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Release Date: May 13th, 2008 Movie Release Year: 1969

Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid

Overview -

The Sundance Kid (Redford) is the frontier's fastest gun. His sidekick, Butch Cassidy (Newman), is always dreaming up new ways to get rich fast. If only they could blow open a baggage car without also blowing up the money-filled safe inside...Or remember that Sundance can't swim before they escape a posse by leaping off a cliff into rushing rapids. So Butch and Sundance pack their guns, don new duds, and, with Sundance's girlfriend (Katharine Ross), head down to Bolivia. A winner of four Academy Awards (including best screenplay and best song), here is a thoroughly enjoyable blend of fact and fancy done with true affection for a bygone era and featuring the two flashiest, friendliest funniest outlaws who ever called out "hands up!"

OVERALL:
For Fans Only
Rating Breakdown
STORY
VIDEO
AUDIO
SPECIAL FEATURES
Tech Specs & Release Details
Technical Specs:
BD-50 Dual-Layer Disc
Video Resolution/Codec:
1080p/MPEG-2
Length:
110
Aspect Ratio(s):
2.35:1
Audio Formats:
Spanish Dolby Digital 1.0 Mono (192kbps)
Subtitles/Captions:
Cantonese Subtitles
Special Features:
Theatrical Trailer
Release Date:
May 13th, 2008

Storyline: Our Reviewer's Take

Ranking:

'Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid' is reality inflated to legend. In the hands of director George Roy Hill ('The Sting'), events become exploits. Exploits become Hollywood cinema. And Hollywood cinema becomes... reality.

The Wild West has churned out its fair share of oversized characters memorialized in film and folklore: Wyatt Earp (who survived well into the twentieth century) and Jesse James (who did not) are arguably the most enduring. But the genre has always told such stories primarily in standard, dramatic fashion (with the exception of 1959's 'Alias Jesse James,' in which insurance salesman Bob Hope is mistaken for James). The story of Butch and Sundance, two of the most famous outlaws who ever lived, was reimagined in a revisionist fashion, and it's all the better for it, since the lighthearted way in which its story was told made it one of the biggest hits of the 1960s, and it has since achieved the status of beloved classic.

There's no doubt that Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid really lived, but there's also no doubt that they didn't live quite the way they're portrayed in this 1969 Best Picture Oscar nominee. ("Not that it matters, but most of it is true!" read the tagline.) For starters, they didn't have William Goldman writing their dialogue, and although Goldman, in his indispensable Hollywood book "Adventures in the Screen Trade," famously criticizes his script by claiming, "The entire enterprise suffers from a case of the cutes," the fact is "the cutes" are what keep the film fresh and enjoyable thirty-five years after its release. Audiences didn't clamor for tickets to see Paul Newman and Robert Redford in a depressing, true-to-life tale of crime, punishment, and capture. They paid to see two larger-than-life stars saddle up, shoot guns, get the girl, and ride off into the sunset.

'Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid' is a seemingly contradictory pastiche, a sun-drenched, nostalgic biopic of notorious bandits who meet a violent end, a sort of sepia-toned 'Bonnie & Clyde.' It is about the end of an era -- a fictional one, maybe, but one no less important than the real thing. It is an idealized vision of what we imagined, in our shared cultural dreams, that the warm and cozy Old West should have been like. The film isn't funny, per se, or campy; it is merely larger than life. It is unabashed, unapologetic entertainment, the kind of Hollywood reality we love to believe.

Video Review

Ranking:

The early buzz on this first-ever Blu-ray release of 'Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid' has been dreadful. Based on an overseas high-def release, word was to expect the worst -- a feeling not entirely confirmed but hardly refuted by this actual 1080p/MPEG-2 transfer. It's not the completely unmitigated disaster I anticipated, but I certainly can't give it high marks.

The problems are many. The source is poor. The inconsistent grain is not unexpected given the age of the material, but the print is often worn (with instances of dirt, dropouts, and even a few hairs on the film). Blacks are pretty atrocious, with obvious fading (especially on the bottom of the frame) and a washed-out, diffused look. To be fair, the film is flush with soft-focus filters, but compare this to a top-flight remaster of the same vintage such as, say, Universal's 'The Sting,' and the comparison is night and day. Colors are likewise on the faded side, with only a few midnight blues and some bright exteriors having any sparkle. Detail is generally middling, and depth is flat as a board. The MPEG-2 encode is also not a wise choice (even spread over a BD-50 dual-layer disc), with some noise and a few posterization artifacts noticeable. I did find 'Butch Cassidy' at least watchable, but that's faint praise indeed.

