent to China with the task of disarming Japanese soldiers and repatriating them following World War II While his duty did not include combat he claimed to have witnessed acts of war between Chinese and Japanese soldiers According to friends these included several acts of torture and the murder of a laborer by sniper fire The American Marines were not permitted to intervene Peckinpah also claimed he was shot during an attack by Communist forces Also during his final weeks as a Marine he applied for discharge in Beijing so he could marry a local woman but was refused His experiences in China reportedly deeply affected Peckinpah and may have influenced his depictions of violence in his films 13 After being discharged in Los Angeles he attended California State University Fresno where he studied history While a student he met and married his first wife Marie Selland in 1947 A drama major Selland introduced Peckinpah to the theater department and he became interested in directing for the first time During his senior year he adapted and directed a one hour version of Tennessee Williams The Glass Menagerie After graduation in 1948 Peckinpah enrolled in graduate studies in drama at University of Southern California He spent two seasons as the director in residence at Huntington Park Civic Theatre near Los Angeles before obtaining his master s degree He was asked to stay another year but Peckinpah began working as a stagehand at KLAC TV in the belief that television experience would eventually lead to work in films Even during this early stage of his career Peckinpah was developing a combative streak Reportedly he was kicked off the set of The Liberace Show for not wearing a tie and he refused to cue a car salesman during a live feed because of his attitude towards stagehands 14 In 1954 Peckinpah was hired as a dialogue coach for the film Riot in Cell Block 11 His job entailed acting as an assistant for the movie s director Don Siegel The film was shot on location at Folsom Prison Reportedly the warden was reluctant to allow the filmmakers to work at the prison until he was introduced to Peckinpah The warden knew of his influential family from Fresno and was immediately cooperative Siegel s location work and his use of actual prisoners as extras in the film made a lasting impression on Peckinpah He worked as a dialogue coach on four additional Siegel films Private Hell 36 1954 An Annapolis Story 1955 and co starring L Q Jones Invasion of the Body Snatchers 1956 and Crime in the Streets 1956 15 Invasion of the Body Snatchers in which Peckinpah appeared as Charlie the meter reader starred Kevin McCarthy and Dana Wynter It became one of the most critically praised science fiction films of the 1950s Peckinpah claimed to have done an extensive rewrite on the film s screenplay a statement which remains controversial 16 Throughout much of his adult life Peckinpah was affected by alcoholism and later other forms of drug addiction According to some accounts he also suffered from mental illness possibly manic depression or paranoia 17 It is believed his drinking problems began during his service in the military while stationed in China when he frequented the saloons of Tianjin and Beijing 18 After divorcing Selland the mother of his first four children in 1960 he married Mexican actress Begona Palacios in 1964 A stormy relationship developed and over the years they married on three separate occasions They had one daughter together 19 20 His personality reportedly often swung between a sweet softly spoken artistic disposition and bouts of rage and violence during which he verbally and physically abused himself and others An experienced hunter Peckinpah was fascinated with firearms and was known to shoot the mirrors in his house while abusing alcohol an image which occurs several times in his films 21 Peckinpah s reputation as a hard living brute with a taste for violence inspired by the content in his most popular films and in many ways perpetuated by himself affected his artistic legacy 22 His friends and family have claimed this does a disservice to a man who was actually more complex than generally credited He used such actors as Warren Oates L Q Jones R G Armstrong James Coburn Ben Johnson and Kris Kristofferson and collaborators Jerry Fielding Lucien Ballard Gordon Dawson and Martin Baum in many of his films and several of his friends and assistants stuck by him to the end of his life citation needed Peckinpah spent a great deal of his life in Mexico after his marriage to Palacios eventually buying property in the country He was fascinated by the Mexican lifestyle and Mexican culture and he often portrayed it with an unusual sentimentality and romanticism in his films 23 From 1979 until his death Peckinpah lived at the Murray Hotel in Livingston Montana 24 Peckinpah was seriously ill during his final years as a lifetime of hard living caught up with him citation needed Regardless he continued to work until his last months He died of heart failure at age 59 on December 28 1984 in Inglewood California 25 At the time he was working on the script for On the Rocks 26 a projected independent film to be shot in San Francisco 27 Television career editOn the recommendation of Don Siegel Peckinpah established himself during the late 1950s as a scriptwriter of western series of the era selling scripts to Gunsmoke Have Gun Will Travel Broken Arrow Klondike The Rifleman and Dick Powell s Zane Grey Theatre the latter Four Star Television productions 28 He wrote one episode The Town December 13 1957 for the CBS series Trackdown 29 Peckinpah wrote a screenplay from the novel The Authentic Death of Hendry Jones a draft that evolved into the 1961 Marlon Brando film One Eyed Jacks 30 His writing led to directing and he directed a 1958 episode of Broken Arrow generally credited as his first official directing job and several 1960 episodes of Klondike co starring James Coburn L Q Jones Ralph Taeger Joi Lansing and Mari Blanchard He also directed the CBS sitcom Mr Adams and Eve starring Howard Duff and Ida Lupino 31 32 In 1958 Peckinpah wrote a script for Gunsmoke that was rejected due to content He reworked the screenplay titled The Sharpshooter and sold it to Zane Grey