One of my favorite scenes in this movie. I've always been a fan of Slim Pickens, he was the best character actor in Hollywood. Rest in Peace Slim Pickens, and Steve McQueen.
Thanks, Slim was one of my Dad's closest friends but i never saw this film, nice to see him in a serious role. My Mom once asked Slim why he took so many roles in'Corn-ball' films, and not stick to the major pictures, and he said: "Well, a lot a big names only get a role every few years, while they might get a million or two, in a year I'll make $250,000 on those corn-balls, so in 5 years I can make as much or more money than someone like Peck or Brando." Slim's Wife 'Maggy' was Secretary of of the Screen Actor's Guild for many years, and knew the business better than most and was probably Slim's best agent"
This was the movie were Ali McGraw hooked up with Steve McQueen and wound up leaving her husband for McQueen. This cost Bob his marriage to Ali McGraw. A lot of darkness here.
Classsic. Did he have to act? Or just be himself and draw on men he knew in his life. We don't see men like him anymore but I grew up with a lot of them.
I remember when the movie was filmed in San Antonio a friend of mine and I were near Sunset Station and walked up to the area where they were filming. The first thing I saw was the film crew playing poker during a break in the parking lot. What amazed me was the amount of money that they were betting. I’ve never seen so many fifty and hundred dollar bills in my life. My dad always gave me and my brother $1.00 per week during the sixties. Of course now I was in high school. But, the few dollars in my pocket were no comparison to the larger bills. A few moments later I spotted Mr. McQueen and quickly went towards him. I remember asking him for an autograph. But, he was very apologetic and cordial and said “I’m sorry fellas but I’ve got to get ready for a scene and if I stop others will come and I will be late. However, I will shake your hand”. I still remember the day very well. A few minutes later we saw Miss McGraw and asked her for an autograph too. She too was very nice to us and gave us the signature we were asking for. Many years later I found out Mr. McQueen didn’t like giving autographs and have often wondered about our request. Anyway, I can still say I met Steve McQueen. Spoke with him, and shook his hand.
Thanks for your input. I wish I had a picture of that moment. The one thing I do have is a picture with Jackie Chan. It was taken in San Antonio when he came to the US. The Director was Robert Clouse. The same director the made the movie “Enter the Dragon “ with Bruce Lee.
@@brucewayne3602 it’s not only the actors, like Steve and Ali, what make this film an iconic masterpiece of his time. Its the visual art of telling an interesting and entertaining story. To find the appropriate atmosphere, fitting dialogues, the cutting technique, wardrobe and costumes, the right light, adequate Soundtrack and most of all a producer, who is willing to hire a creative and resourceful director to realise a film project like this. If you see the Blockbuster movies of the last ten years and go back 30 to 40 years, the above mentioned elements of a film are substantial better then today.
fyi this was filmed at what is now 1684 McNutt Road, Sundland Park, New Mexico. The camera is set up on the north side of the road looking back in an east direction. The area is almost unrecognizable today except for the mountains in the background.
I was fortunate to see this in the theater. It was such a 'feel-good' ending. As far as I know, this was one of the very first movies where the 'bad guy' got away with it. Prior to this, Hollywood had an unwritten rule that no one committing a crime of any kind got away. 'The Getaway' broke that rule forever, and now, some of the best movies are about 'criminals' committing the 'perfect' crime. Think 'Oceans 11'. Even in the original with Frank Sinatra and the 'Rat Pack', they lost out in the end. Just one of the many reasons why this is such a great movie.
I think the very first movie where the crooks got away with it was The Hot Rock, it was the same year but was released before this movie so beat it by a few months. It wasn't a very good movie, not Redford's best by any means.
If you're going to be two other people in time and place on this planet, maybe you're like me and would want to be one of these two? If you have to fall in love and just be beautiful for one lifetime, this would be a good one. No one really dies pretty, but with this love affair, and during this time in history, there must have been some real sparks. What a joy to watch this movie, and these two people. And old Slim Pickens is a treat!!