Audio Review

Ranking:

Fox offers a new DTS-HD Lossless Master Audio 5.1 Surround track (48kHz/16-bit) track, plus 1.0 Mono options (192kbps) in English, French and Spanish. I'll give points to the studio for offering a high-res upgrade, but listening to the results, quite frankly they needn't have bothered.

I never once felt I was listening to a surround mix. The rears are simply inactive for the vast majority of the runtime (save for a few echoes on bullets, etc.). Even the front soundstage doesn't offer much stereo separation, with much of it sounding like a mono mix. Dynamics aren't bad for a 1969 film, however, with clean sound and no discernible artifacts. Don't expect deep bass, however, or particularly punchy highs (which can be rather screechy at times). Dialogue is always discernible, so at least that's a plus. That's one of the few comments I can give to this unremarkable mix.

Special Features

Ranking:

Originally released in a lavish, two-disc standard DVD edition back in 2000, 'Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid' comes to Blu-ray with about half of those same extras intact. Despite the missing pieces (much of it fluff, to be honest), this is still a strong -- if complete -- package. The video has also been (surprisingly) bumped up to 1080i/MPEG-2, although there are no subtitle options that I could find on any of the supplementary material.

  • Audio Commentaries- A Robert Redford and Paul Newman commentary would have been a dream, but we do get a track with director George Roy Hill, lyricist Hal David, associate producer Robert Crawford and the late cinematographer Conrad Hall. It is a dry and pieced-together affair, but there are still plenty of juicy nuggets to be mined from it. Lengthy gaps of silence drag the pace, and some of the film's more famous passages come and go with no comments at all. Yet, there remains something compelling about what is said, a team of misty-eyed filmmakers recalling perhaps their most successful and beloved achievement. Despite the poor editing job, this commentary is cozy nostalgia.

    A second track is also included, with a solo turn by screenwriter William Goldman. Not be be personal, but Goldman is a rather uptight and dry presence. His negativity about some aspects of his own work just comes off as a bit snooty (if not ungrateful), though there is plenty of insight on the film's considerable fictionalization of the real story. Quite frankly, I just couldn't get through much of this track without cringing.
  • Documentary: "All Of The Following Is True: The Making Of 'Butch Cassidy And The Sundance Kid'" (HD, 36 minutes) - A more current making-of (dating back to 2005), this culls most of the source interview material used on past laserdisc and DVD editions, but gives a more concise overview of the film. Paul Newman, Robert Redford, and Katherine Ross provide the star power in then-new interviews, along with Hill, Goldman, composer Burt Bacharach, and other key players. It's a solid overview of the main conception of the project, a few antecedents on choice scenes (including the "Raindrops Keep Falling on My Head" montage), and a few parting thoughts on the film's lasting legacy.
  • Featurette: "The Wild Bunch: The Fact vs. Fiction of Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid" (HD, 25 minutes) - Originally appearing on the old DVD, this is a History Channel-type special that illustrates who were the real Butch and Sundance, and how they compare to their movie incarnations. A host of scholarly types are interviewed, and there is an abundance of film clips. An interesting little history lesson.
  • Deleted Scene (SD, 3 minutes) - A single scene is included, called "Tent." It's a perfectly fine scene but hardly a serious omission to the film. Hill offers optional commentary explaining its removal.
  • Theatrical Trailers (HD) - A trio are included for 'Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid,' all in rather poor, scratchy, and upconverted video.

'Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid' is a nostalgic, comfortable Western, but it's also an undeniable a classic. It's merely revisionist comfort food, perhaps, but still delicious. This Blu-ray will certainly strike most as a disappointment -- the video suffers from neglect, the audio is unremarkable, and the lack of many supplements from the previous DVD should irk completists. I'm somewhat lenient given the age of the material, but this is a catalog title that is best left as a rental for all but diehard 'Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid' fans.