Theater The episode received popular response and became the television series The Rifleman starring Chuck Connors Peckinpah directed four episodes of the series with guest stars R G Armstrong and Warren Oates but left after the first year The Rifleman ran for five seasons and achieved enduring popularity in syndication 33 34 The Westerner edit Main article The Westerner TV series nbsp Brian Keith with Spike in The Westerner 1960 During this time he also created the television series The Westerner for Four Star Television starring Brian Keith and in three episodes also featuring John Dehner Peckinpah wrote and directed a pilot called Trouble at Tres Cruzes which was aired in March 1959 before the actual series was made in 1960 Peckinpah acted as producer of the series having a hand in the writing of each episode and directing five of them Critically praised the show ran for only 13 episodes before cancellation mainly due to its gritty content detailing the drifting laconic cowboy Dave Blassingame Brian Keith Especially noteworthy are the episodes Jeff and Hand on the Gun extraordinary in their depiction of violence and their imaginative directing forerunners of his later feature films Despite its short run The Westerner and Peckinpah were nominated by the Producers Guild of America for Best Filmed Series An episode of the series eventually served as the basis for Tom Gries 1968 film Will Penny starring Charlton Heston The Westerner which has since achieved cult status further established Peckinpah as a talent to be reckoned with 35 36 37 38 In 1962 Peckinpah directed two hour long episodes for The Dick Powell Theater In the second of these The Losers an updated remake of The Westerner set in the present day with Lee Marvin as Dave Blassingame and Keenan Wynn as Dehner s character Bergundy Smith he mixed slow motion fast motion and stills together to capture violence a technique famously put to more sophisticated use in 1969s The Wild Bunch 39 Early film career editThe Deadly Companions edit Main article The Deadly Companions After cancellation of The Westerner Brian Keith was cast as the male lead in the 1961 Western film The Deadly Companions He suggested Peckinpah as director and the project s producer Charles B Fitzsimons accepted the idea By most accounts the low budget film shot on location in Arizona was a learning process for Peckinpah who feuded with Fitzsimons brother of the film s star Maureen O Hara over the screenplay and staging of the scenes Reportedly Fitzsimons refused to allow Peckinpah to give direction to O Hara Unable to rewrite the screenplay or edit the picture Peckinpah vowed to never again direct a film unless he had script control The Deadly Companions passed largely without notice and is the least known of Peckinpah s films 40 41 Ride the High Country edit Main article Ride the High Country His second film Ride the High Country 1962 was based on the screenplay Guns in the Afternoon written by N B Stone Jr Producer Richard Lyons admired Peckinpah s work on The Westerner and offered him the directing job Peckinpah did an extensive rewrite of the screenplay including personal references from his own childhood growing up on Denver Church s ranch and even naming one of the mining towns Coarsegold He based the character of Steve Judd a once famous lawman fallen on hard times on his own father David Peckinpah In the screenplay Judd and old friend Gil Westrum are hired to transport gold from a mining community through dangerous territory Westrum hopes to talk Judd into taking the gold for themselves Along the way following Judd s example Westrum slowly realizes his own self respect is far more important than profit During the final shootout when Judd and Westrum stand up to a trio of men Judd is fatally wounded but his death serves as Westrum s salvation a Catholic tragedy woven from the cloth of the Western genre This sort of salvation became a major theme in many Peckinpah s later films Starring aging Western stars Joel McCrea and Randolph Scott in their final major screen roles the film initially went unnoticed in the United States but was an enormous success in Europe Beating Federico Fellini s 8 for first prize at the Belgium Film Festival the film was hailed by foreign critics as a brilliant reworking of the Western genre New York critics also discovered Peckinpah s unusual Western with Newsweek naming Ride the High Country the best film of the year and Time placing it on its ten best list By some critics the film is admired as one of Peckinpah s greatest works 42 43 Major Dundee edit Main article Major Dundee Peckinpah s next film Major Dundee 1965 was the first of Peckinpah s many unfortunate experiences with the major studios that financed his productions Based on a screenplay by Harry Julian Fink the film was to star Charlton Heston Peckinpah was hired as director after Heston viewed producer Jerry Bresler s private screening of Ride the High Country Heston liked the film and called Peckinpah saying I d like to work with you 44 The sprawling screenplay told the story of Union cavalry officer Major Dundee who commands a New Mexico outpost of Confederate prisoners When an Apache war chief wipes out a company and kidnaps several children Dundee throws together a makeshift army including unwilling Confederate veterans black Federal soldiers and traditional Western types and takes off after the Indians Dundee becomes obsessed with his quest and heads deep into the wilderness of Mexico with his exhausted men in tow Filming began without a completed screenplay and Peckinpah chose several remote locations in Mexico causing the film to go heavily overbudget Intimidated by the size and scope of the project Peckinpah reportedly drank heavily each night after shooting He also fired at least 15 crew members At one point Peckinpah s mean streak and abusiveness towards the actors so enraged Heston that the normally even tempered star threatened to run the director through with his cavalry saber if he did not show more courtesy to the cast Shooting ended 15 days over schedule and 1 5 million more than budgeted with Peckinpah and producer Bresler no longer on speaking terms The movie detailing themes and sequences Peckinpah