@@msalykat6466 well, i wouldn't have complained if there was more nudity. But you're correct of course, there wasn't any need for it. Today, a bio-pic about Marco Polo the explorer shows him shirtless wearing tight leather pants and with abs! Why does a 12th century explorer need abs?
So many desert movies in the late 60’s, and especially the early 70’s. Out in the wide open air, away from the studio. I wish all three of them had traveled on TOGETHER. Now that would’ve been a movie.
I saw this when it first came out and I went back to see maybe 7 more times. This is the kind of movie you never want to end. I've never seen a bad Peckinpah film and this is my favorite McQueen movie. Too bad the soundtrack never had a release, it's a killer.
Slim Pickens was a terrific actor, Loved his voice, He played a great part in an episode of Gunsmoke where he was about to hang for a murder he didn't commit but they found the person who did it and he was cleared, He was one of the best.
@jaydogtitan-he6wo Agree 100%. I always loved the following scene with him in "1941," not one of Spielberg's better known movies, but nevertheless a fav of mine. It's a day or so AFTER the bombing of Pearl Harbor, and SP, quite improbably, ends up on a Japanese submarine. SP was a little SLOW on the uptake, but once he figured things out, he was a true patriot, lol: ruclips.net/video/j7O-SUEh-54/видео.html
Maqueen must of talked to Slim Pickens about his forthcoming film 'Junior Bonner' and Rodeo RIding..possibly knowing Slim was a National Champion Rodeo rider in the late 40s and early 1950s, maybe Slim was a technical consultant for that film. To see Slim and Robert Preston telling stories would have been a gift of good times.
One of the all-time great (under-played) movie endings with a fantastic leading man WELL-KNOWN to be a horrid scene stealer with an old veteran actor with whom NOBODY could steal the scene!
I remember watching this movie as a little kid back in the 70s and this scene always stood out in my mind. I’m glad I found it on your channel. Thanks for posting 👍
He is funny as hell in 1941 as well. Also is really good in Pat Garrett and Billy the Kid , also liked him in a hard to find film Bootleggers.......Ah hell he was good in every movie he played in !
As someone else has mentioned, this, indeed, was the first movie that broke the code about “bad guys“ having to be caught for their crimes at the end of a movie. It had never been done before. You can have your loot suddenly taken away from you by “God” like the wind storm at the end of “Treasure of Sierra Madre”, but you were never allowed to take your loot with you and get away with it. Of course, that’s the reason the movie and the book it was based on was called “The Getaway“. Peckinpah really wanted to flip the bird at these censors and broke the mold. Movies have never been the same. Ironically, the author of the book, Jim Thompson, also wrote “The Killing”, which Stanley Kubrick made into a movie and used the same plot device as “Treasure” wherein they also lose their loot, this time in the airport, where it is stuffed into a suitcase, which overturns on a motorized cart on the way to being loaded onto the plane, and again the wind casts it into the heavens! But by the time he wrote “The Getaway”, he decided it was time that they get rewarded for “all their work”. I remember seeing this movie with my father at the Writers Guild theater. It was a screening and filled with mostly writers and their family. I so very clearly remember that at the end of the film when we saw this moment where Steve McQueen and Ali MacGraw drive down that road on that long shot, we kept waiting for police cars to come speeding behind them, but instead, the credits came up and rolled, and it said THE END and the lights in the theater came up. And I swear you could hear a loud audible gasp from the audience having never seen anything like that before!
Wife and I watched the scene at the drive in food place called the Oasis and also where I met my wife, we also watched the filming of the shotgun of the police car in Fabens tx.
I really got a kick out when Steve first commandeered Slim’s pickup after the big shootout. He had a wino looking helper holding a bottle he hollered “You want me to go too?” and Steve yelled “NOOO!” 😂
Steve McQueen. Love you. Always will. Discovered in "Love with the Proper Stranger" also starring Natalie Wood. I found my favorite actor. Love ya Steve.
