@@gdmofo ill be embarrassed to admit that I didn't know who this was, ran across this clip on facebook, and thought man that guy knows how to handle real firearms.... well makes sense now if hes a marine. Even had proper trigger discipline which I don't think was being taught back in the day
One of the many bad ass scenes in this movie. Steve McQueen is a bad “Mutha” with a twelve gauge shotgun. Thank you Sam Peckinpah for such a great action movie
Steve McQueens military training came in handy in his films as served in the Marine Corps and even Walter Hill who helped write the screenplay and later became a director said McQueen had confidence when handling weapons.
I like his method of reloading where he flips the shotgun on its back with the stock tucked under his arm. With his free hand he holds multiple shells like a clip and uses his index finger to slide the shells into the tube one by one. Very quick and effective method.
My Mom and Dad took me to see this when it came out! It was my first Sam Peckinpah movie. We were a big Steve McQueen/John Wayne/Clint Eastwood family.
Well, Steve McQueen and Sam Peckinpah... These names bring good memories. I'm a strong admirer of them. After all these years both of them are still in my top 5 actors and directors respectively. I remember those times near the end of 70s in Poland when I was 7-9 years old lad and my dear Dad showed me what the great cinema and great acting is. He was taking me to the movies (I just couldn't go for most of those films by myself because they were labelled "for adults only" and cinema staff people were not willing to discuss anything with a young boy) and really shaped my taste. I am still very grateful to him (and He's long gone now...). What a great actor Steve was! Being a boy then I wasn't able to understand everything but after the years gone by I'm being more and more impressed by his acting. Bullit, The Getaway, Papillon and Tom Horn are all simply choices but I need to notice one movie which is hardly available and because of that being rather unknown to the wider audience - I mean "An Enemy of the people", Steve's own adaptation of Ibsen's play. He shows how great stage-like actor he could also be. I think the movie is heavy underapprieciated and McQueen is stunning. And Sam... Innovator from technical point of view (slow motion, work of camera etc.) and in the way he showed the good ol' West (both in straight westerns and in films like The Getaway, Bring me the head of Alfredo Garcia and Convoy) with hard dillemas and choices of his heroes and the problems of destiny and determinism. Really great artists. It's been 40 years now since the untimely death of Steve and almost 36 years since the death of Sam. I was 10 in 1980 and now I'm 50. It's sad how time slips away.
I was thinking about just that this morn before reading your comment. Funny how time slips by. But I guess we were just lucky to have actors like McQueen, guys who seemed to wax melancholy on the same things we think of. Beneath the exterior, there was a lot going on. I've only seen Papillon, and was mesmerized with it. I'll try to catch the flick u mentioned. Time goes by, but it only gets better reading these comments.
to bad old Alec Baldwin's bitch ass was casted for McQueens role in the remake once again worthless fuckin Hollywood has no idea how or why the original movie was so good in the first place fuckin goddamned McQueen what the fuck else.
The BEST movie EVER made...I should know, I was a 20 yr old extra in the train scene and even though Steve McQueen was a lot to himself and not a bad guy, Ali McGraw was the coolest and most sweetest person I have ever met because she took the time to sit down with you and just chat!!!!!
@@seymourskinner2533 Can you look again at my comment and see ANYWHERE that I said I was an EXPERT??? REALLY?? Use you glasses and take another Pill dude!
I love the cutaways to the kids looking at the shooting from behind doors. Also, how she pulls out before he gets in the car,. Peckinpah was such a fine detailed director. This is one of his best films. And one of the best pure entertainment films of the seventies.
Yes they were, I was at one with my Dad. My Dad started laughing every time McQueen started yelling or slapping her around. I didn’t understand at the time what he was laughing at but later in life I finally got it.
3 years later, wouldn't it be funny if the op came back like "Ah, the guy was a prick. He spilled his drink all over the table, slapped a waitress and made sure to let everyone in the whole restaurant know that his burger tasted like shit on a tampon. My burger was great though, I just wish I didn't take Steve."
Steve McQueen not just a character actor. But, at the high point of his career, he was picking roles, where he wanted to be the hero everytime, all the time, with few lines.
Clint Eastwood and Bronson and McQueen my all time Favorites! my favorite? Steve McQueen!!!my all time favorite!!!God Bless the the 1970 s my decade growing up...Grovyyy...
Steve was the king of movie actors back then no body was better. Bullet, The Cinniatl Kid, Pallion,The Sand Peebles, The Get Away, Neadva Smith My favorite actor of all times.
Just To Be Clear, I Love Steve McQueen, I Love This Movie & I Love This Scene But You Would Never Have Fired On Those Cops With A Shotgun If Your Girlfriend Was Standing Next To Them.
+john doe wrong todays crowds want gags,short mindless "action" bits strung together and called a film. mindless drivel for their down syndrone slobbering minds you live in a fantasy this film actually had a S.T.O.R.Y ( look it up dr lexus)
unfortunately worthless fuckin Hollywood tries by remaking good movies without knowing what made them good in the first place it was fuckin McQueen not that bitch ass Alec Baldwin who they casted in the remake.
What’s funny is a lot of people mistook this gun for the more popular Winchester 1200 and it helped Winchester out of a rough patch while High Standard suffered due to QC issues.
the bit where McQueen is about to throw his shotgun into the back seat of the car, and he does a very awkward mis step shuffle as he is almost knocked over by the open car door as the car speeds backwards, that was totally unscripted and a genuine mistiming by Ali McGraw who was not such an experienced driver, McQueen was not expecting the car to speed backwards just at that point so that could be classed as a blooper but director Peckinpah thought ah hell, lets keep that mis step in the movie and do a quick cut to McQueen falling on his back on the ground to tie it up.