mastered later in his career was taken away from him and substantially reedited An incomplete mess which today exists in a variety of versions Major Dundee performed poorly at the box office and was trashed by critics though its standing has improved over the years Peckinpah maintained nonetheless throughout his life that his original version of Major Dundee was among his best films but his reputation was severely damaged 45 46 47 Peckinpah was next signed to direct The Cincinnati Kid a gambling drama about a young prodigy who takes on an old master during a big New Orleans poker match Before filming started producer Martin Ransohoff began to receive phone calls about the Major Dundee ordeal and was told Peckinpah was impossible to work with Peckinpah decided to shoot in black and white and was hoping to transform the screenplay into a social realist saga about a kid surviving the tough streets of the Great Depression After four days of filming which reportedly included some nude scenes Ransohoff disliked the rushes and immediately fired him 48 Eventually directed by Norman Jewison and starring Steve McQueen the film went on to become a 1965 hit 49 50 Noon Wine edit Peckinpah caught a lucky break in 1966 when producer Daniel Melnick needed a writer and director to adapt Katherine Anne Porter s short novel Noon Wine for television Melnick was a big fan of The Westerner and Ride the High Country and had heard Peckinpah had been unfairly fired from The Cincinnati Kid Against the objections of many within the industry Melnick hired Peckinpah and gave him free rein Peckinpah completed the script which Porter enthusiastically endorsed and the project became an hour long presentation for ABC Stage 67 Taking place in turn of the century West Texas Noon Wine was a dark tragedy about a farmer s act of futile murder which leads to suicide Starring Jason Robards and Olivia de Havilland the film was a critical hit with Peckinpah nominated by the Writers Guild for Best Television Adaptation and the Directors Guild of America for Best Television Direction Robards kept a personal copy of the film in his private collection for years as he considered the project to be one of his most satisfying professional experiences A rare film which had no home video release until 2014 Noon Wine is today considered one of Peckinpah s most intimate works revealing his dramatic potential and artistic depth 51 52 53 International fame editThe Wild Bunch edit Main article The Wild Bunch The surprising success of Noon Wine laid the groundwork for one of the most explosive comebacks in film history In 1967 Warner Bros Seven Arts producers Kenneth Hyman and Phil Feldman were interested in having Peckinpah rewrite and direct an adventure film The Diamond Story An alternative screenplay written by Roy Sickner and Walon Green was the western The Wild Bunch At the time William Goldman s screenplay Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid had recently been purchased by 20th Century Studios It was quickly decided that The Wild Bunch which had several similarities to Goldman s work would be produced in order to beat Butch Cassidy to the theaters 54 By the fall of 1967 Peckinpah was rewriting the screenplay into what became The Wild Bunch Filmed on location in Mexico Peckinpah s epic work was inspired by a number of forces his hunger to return to films the violence seen in Arthur Penn s Bonnie and Clyde America s growing frustration with the Vietnam War and what he perceived to be the utter lack of reality seen in Westerns up to that time He set out to make a film which portrayed not only the vicious violence of the period but the crude men attempting to survive the era During this period Peckinpah said that his life was changed by seeing Carlos Saura s La Caza 1966 which profoundly influenced his subsequent oeuvre 55 56 The film detailed a gang of veteran outlaws on the Texas Mexico border in 1913 trying to survive within a rapidly approaching modern world The Wild Bunch is framed by two ferocious and infamous gunfights beginning with a failed robbery of the railway company office and concluding with the outlaws battling the Mexican army in suicidal vengeance prompted by the brutal torture and murder of one of their members 57 Irreverent and unprecedented in its explicit detail the 1969 film was an instant success Multiple scenes attempted in Major Dundee including slow motion action sequences characters leaving a village as if in a funeral procession and the use of inexperienced locals as extras were perfected in The Wild Bunch Many critics denounced its violence as sadistic and exploitative Other critics and filmmakers hailed the originality of its unique rapid editing style created for the first time in this film and ultimately becoming a Peckinpah trademark and praised the reworking of traditional Western themes It was the beginning of Peckinpah s international fame and he and his work remained controversial for the rest of his life 58 The film was ranked No 80 on the American Film Institute s top 100 list of the greatest American films ever made and No 69 as the most thrilling but the controversy has not diminished 59 The Wild Bunch was re released for its 25th anniversary and received an NC 17 rating from the MPAA 60 Peckinpah received his only Academy Award nomination for Best Original Screenplay for this film 61 The Ballad of Cable Hogue edit Main article The Ballad of Cable Hogue Defying audience expectations as he often did Peckinpah immediately followed The Wild Bunch with the elegiac funny and mostly non violent 1970 Western The Ballad of Cable Hogue Using many of the same cast L Q Jones Strother Martin and crew members of The Wild Bunch the film covered three years in the life of small time entrepreneur Cable Hogue Jason Robards who decides to make his living by remaining in the desert after having miraculously discovered water when he had been abandoned there to die He opens his business along a stagecoach line only to see his dreams end with the appearance of the first automobile on the horizon Shot on location in the Valley of Fire in Nevada the film was plagued by poor weather Peckinpah s renewed drinking and his brusque firing of 36 crew members