Saw this film in its first theatrical run in Toronto. Peckinpah's use of squibs was eye-popping at the time and McQueen was always fun to watch. McGraw, although cute, ran the gamut of emotion from A to A. The scene that impacted me the most was Lettieri bouncing Struthers on his lap with a donut in his mouth, humming tunelessly. For some reason, that repulsed me so much! Not McQueen's best but a good effort. And of course, Slim is an icon of cinema!
If restored correctly, it's well worth more than $30k today. Probably back then it was only worth a couple hundred dollars if that. Amazing when you think about it.
Slim was an avid hunter and a member of the muzzle loader club. On a hunt he took a very large elk. After it was weighed it was a little shot of the state record. Slim then commented ," Damn! If I'd used my muzzel loader it would've been a world record. He was kidded about that for years.
Le grand Slim Pickens ! La même sincérité dans le regard que dans le film "Pat Garrett et Billy The Kid" dans la scène du crépuscule avec le chef d'œuvre de Bob Dylan : Knockin' on Heaven's Door" . Mama Take this badge off of me I can't use any More It's getting dark too dark to see I think I'm Knockin' on Heaven's Door !"
The previous scene ruclips.net/video/Ls70QShBYVM/видео.html
The movie was remade in 1994 Steve McQueen was dead by 1980 from lung cancer
One of my favorite scenes in this movie. I've always been a fan of Slim Pickens, he was the best character actor in Hollywood. Rest in Peace Slim Pickens, and Steve McQueen.
Thanks, Slim was one of my Dad's closest friends but i never saw this film, nice to see him in a serious role. My Mom once asked Slim why he took so many roles in'Corn-ball' films, and not stick to the major pictures, and he said: "Well, a lot a big names only get a role every few years, while they might get a million or two, in a year I'll make $250,000 on those corn-balls, so in 5 years I can make as much or more money than someone like Peck or Brando." Slim's Wife 'Maggy' was Secretary of of the Screen Actor's Guild for many years, and knew the business better than most and was probably Slim's best agent"
Concur, my favorite Slim movie is Rancho Deluxe!
Great actor Dr strange Love and movie 1941 you japs ain't getting shit out of me,🤣😆😂😝
This was the movie were Ali McGraw hooked up with Steve McQueen and wound up leaving her husband for McQueen. This cost Bob his marriage to Ali McGraw. A lot of darkness here.
Who else could’ve played this character?
One of the most humble gracious and naturally funny men that ever graced the screen in Hollywood.He lit up the screen.
Why shoot, a man could have a pretty good weekend in Vegas with all that stuff.
*@Herr Schmitz*
You ARE referring to Slim Pickens... right? Gotta be cuz pretty much the exact opposite could describe Steve McQueen.
Great movie. Great lead pair. But Slim. Steals every scene he's ever been in. Legend.
This.
Blazing Saddles. Dr. Strangelove. Pat Garrett and Billy the Kid. A natural. RIP, Slim.
@@square-dealsam9102 Love him in 1941 too , hes funny as hell in that.
man you got that right. Slim was always playing Slim and it was good enough every time
I saw an episode of Bonanza with him in it where he fights Big Hoss. Really good one.
Classsic. Did he have to act? Or just be himself and draw on men he knew in his life. We don't see men like him anymore but I grew up with a lot of them.
You have to love Slim Pickens.
tss77 i lost count how many times i watch this ending , i miss the steve macqueen acting
@John Jones no, just Slim and Steve
He is brilliant in any role he plays.
Slim Pickens riding the nuke in Dr. Strangelove was great.
He's inimitable w/Marlon Brando's "One-eyed Jacks"
Mr. Pickens has always been one of my favorite actors. His acting in this movie is not only humbling but inspirational. RIP.
I remember when the movie was filmed in San Antonio a friend of mine and I were near Sunset Station and walked up to the area where they were filming. The first thing I saw was the film crew playing poker during a break in the parking lot. What amazed me was the amount of money that they were betting. I’ve never seen so many fifty and hundred dollar bills in my life. My dad always gave me and my brother $1.00 per week during the sixties. Of course now I was in high school. But, the few dollars in my pocket were no comparison to the larger bills. A few moments later I spotted Mr. McQueen and quickly went towards him. I remember asking him for an autograph. But, he was very apologetic and cordial and said “I’m sorry fellas but I’ve got to get ready for a scene and if I stop others will come and I will be late. However, I will shake your hand”. I still remember the day very well. A few minutes later we saw Miss McGraw and asked her for an autograph too. She too was very nice to us and gave us the signature we were asking for. Many years later I found out Mr. McQueen didn’t like giving autographs and have often wondered about our request. Anyway, I can still say I met Steve McQueen. Spoke with him, and shook his hand.
Awesome story. It's true McQueen signed few autographs, thus, any McQueen autograph is worth lots of money today.
Thanks for your input. I wish I had a picture of that moment. The one thing I do have is a picture with Jackie Chan. It was taken in San Antonio when he came to the US. The Director was Robert Clouse. The same director the made the movie “Enter the Dragon “ with Bruce Lee.
I now live in San Antonio tried to go in the sunset station it’s closed and private own
@@bradmeeds1226 thanks. Really miss those days. Life was good. The youth today have no idea. They are letting opportunity slip away.
That's a great story! Thanks for sharing. I've seen the film 3 times in the theater and over a hundred since. It's awesome you were there to see them.
a underrated classic....steve was a great actor...shame he died way too soon. love this guy.
If Ali McGraw smiled at me like that I'd have given her the truck. What a stunner.
I would have given her my house.
She gave me a smile I could feel in my hip pocket
They do not make such cinematic masterpieces anymore today in Hollywood
too true - but is there another Ali or Steve today ???!!!
@@brucewayne3602 it’s not only the actors, like Steve and Ali, what make this film an iconic masterpiece of his time. Its the visual art of telling an interesting and entertaining story. To find the appropriate atmosphere, fitting dialogues, the cutting technique, wardrobe and costumes, the right light, adequate Soundtrack and most of all a producer, who is willing to hire a creative and resourceful director to realise a film project like this. If you see the Blockbuster movies of the last ten years and go back 30 to 40 years, the above mentioned elements of a film are substantial better then today.
Very true. And this movie was MUCH better than the remake.
@@bambina2286 was there a remake?! Oh boy
@@ReR7474 yes in 1994 Alec Baldwin and Kim Basinger did a remake of this movie.
I love this movie so much that I have never seen the remake. Just don't care to. McQueen and McGraw cannot be equalled.
me too
Same here.
EXACTLY 🙏❤️🙏
The older I get and the more Hollywood can't come with new ideas and try's to remake classics, the more they fail. The original is the best.
The remake is fucking garbage.
... the ultimate "feel good" scene ... would lift the lowest morale ... excellent therapy !!!
I love that movie and one of my favorite movie scenes of all time.
I lived all my life in Texas know many a cowboy in my life slim Pickens will always be the best example of a cowboy RIP sir
Love the ending to this movie. RIP Steve McQueen...great actor.
This was a great movie! Sam Peckinpah was a genius! Movie making at its best.
This is so much better than the re-make.
I love this scene,two greats together,an unofficial passing of the torch.
sad but true ... Bless them both + Ali
Slim Pickens made EVERY movie he was in better. RIP Slim!
Loved slim in 1941....is that a Winchester? You should pick one up while you are over here😅😅😅
@@clhuke6494 That scene with him in the Japanese sub's head gets me rolling every time.
WHAT a film - Love it when they get way with it !