The chaotic filming wrapped 19 days over schedule and 3 million over budget effectively terminating his tenure with Warner Bros Seven Arts In retrospect it was a damaging career move as Deliverance and Jeremiah Johnson critical and enduring box office hits were in development at the time and Peckinpah was considered the first choice to direct both films 62 Largely ignored upon its initial release The Ballad of Cable Hogue has been rediscovered in recent years and is often held up by critics as exemplary of the breadth of Peckinpah s talents They claim that the film proves Peckinpah s ability to make unconventional and original work without resorting to explicit violence Over the years Peckinpah cited the film as one of his favorites 63 64 65 Straw Dogs edit Main article Straw Dogs 1971 film His alienation from Warner Brothers once again left him with a limited number of directing jobs Peckinpah traveled to England to direct Straw Dogs 1971 one of his darkest and most psychologically disturbing films Produced by Daniel Melnick who had previously worked with Peckinpah on Noon Wine the film s screenplay was based on the novel The Siege of Trencher s Farm by Gordon Williams It starred Dustin Hoffman as David Sumner a timid American mathematician who leaves the chaos of college anti war protests to live with his young wife Amy Susan George in her native village in Cornwall England Resentment of David s presence by the locals slowly builds to a shocking climax when the mild mannered academic is forced to violently defend his home Peckinpah rewrote the existing screenplay inspired by the books African Genesis and The Territorial Imperative by Robert Ardrey which argued that man was essentially a carnivore who instinctively battled over control of territory 66 The character of David Sumner taunted and humiliated by the violent town locals is eventually cornered within his home where he loses control and kills several of the men during the violent conclusion Straw Dogs deeply divided critics some of whom praised its artistry and its confrontation of human savagery while others attacked it as a misogynistic and fascistic celebration of violence 67 Much of the criticism centered on Amy s complicated and lengthy rape scene which Peckinpah reportedly attempted to base on his own personal fears rooted in past failed marriages To this day the scene is attacked by some critics as an ugly male chauvinist fantasy 68 The film was for many years banned on video in the UK 69 70 71 Junior Bonner edit Main article Junior Bonner Despite his growing alcoholism and controversial reputation Peckinpah was prolific during this period of his life In May 1971 weeks after completing Straw Dogs he returned to the United States to begin work on Junior Bonner The lyrical screenplay by Jeb Rosenbrook depicting the changing times of society and binding family ties appealed to Peckinpah s tastes He accepted the project at the time concerned with being typed as a director of violent action The film was his final attempt to make a low key dramatic work in the vein of Noon Wine and The Ballad of Cable Hogue Filmed on location in Prescott Arizona the story covered a week in the life of aging rodeo rider Junior JR Bonner Steve McQueen who returns to his hometown to compete in an annual rodeo competition Promoted as a Steve McQueen action vehicle the film s reviews were mixed and the film performed poorly at the box office Peckinpah remarked I made a film where nobody got shot and nobody went to see it The film s reputation has grown over the years as many critics consider Junior Bonner to be one of Peckinpah s most sympathetic works while also noting McQueen s earnest performance 72 73 The Getaway edit Main article The Getaway 1972 film Eager to work with Peckinpah again Steve McQueen presented him Walter Hill s screenplay to The Getaway Based on the Jim Thompson novel the gritty crime thriller detailed lovers on the run following a dangerous robbery Both Peckinpah and McQueen needed a hit and they immediately began working on the film in February 1972 74 Peckinpah had no pretensions about making The Getaway as his only goal was to create a highly polished thriller to boost his market value 75 McQueen played Doc McCoy a convicted robber who colludes with corrupt businessman Jack Beynon Ben Johnson to be released from prison and later masterminds a bank heist organized by Beynon A series of double crosses ensues and Doc and his wife Carol MacGraw attempt to flee from their pursuers to Mexico Replete with explosions car chases and intense shootouts the film became Peckinpah s biggest financial success to date earning more than 25 million at the box office 76 Though strictly a commercial product Peckinpah s creative touches abound throughout most notably during the intricately edited opening sequence when McQueen s character is suffering from the pressures of prison life 77 The film remains popular and was remade in 1994 78 79 80 starring Alec Baldwin and Kim Basinger Later career editThe year 1973 marked the beginning of the most difficult period of Peckinpah s life and career While still filming The Getaway in El Paso Texas Peckinpah sneaked across the border into Juarez in April 1972 and married Joie Gould He had met Gould in England while filming Straw Dogs and she had since been his companion and a part time crew member Peckinpah s intake of alcohol had increased dramatically while making The Getaway and he became fond of saying I can t direct when I m sober He began to have violent mood swings and explosions of rage at one point assaulting Gould After four months she returned to England and filed for divorce Devastated by the breakup Peckinpah fell into a self destructive pattern of almost continuous alcohol consumption and his health was unstable for the remainder of his life 81 Pat Garrett and Billy the Kid edit Main article Pat Garrett and Billy the Kid It was in this state of mind that Peckinpah agreed to make Pat Garrett and Billy the Kid 1973 for Metro Goldwyn Mayer Based on the screenplay by Rudolph Wurlitzer who had previously penned Two Lane Blacktop a film admired by Peckinpah the director was convinced that he was about to make his definitive statement on the