Hope you find what your looking for,
Great words
With 30 grand in his pocket finding it was going to be a lot easier
fyi this was filmed at what is now 1684 McNutt Road, Sundland Park, New Mexico. The camera is set up on the north side of the road looking back in an east direction. The area is almost unrecognizable today except for the mountains in the background.
Thanks Rick ... a most memorable scene !!!
I think it's Mt. Christo Rey. I can see it from my window.
They don't make them like that anymore 😢. Great movie!!
I was fortunate to see this in the theater. It was such a 'feel-good' ending. As far as I know, this was one of the very first movies where the 'bad guy' got away with it. Prior to this, Hollywood had an unwritten rule that no one committing a crime of any kind got away. 'The Getaway' broke that rule forever, and now, some of the best movies are about 'criminals' committing the 'perfect' crime. Think 'Oceans 11'. Even in the original with Frank Sinatra and the 'Rat Pack', they lost out in the end. Just one of the many reasons why this is such a great movie.
yes there are many
I think the very first movie where the crooks got away with it was The Hot Rock, it was the same year but was released before this movie so beat it by a few months. It wasn't a very good movie, not Redford's best by any means.
If you're going to be two other people in time and place on this planet, maybe you're like me and would want to be one of these two? If you have to fall in love and just be beautiful for one lifetime, this would be a good one. No one really dies pretty, but with this love affair, and during this time in history, there must have been some real sparks. What a joy to watch this movie, and these two people.
And old Slim Pickens is a treat!!
... the ultimate "feel good" scene ... nothing better ever ... miss Steve & Slim ....................
😁 I choose to be Slim Pickens,an unassuming good actor.
And what's so beautiful about this film is that Steve and Ali just sizzle and without any unnecessary nudity. Great film.👍😺
@@msalykat6466 well, i wouldn't have complained if there was more nudity. But you're correct of course, there wasn't any need for it. Today, a bio-pic about Marco Polo the explorer shows him shirtless wearing tight leather pants and with abs! Why does a 12th century explorer need abs?
perfect summation ... perhaps nothing ever better ... words fail me but you covered it ... Thx !!!
So many desert movies in the late 60’s, and especially the early 70’s. Out in the wide open air, away from the studio. I wish all three of them had traveled on TOGETHER. Now that would’ve been a movie.
30k was a very fair reward.
Almost $224,000.00
I saw this when it first came out and I went back to see maybe 7 more times. This is the kind of movie you never want to end. I've never seen a bad Peckinpah film and this is my favorite McQueen movie. Too bad the soundtrack never had a release, it's a killer.
Could watch this movie over n over again..
My favorite scene of the whole movie.
yes, among many others
Slim Pickens was a terrific actor, Loved his voice, He played a great part in an episode of Gunsmoke where he was about to hang for a murder he didn't commit but they found the person who did it and he was cleared, He was one of the best.
@jaydogtitan-he6wo Agree 100%. I always loved the following scene with him in "1941," not one of Spielberg's better known movies, but nevertheless a fav of mine. It's a day or so AFTER the bombing of Pearl Harbor, and SP, quite improbably, ends up on a Japanese submarine. SP was a little SLOW on the uptake, but once he figured things out, he was a true patriot, lol: ruclips.net/video/j7O-SUEh-54/видео.html
@@tubeerv "One box of delicious, genuine Popper Jacks!!"
@@thebrinx9632 "Watch that knife, Boy."🤣🤪😜
@@tubeerv how you expect me to to take a leak with you slant eyes watchin' me?
@@tubeerv how you expect me to to take a leak with you slant eyes watchin' me?
Masterful performance....................by all but especially Slim.
Great movie. Loved it since I was a kid
That Was a million dollar smile that Ali Macgraw flashed right at the end of the clip!
Those two in the swimming scene were on Fire!
My favorite movie. I still have 3 classic cars from the 50s and of course a truck like this one.
this scene will play in my mind until I am gone , great job Steve McQueen and Ali McGraw Slim Pickens great movie
This movie is much much better than The Remake.
Maqueen must of talked to Slim Pickens about his forthcoming film 'Junior Bonner' and Rodeo RIding..possibly knowing Slim was a National Champion Rodeo rider in the late 40s and early 1950s, maybe Slim was a technical consultant for that film. To see Slim and Robert Preston telling stories would have been a gift of good times.
What a classic scene❤
One of the all-time great (under-played) movie endings with a fantastic leading man WELL-KNOWN to be a horrid scene stealer with an old veteran actor with whom NOBODY could steal the scene!
Slim Pickens (1920-1984) was a fine character actor who I enjoyed his work for many years.
Something beautifully evocative about that music, that old Chevy Truck and the telegraph pole lined open road….
Happy birthday Steve McQueen
I remember watching this movie as a little kid back in the 70s and this scene always stood out in my mind. I’m glad I found it on your channel. Thanks for posting 👍
in the top 10 best movies ever made,this scene takes it to the top,REST IN PEACE STEVE AND SLIM,no one touches your talents
One of the rare Hollywood movies that depicts crime paying off in the end. At least in the old days.
Back when I used to dream about Ali McGraw a lot. She was my type all the way. She and Katherine Ross.
We sure do think alike.
Look for Slim in Dr Strangelove, The Cowboys, a comic turn in Blazing Saddles and once again with McQueen in Tom Horn.
He is funny as hell in 1941 as well. Also is really good in Pat Garrett and Billy the Kid , also liked him in a hard to find film Bootleggers.......Ah hell he was good in every movie he played in !
Love the sound old truck doors make when they close.
That's exactly the way they sounded, too.
unique & real
Same here. Nice catch.
Two worlds best actors, opps, three of the greatest ever. Vaya con Dios. St. Paul Minnesota.
Back when we had great actors.
Terrific/Beautiful scene, very unusual for this kind of film.
Just wish I had someone in 63 years to come across like Slim's character.
Aahh, the melancholy of it all!!!! Killing me!
BEST movie scene EVER.
Slim played his part so well. His features and manner made him real in this movie. I bet he was like this in real life. Steve and Ally are tops too.
McQueen, definition of a film star. Taken too soon
As someone else has mentioned, this, indeed, was the first movie that broke the code about “bad guys“ having to be caught for their crimes at the end of a movie. It had never been done before. You can have your loot suddenly taken away from you by “God” like the wind storm at the end of “Treasure of Sierra Madre”, but you were never allowed to take your loot with you and get away with it. Of course, that’s the reason the movie and the book it was based on was called “The Getaway“. Peckinpah really wanted to flip the bird at these censors and broke the mold. Movies have never been the same. Ironically, the author of the book, Jim Thompson, also wrote “The Killing”, which Stanley Kubrick made into a movie and used the same plot device as “Treasure” wherein they also lose their loot, this time in the airport, where it is stuffed into a suitcase, which overturns on a motorized cart on the way to being loaded onto the plane, and again the wind casts it into the heavens! But by the time he wrote “The Getaway”, he decided it was time that they get rewarded for “all their work”. I remember seeing this movie with my father at the Writers Guild theater. It was a screening and filled with mostly writers and their family. I so very clearly remember that at the end of the film when we saw this moment where Steve McQueen and Ali MacGraw drive down that road on that long shot, we kept waiting for police cars to come speeding behind them, but instead, the credits came up and rolled, and it said THE END and the lights in the theater came up. And I swear you could hear a loud audible gasp from the audience having never seen anything like that before!
მაგარი ფილმის უმაგრესი ფინალი! )
Ali McGraw is 83..and looks great. Underrated actress.
Met her once. Incredibly kind and very beautiful
Two men talkin' business. Beautiful-
Good bad guys film days. Great stories, cool actors and no music until the end of the film.
2 LOVELY GREAT ACTORS RIP LOVE ACTRESS Mr Sam Ellito
Wife and I watched the scene at the drive in food place called the Oasis and also where I met my wife, we also watched the filming of the shotgun of the police car in Fabens tx.