Western genre 82 The script offered Peckinpah the opportunity to explore themes that appealed to him two former partners forced by changing times onto opposite sides of the law manipulated by corrupt economic interests Peckinpah rewrote the screenplay establishing Pat Garrett and Billy the Kid as friends and attempted to weave an epic tragedy from the historical legend Filmed on location in the Mexican state of Durango the film starred James Coburn and Kris Kristofferson in the title roles with a huge supporting cast including Bob Dylan who composed the film s music Jason Robards R G Armstrong Richard Jaeckel Jack Elam Chill Wills Katy Jurado Matt Clark L Q Jones Rutanya Alda Slim Pickens and Harry Dean Stanton 83 From the beginning Peckinpah began to have clashes with MGM and its president James Aubrey known for his stifling of creative interests and eventual dismantling of the historic movie company 84 Numerous production difficulties including an outbreak of influenza and malfunctioning cameras combined with Peckinpah s alcoholism resulted in one of the most troubled productions of his career Principal photography finished 21 days behind schedule and 1 6 million over budget Enraged Aubrey severely cut Peckinpah s film from 124 to 106 minutes resulting in Pat Garrett and Billy the Kid being released in a truncated version largely disowned by cast and crew members Critics complained that the film was incoherent and the experience soured Peckinpah forever on Hollywood In 1988 however Peckinpah s director s cut was released on video and led to a reevaluation with many critics hailing it as a mistreated classic and one of the era s best films Filmmakers including Martin Scorsese have praised the film as one of the greatest modern Westerns 85 86 Bring Me the Head of Alfredo Garcia edit Main article Bring Me the Head of Alfredo Garcia In the eyes of his admirers Bring Me the Head of Alfredo Garcia 1974 was the last true Peckinpah film The director himself claimed that it was the only one of his films to be released exactly as he intended it A project in development for many years and based on an idea by Frank Kowalski Peckinpah wrote the screenplay with the assistance of Kowalski Walter Kelley and Gordon Dawson An alcohol soaked fever dream involving revenge greed and murder in the Mexican countryside the film featured Bennie Warren Oates as a thinly disguised self portrait of Peckinpah and co starred a burlap bag containing the severed head of a gigolo being sought by a Mexican patrone for having impregnated his young granddaughter Bennie is offered a reward of ten thousand dollars for Alfredo s death or proof thereof and Alfredo s head is demanded as proof that the contract has been fulfilled The macabre drama was part black comedy action film and tragedy with a warped edge rarely seen in Peckinpah s works Most critics were repulsed and it was listed in the book The 50 Worst Films of All Time by Harry Medved and Randy Dreyfuss 87 One of the few critics to praise the film was Roger Ebert and in fact the film s reputation has grown in recent years with many noting its uncompromising vision as well as its anticipation of the violent black comedy which became famous in the works of such directors as David Lynch and Quentin Tarantino 88 While a failure at the box office the film today has a cult following In 1991 UCLA s film school organized a festival of great but forgotten American films and included Bring Me the Head of Alfredo Garcia in the program 89 90 It is reportedly Takeshi Kitano s favorite film The Killer Elite edit Main article The Killer Elite His career now suffering from consecutive box office failures Peckinpah once again was in need of a hit on the level of The Getaway For his next film he chose The Killer Elite 1975 an action filled espionage thriller starring James Caan and Robert Duvall as rival American agents Filmed on location in San Francisco Peckinpah allegedly discovered cocaine for the first time thanks to Caan and his entourage 91 This led to increased paranoia and his once legendary dedication to detail deteriorated Producers also refused to allow Peckinpah to rewrite the screenplay for the first time since his debut film The Deadly Companions Frustrated the director spent large amounts of time in his on location trailer allowing assistants to direct many scenes At one point he overdosed on cocaine landing himself in a hospital and receiving a second pacemaker The film was completed and was reasonably successful at the box office although critics panned it Today the film is considered one of Peckinpah s weakest films and an example of his decline as a major director 92 93 Cross of Iron edit Main article Cross of Iron Still renowned in 1975 Peckinpah was offered the opportunity to direct the eventual blockbusters King Kong 1976 and Superman 1978 94 He turned down both offers and chose instead the bleak and vivid World War II drama Cross of Iron 1977 The screenplay was based on a novel about a platoon of German soldiers in 1943 on the verge of utter collapse on the Taman Peninsula on the Eastern Front The German production was filmed in Yugoslavia Working with James Hamilton and Walter Kelley Peckinpah rewrote the screenplay and screened numerous Nazi documentaries in preparation Almost immediately Peckinpah realized he was working on a low budget production as he had to spend 90 000 of his own money to hire experienced crew members While not suffering from the cocaine abuse which marked The Killer Elite Peckinpah continued to drink heavily causing his direction to become confused and erratic The production abruptly ran out of funds and Peckinpah was forced to completely improvise the concluding sequence filming the scene in one day Co starring James Mason Maximilian Schell David Warner and Senta Berger Cross of Iron was noted for its opening montage utilizing documentary footage as well as the visceral impact of the unusually intense battle sequences The film was a huge box office success in Europe inspiring the sequel Breakthrough starring Richard Burton 95 Cross of Iron was reportedly a favorite of Orson Welles who said that after All Quiet on the Western Front it was the finest anti war film he had ever seen 96 The film performed poorly in the U S ultimately eclipsed by Star Wars though today it is highly regarded and considered the last instance of Peckinpah s once great talent 97 98 Convoy edit Main article Convoy 1978 film Hoping to create a blockbuster Peckinpah decided to take on Convoy 1978 His associates were perplexed as they felt his choice to direct such substandard material was a result of his renewed cocaine use and continued alcoholism Based on the hit song by C W McCall the film was an attempt to capitalize on the huge success of Smokey and the Bandit 1977 In spite of his addictions Peckinpah felt compelled to turn the genre exercise into something more significant Unhappy with the screenplay written by B W L Norton Peckinpah tried to encourage the actors to re write improvise and ad lib their dialogue In another departure from the script Peckinpah attempted to add a new dimension by casting a pair of black actors as members of the convoy Madge Sinclair as Widow Woman and Franklyn Ajaye as Spider Mike Filmed in New Mexico and starring Kris Kristofferson Ali MacGraw and Ernest Borgnine Convoy turned out to be yet another troubled Peckinpah production with the director s health a continuing problem Friend and actor James Coburn was brought in to serve as second unit director and he filmed many of the scenes while Peckinpah remained in his on location trailer The film wrapped in September 1977 11 days behind schedule and 5 million over budget Surprisingly Convoy was the highest grossing picture of Peckinpah s career notching 46 5 million at the box office but was panned by many critics leaving his reputation seriously damaged For the first time in almost a decade Peckinpah finished a picture and found himself unemployed 99 100 2nd unit work on Jinxed edit For the next three years Peckinpah remained a professional outcast But during the summer of 1981 his original mentor Don Siegel gave him a chance to return to filmmaking While shooting Jinxed a comedy drama starring Bette Midler and Rip Torn Siegel asked Peckinpah if he would be interested in directing 12 days of second unit work Peckinpah immediately accepted and his earnest collaboration while uncredited was noted within the industry For the final time Peckinpah found himself back in the directing business 101 102 103 The Osterman Weekend edit Main article The Osterman Weekend film By 1982 Peckinpah s health was poor Producers Peter S Davis and William N Panzer were undaunted as they felt that having Peckinpah s name attached to The Osterman Weekend 1983 would lend the suspense thriller an air of respectability Peckinpah accepted the job but reportedly hated the convoluted screenplay based upon Robert Ludlum s novel which he also disliked Multiple actors in Hollywood auditioned for the film intrigued by the opportunity Many of those who signed on including John Hurt Burt Lancaster and Dennis Hopper did so for less than their usual salaries for a chance to work with the legendary director By the time shooting wrapped in January 1983 in Los Angeles Peckinpah and the producers were hardly speaking Nevertheless Peckinpah brought the film in on time and on budget delivering his director s cut to the producers Davis and Panzer were unhappy with Peckinpah s version which included an opening sequence of two characters making love The producers changed the opening and also deleted other scenes they deemed unnecessary Peckinpah s final film was critically panned It grossed 6 5 million in the United States nearly recouping its budget and did well in Europe and on the new home video market 103 104 Julian Lennon music videos edit Peckinpah s last work as a filmmaker was undertaken two months before his death He was hired by producer Martin Lewis to shoot two music videos featuring Julian Lennon Valotte and Too Late For Goodbyes The critically acclaimed videos led to Lennon s nomination for Best New Video Artist at the 1985 MTV Video Music Awards 105 106 Documentaries editThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed July 2017 Learn how and when to remove this template message Peckinpah has been the subject of four documentaries the BBC production Sam Peckinpah Man of Iron 1992 directed by Paul Joyce Sam Peckinpah s West Legacy of a Hollywood Renegade 1994 The Wild Bunch An Album in Montage 1996 directed by Paul Seydor and the TCM production Peckinpah Suite 2019 which focused on Peckinpah s daughter Lupita Peckinpah The Wild Bunch An Album in Montage was nominated for an Academy Award as Best Documentary Short Subject Over a 4 year period German film maker Mike Siegel produced and directed Passion amp Poetry The Ballad of Sam Peckinpah a two hour long film about Sam Peckinpah which includes rare Peckinpah interviews and statements In 2009 the two disc special edition with a running time of 270 minutes was released on DVD In popular culture editThis section has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article may contain irrelevant references to popular culture Please remove the content or add citations to reliable and independent sources October 2018 This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Sam Peckinpah news newspapers books scholar JSTOR October 2018 Learn how and when to remove this template message Learn how and when to remove this template message John Belushi portrayed Peckinpah as a deranged lunatic who directs his first romantic comedy by beating up his leading lady in the fifth episode of the first season of Saturday Night Live 107 Peckinpah s use of violence was parodied by Monty Python in Sam Peckinpah s Salad Days in which a lovely day out for an upper class English family turns into a blood soaked orgy of severed limbs and gushing wounds 108 Peckinpah reportedly liked the sketch and enjoyed showing it to friends and family citation needed Peckinpah s penchant for filming action scenes in slow motion was satirized by UK comedian Benny Hill 109 playing a milkman in a Western skit called The Deputy that first aired on his March 29 1973 special In one scene Hill s titular character shoots one of the villains Bob Todd who then proceeds to pirouette in extremely slow motion before collapsing citation needed In the 1973 Sergio Leone Tonino Valerii