I loved all the scenes of downtown El Paso and Sunset Heights...all of it changed.
Slim Pickens! Dude was something else!!
one of the best movie seems ever
scene
What an awesome movie. I remember watching this movie at the Drive-In with Lisa Langston in High School 1974. Miss those days!
Damn, do I need a time machine. The changes I would make back in that day.
Steve McQueen was so unsung as an actor. Economical, focused and charismatic.
A memorable cinematic moment
eternal !!!
I really got a kick out when Steve first commandeered Slim’s pickup after the big shootout. He had a wino looking helper holding a bottle he hollered “You want me to go too?” and Steve yelled “NOOO!” 😂
Steve McQueen. Love you. Always will. Discovered in "Love with the Proper Stranger" also starring Natalie Wood. I found my favorite actor. Love ya Steve.
Ilove dat movie planth i see it over and over
What greats Slim Pickens hot dang
Saw this film in its first theatrical run in Toronto. Peckinpah's use of squibs was eye-popping at the time and McQueen was always fun to watch. McGraw, although cute, ran the gamut of emotion from A to A. The scene that impacted me the most was Lettieri bouncing Struthers on his lap with a donut in his mouth, humming tunelessly. For some reason, that repulsed me so much! Not McQueen's best but a good effort. And of course, Slim is an icon of cinema!
Slim Pickens. One of the finest character actors ever.
Steve McQueen's pretty good too.
Great movie.
You're only a man when you have a Slim Pickens moustache.
Trucks probably worth that today
oh yehsss
If restored correctly, it's well worth more than $30k today. Probably back then it was only worth a couple hundred dollars if that. Amazing when you think about it.
The coolest cat on the planet and the sweetest babe...perfect match...makes you wonder if they dated in real life?
They were married.
She dumped David McCallum (her husband at the time) for Steve
Steve was cool, she was not.
@@Hithere-ek4qt are you thinking of Jill Ireland?
@@Hithere-ek4qt She divorced Robert Evans
@@Hithere-ek4qt Well Steve thought she was.
Slim and McQueen would work together again in one of his last films, Tom Horn.
I remember this movie the remake hadn't a pick on this one. Slim. Played a great part
A Great husband & wife 🎥🎬📽️🎞️ever made👍🇺🇸
Not even Close more than 5 decades ago this 🎥🎬📽️🎞️was made.Steve Ali..Slim were 👍🇺🇸
never fell out of love for that woman
Take care, you hear?
is the same nice farewell words in the heat of the night.
Slim was a great actor!
Ali was so hot and beautiful in this movie. Great casting all around.
Legendary scene of all time
The king of cool and slim pickens... sold!
What a movie 😢
Great ending i loved McQueens vision he had on his films!
Love the harmonica at the end seems perfectly matched 👌
the late great toots thielmans.
I saw this at the movie. I was 9.
Slim was an avid hunter and a member of the muzzle loader club. On a hunt he took a very large elk. After it was weighed it was a little shot of the state record. Slim then commented ," Damn! If I'd used my muzzel loader it would've been a world record. He was kidded about that for years.
great ending.
the BEST !!!
Le grand Slim Pickens ! La même sincérité dans le regard que dans le film "Pat Garrett et Billy The Kid" dans la scène du crépuscule avec le chef d'œuvre de Bob Dylan : Knockin' on Heaven's Door" . Mama Take this badge off of me I can't use any More It's getting dark too dark to see I think I'm Knockin' on Heaven's Door !"
Saw This in 72.. . I was Al Litteriei Never got His Due as a Actor. ..Great Flick!
Slim Pickens was a jewel. Good stuff
Steve mcqueen in the getaway, cincinatti kid, and bullit.
Excellent.
Slim never plays a fool
Dr. Strangelove?
Brando got the better of him in One Eyed Jacks.