Spaghetti Western My Name is Nobody the characters Jack Beauregard Henry Fonda and Nobody Terence Hill meet at a cemetery Nobody walks past the tombstones reading the names and comes across one labeled Sam Peckimpah He says Sam Peckimpah That s a beautiful name in Navajo Leone named the gang in the film The Wild Bunch Various Peckinpah films are parodied in Jim Reardon s student film Bring Me the Head of Charlie Brown citation needed In the John Waters film Cecil B Demented 2000 several characters have the names of legendary film directors tattooed on their bodies One of the characters has Sam Peckinpah tattooed on his arm 110 Kris Kristofferson recorded Sam s Song Ask Any Working Girl a brief tribute to the director for his 1995 release A Moment of Forever 111 Filmography editFilms edit Year Title Credited as NotesDirector Writer Actor Other Role1961 The Deadly Companions Yes No No No1962 Ride the High Country Yes Uncredited No No1965 Major Dundee Yes Yes No No1969 The Wild Bunch Yes Yes No No1970 The Ballad of Cable Hogue Yes No No Yes Producer1971 Straw Dogs Yes Yes No No1972 Junior Bonner Yes No Yes No Role Man in Palace Bar uncredited The Getaway Yes No No No1973 Pat Garrett and Billy the Kid Yes No Yes No Role Will uncredited 1974 Bring Me the Head of Alfredo Garcia Yes Yes No No1975 The Killer Elite Yes No No No1977 Cross of Iron Yes No No No1978 Convoy Yes No Yes No Role TV Reporter uncredited 1983 The Osterman Weekend Yes No Yes No Role Danforth s Aide uncredited Other film work edit Year Title Credited as NotesWriter Actor Other Role1954 Riot in Cell Block 11 No No Yes Production Assistant uncredited Private Hell 36 No No Yes Dialogue Director1955 Dial Red O No Yes Yes Dialogue CoachRole Cook in Diner uncredited The Blue and the Gold No Yes Yes Dialogue CoachRole Pilot uncredited Wichita No Yes No Role Bank Teller uncredited 1956 World Without End No No Yes Dialogue Coach uncredited Crime in the Streets No No Yes Dialogue DirectorInvasion of the Body Snatchers No Yes No Role Charlie1961 One Eyed Jacks Uncredited No No1965 The Glory Guys Yes No No1968 Villa Rides Yes No No1972 Morbo No No Yes Script Supervisor uncredited 1978 China 9 Liberty 37 No Yes No Role Wilbur Olsen1979 The Visitor No Yes No Role Dr Sam Collins1982 Jinxed No No Yes Second Unit Director uncredited Television edit 1955 58 Gunsmoke Episode 10 The Queue Writer Episode 18 Yorky Writer Episode 27 Cooter Writer Episode 31 How To Die For Nothing Writer Episode 35 The Guitar Writer Episode 43 The Round Up Writer Episode 47 Legal Revenge Writer Episode 52 Poor Pearl Writer Episode 78 Jealousy Writer Episode 90 How to Kill a Woman Writer Episode 103 Dirt Writer 1956 58 Broken Arrow Episode 29 The Assassin Writer Episode 41 The Teacher Writer Episode 72 The Transfer Writer amp Director 1958 Have Gun Will Travel Episode 22 The Singer Co Writer 1958 Man Without a Gun Episode 31 The Kidder Writer 1958 59 The Rifleman Episode 1 The Sharpshooter Writer Episode 2 Home Ranch Writer Episode 4 The Marshal Writer amp Director Episode 22 The Boarding House Writer amp Director Episode 33 The Money Gun Co Writer amp Director Episode 52 The Baby Sitter Co Writer amp Director 1959 1960 Zane Grey Theater Episode 82 Trouble at Tres Cruzes Writer amp Director Episode 95 Lonesome Road Co Writer amp Director Episode 101 Miss Jenny Co Writer amp Director 1960 Pony Express Episode 1 The Story of Julesberg Writer 1960 Klondike Episode 1 Klondike Fever Writer Episode 6 Swoger s Mules Co Writer 1960 The Westerner Creator amp Producer on all 13 episodes Pilot 1959 Trouble at Tres Cruzes Writer amp Director Episode 1 Jeff Co Writer amp Director Episode 2 School Days Co Writer Episode 3 Brown Director Episode 4 Mrs Kennedy Co Writer Episode 6 The Courting of Libby Director Episode 8 The Old Man Writer Episode 12 Hand on the Gun Director Episode 13 The Painting Director 1961 Route 66 Episode 39 Mon Petit Chou Director 1962 The Dick Powell Show Episode 40 Pericles on 32nd Street Co Writer amp Director Episode 46 The Losers Co Writer amp Director with Lee Marvin Keenan Wynn 1966 ABC Stage 67 Episode 10 Noon Wine Writer amp Director with Jason Robards 1967 Bob Hope s Chrysler Theater Episode 93 That Lady Is My Wife Director with Jean Simmons Bradford Dillman Alex Cord Music videos edit Year Title Artist1984 Valotte Julian Lennon Too Late for Goodbyes Notes edit Peckinpah Random House Webster s Unabridged Dictionary Current Biography 1973 p 327 a b Simmons p 3 Weddle p 15 Fine p 12 Weddle p 16 David E Peckinpah amp IMDB Simmons p 5 FilmReference Director Sam Peckinpah the rugged auteur director of films UPI Retrieved February 14 2022 Simmons pp 10 11 Simmons p 18 Weddle pp 52 59 Weddle pp 104 05 Weddle pp 116 119 Weddle p 120 Weddle pp 499 500 Weddle p 56 Simmons pp 63 64 LUPITA PECKINPAH TALKS ABOUT HER FATHER SAM PECKINPAH Money into light com Retrieved July 9 2022 Weddle pp 163 479 Weddle p 380 Rowl Paul s LUPITA PECKINPAH TALKS ABOUT HER FATHER SAM PECKINPAH Retrieved December 6 2022 Cohen pp 77 80 Weddle p 550 McCarthy Todd Sam Peckinpah Controversial Director Dead At 59 Variety January 2 1985 Retrieved January 14 2017 Harrington Richard Sam Peckinpah Director Of Wild Bunch Dies at 59 The Washington Post December 29 1984 Retrieved January 14 2017 Sam Peckinpah amp IMDB Weddle p 126 Simmons p 28 Simmons pp 28 29 Klondike amp IMDB Simmons pp 29 30 Rifleman amp IMDB Simmons pp 31 34 Westerner amp IMDB Westerner Trivia amp IMDB Weddle pp 168 184 Simmons pp 55 6 Weddle pp 197 198 Simmons pp 36 39 Weddle pp 198 219 Simmons pp 41 54 Fine p 84 Weddle pp 229 44 Simmons pp 55 72 Major Dundee Trivia amp IMDB Carroll Weddle pp 257 63 Simmons pp 73 81 Weddle pp 280 95 Simmons pp 76 80 Noon Wine amp IMDB Weddle pp 307 309 The BFI s Spain Un censored Season Time Out London Archived from the original on August 7 2018 Retrieved August 7 2018 Kinder Marsha 2001 the Cultural Reinscription of The Wild Bunch PDF In Slocum John David ed Violence and American Cinema PDF Psychology Press pp 64 100 ISBN 9780415928106 ISSN 2577 7610 Retrieved August 7 2018 Weddle pp 310 31 Weddle pp 376 377 AFI 100 Wild Bunch Trivia amp IMDB The 42nd Academy Awards Academy Awards Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences April 7 1970 Retrieved August 7 2018 Weddle pp 391 92 Weddle pp 383 89 Simmons pp 108 20 Cable Hogue Trivia amp IMDB Weddle p 396 Weddle p 427 Weddle pp 399 400 Weddle pp 393 403 Simmons pp 121 38 Straw Dogs Trivia amp IMDB Weddle pp 428 34 Simmons pp 139 53 Weddle p 434 Weddle p 436 Getaway Box Office amp IMDB Weddle p 439 Getaway amp IMDB Simmons pp 154 68 Weddle p 442 Weddle pp 444 450 Weddle p 453 Pat Garrett amp IMDB Weddle p 463 Weddle p 483 Simmons pp 169 188 Medved pp 51 55 Ebert review Weddle pp 492 498 Simmons pp 189 208 Weddle p 499 Weddle pp 498 500 Simmons pp 209 224 Weddle p 504 Breakthrough amp IMDB Simmons p 236 Weddle pp 504 513 Simmons pp 225 237 Weddle pp 514 518 Simmons pp 232 236 Jinxed amp IMDB Weddle pp 534 535 a b Simmons p 239 Weddle pp 535 537 Weddle pp 541 543 MTV SNL Episodes amp IMDB Weddle p 428 The Truth About Benny Hill Collins Andrew Sabotagetimes com Retrieved February 22 2020 Zacharek Stephanie August 11 2000 Cecil B DeMented Salon com Retrieved August 23 2019 Kris Kristofferson A Moment of Forever Album Reviews Songs amp More AllMusic Retrieved July 9 2022 References editSimmons Garner 1982 Peckinpah A Portrait in Montage University of Texas Press ISBN 0 292 76493 6 Weddle David 1994 If They Move Kill Em The Life and Times of Sam Peckinpah Grove Press ISBN 0 8021 1546 2 Current Biography H W Wilson 1973 ISBN 0 8242 0543 X David E Peckinpah Internet Movie Database Retrieved July 23 2007 David Sam Peckinpah Biography 1925 FilmReference com Retrieved September 3 2011 Sam Peckinpah Internet Movie Database Retrieved September 27 2007 Biography Sam Peckinpah Internet Movie Database Retrieved July 28 2007 Cohen Stan 2004 The Murray Hotel Montana s Grandest Historic Hotels and Resorts of the Treasure State Missoula Montana Pictorial Histories Publishing Company ISBN 1 57510 111 4 Full cast and crew for Klondike Internet Movie Database Retrieved September 27 2007 Episode list for The Rifleman Internet Movie Database Retrieved September 27 2007 The Westerner Internet Movie Database Retrieved September 27 2007 Trivia for The Westerner Internet Movie Database Retrieved September 27 2007 Trivia for Major Dundee Internet Movie Database Retrieved September 27 2007 Carroll E Jean March 1982 Last of the Desperadoes Dueling with Sam Peckinpah Rocky Mountain Magazine Fine Marshall 1991 Bloody Sam Donald I Fine Books ISBN 978 1 55611 236 2 Noon Wine Internet Movie Database Retrieved September 27 2007 American Film Institute afi com Archived from the original on July 16 2011 Retrieved September 27 2007 Trivia for The Wild Bunch Internet Movie Database Retrieved September 27 2007 Trivia for The Ballad of Cable Hogue Internet Movie Database Retrieved September 27 2007 Trivia for Straw Dogs Internet Movie Database Retrieved September 27 2007 Box office business for The Getaway Internet Movie Database Retrieved September 27 2007 The Getaway Internet Movie Database Retrieved September 27 2007 Pat Garrett and Billy the Kid Internet Movie Database Retrieved September 27 2007 Medved Harry 1978 The 50 Worst Films of All Time Warner Books ISBN 0 446 38119 5 Roger Ebert Film Review for Bring Me the Head of Alfredo Garcia suntimes com October 28 2001 Archived from the original on September 20 2012 Retrieved October 6 2007 Breakthrough Internet Movie Database Retrieved November 9 2007 Rock on the Net 1985 MTV Video Music Awards rockonthenet com Retrieved November 9 2007 Sam Peckinpah Man of Iron Internet Movie Database Retrieved November 9 2007 The Wild Bunch An Album in Montage Internet Movie Database Retrieved November 9 2007 Episode list for Saturday Night Live Internet Movie Database Retrieved November 9 2007 Memorable quotes for Fletch Internet Movie Database Retrieved November 9 2007 Trivia for Cecil B DeMented Internet Movie Database Retrieved November 9 2007 Movie connections for Chopping Mall Internet Movie Database Retrieved November 20 2007 Combined credits for Jinxed Internet Movie Database Retrieved March 6 2012 Further reading editBliss Michael 2012 Peckinpah Today New Essays on the Films of Sam Peckinpah Southern Illinois University Press ISBN 978 0 8093 3106 2 Simons John L 2011 Peckinpah s Tragic Westerns A Critical Study McFarland ISBN 978 0 7864 6133 2 Hayes Kevin J 2008 Sam Peckinpah Interviews University Press of Mississippi ISBN 978 1 934110 64 5 Engel Leonard 2003 Sam Peckinpah s West New Perspectives University of Utah Press ISBN 0 87480 772 7 Mesce Bill Jr 2001 Peckinpah s Women A Reappraisal of the Portrayal of Women in the Period Westerns of Sam Peckinpah Scarecrow Press ISBN 0 8108 4066 9 Seydor Paul 1999 Peckinpah The Western Films A Reconsideration University of Illinois Press ISBN 0 252 06835 1 Dukore Bernard F 1999 Sam Peckinpah s Feature Films University of Illinois Press ISBN 0 252 06802 5 Bliss Michael 1993 Justified Lives Morality and Narrative in the Films of Sam Peckinpah Southern Illinois University Press ISBN 0 8093 1823 7 Evans Max 1972 Sam Peckinpah Master of Violence Dakota Press ISBN 0 88249 011 7 External links edit nbsp Biography portalSam Peckinpah at IMDb Black Stacy October 2009 The Best Sam Peckinpah Westerns Are a Wild Bunch Indeed American Movie Classics Archived from the original on July 29 2017 Retrieved July 28 2017 Sam Peckinpah papers 1936 1985 Margaret Herrick Library Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences Collection 91 Sam Peckinpah Fan Forum Sam Peckinpah Radio Documentary One Act Plays and Monologues 1969 Tribute to Sam Peckinpah ConvoyTM 1994 Kael Pauline November 19 1999 A Glorious High Austin Chronicle Murray Gabrielle May 2002 Sam Peckinpah Senses of Cinema Great Directors 20 Ebert Roger September 29 2002 The Wild Bunch Sun Times Review Childs Hayden 2003 Wherefore Art Thou Bloody Sam The High Hat Nitrate Special feature 2 Archived from the original on November 15 2007 Retrieved January 30 2006 Essays about Sam Peckinpah s films Cremean Paul May 23 2006 Sam Peckinpah s West versus Michael Mann s Metropolis Cremmers The Films of Sam Peckinpah Filmkuratorium Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Sam Peckinpah amp oldid 1206740233, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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