Classic 69 Plymouth Fury cop car being shot up by the King......The 69 Fury with a police spec 440 was the ultimate in cop car technology. It held a 147 mph top speed record for well over 25 years.....Back when America was great.....Before all the hippies sold us out to the Man.
Sounded like a small block V8 with a glass pack. I have a Ford with a 390 V8 and it has that same raspy tone when I get on it, a little different in sound then the Chevy but still sounds nice, mine are Thrush glass packs, not sure what's on that Chevy, they had Thrush's then as well as Cherry bombs.
The car that made these two, equal-length tire marks had positraction. You can't make those marks without positraction, which was not available on the '64 Buick Skylark!
Bayan1905 What I like best is Peckinpah's dissatisfaction for the "modern" world and how he incorporates that in his films.....and who doesn't love slow motion shoot-outs?
Bayan1905 What about a Ithaca like the one they used on drag net it loaded and ejected from the bottom. I have always liked Remington 870's but with a wooden stock.
It's a 1969 Impala or Caprice. Rectangular taillights. '68s had round ones. The 396 put out that kind of power and exhaust note. 350s made good power also, so either one could have been spinning those tires.
Doc kept the brown paper bag over the stock of his shotgun. He could've thrown it away, but he was a good Texas citizen - after all, he didn't want to be a Litter Bug®.
The shell rolling toward the police was unspent. 12 Gauge with OO Buck is a devastating weapon. Much more than a AR-15. Yet, not aware of any state declaring 12 GA illegal. Shows the illogical mindset of the gun grabbers.
before this scene the techies were loading the car to be shot up with explosives and Steve notes this and takes control and moves them out and loads the shotgun up with real buckshot and has them film him actually shooting up the cop car with real lead. Nobody else like Steve. Most realistic shoot up of a car in the movies. Thanx to Steve Mc Cool
That is interesting. Using real ammunition is completely prohibited on film sets for obvious reasons (although back in the '30s real ammunition was often used in film). Way too dangerous. If McQueen was using live ammo when shooting up the car it was a huge risk. I must admit it looks as if he really blasted the car. Using the "squibs" as is the case to simulate bullet hits probably wouldn't have been as effective. Bud Hulburd, the special effects man on this film was one of the best. He of course was Peckinpah's guy and was the head effects man on The Wild Bunch.
Not a Winchester. High Standard. Six rounds in the tube plus one in the chamber. 18⅛" cylinder bore barrel. After seeing the movie, I wanted one like it and the gun shop I frequented happened to get one in. Snapped it up in an instant, but not like Steve. I paid them for it. I have no idea how many rounds I've burned through it, but at one point, the firing pin broke and had to be replaced. I also did a smooth and refinish on the stock and forend. Still my favorite pump gun.
The late 60s and early 70s when outlaws ruled the movie theaters. There were very few hit films during that time that featured bona fide heroes on the right side of the law. The movie heroes of the day were bank robbers , murderers, crooks, hoods and con artists. We found ourselves cheering for the ones, like Steve and Ali, who got away at the end of the film. Good movie, though!
0:45 - He is very confident, the shot gun is pointed at the cops and MacGraw is right behind them, in McQueen's line of fire... 1:12 - Hence the reason for no more "Open Carry"....
Wow, Steve actually reloads his shotgun!
Shouldn't be any surprise Steve McQueen was a former Marine he knew his way around firearms
At least his shotgun doesn't have infinity bullets unlike his mustang in bullit with infinite gear 😂😂for
@@gdmofo ill be embarrassed to admit that I didn't know who this was, ran across this clip on facebook, and thought man that guy knows how to handle real firearms.... well makes sense now if hes a marine. Even had proper trigger discipline which I don't think was being taught back in the day
One of the many bad ass scenes in this movie. Steve McQueen is a bad “Mutha” with a twelve gauge shotgun. Thank you Sam Peckinpah for such a great action movie
I'm really impressed by McQueen's trigger discipline. That's rare even nowadays.
Steve McQueens military training came in handy in his films as served in the Marine Corps and even Walter Hill who helped write the screenplay and later became a director said McQueen had confidence when handling weapons.
@@scottknode898 That's pretty cool. He definitely looks it.
What's funny is that the remake of this movie starred Alec Baldwin 🤣
@@hoppinggnomethe4154 Oof.
I like his method of reloading where he flips the shotgun on its back with the stock tucked under his arm. With his free hand he holds multiple shells like a clip and uses his index finger to slide the shells into the tube one by one. Very quick and effective method.
My Mom and Dad took me to see this when it came out! It was my first Sam Peckinpah movie. We were a big Steve McQueen/John Wayne/Clint Eastwood family.
Steve, Marion and Clint. Don't forget Charles Bronson.
Republicans, very good. Not Biden gay friends....
@@iostoconlarussia.7689 Come On Man
My people
@@iostoconlarussia.7689 lol bull
Trivia : Talking of Cool , Reservoir Dogs Actor Michael Madsen is now the proud owner of this shotgun ! a gift from his longtime friend Chad McQueen.
Well, Steve McQueen and Sam Peckinpah... These names bring good memories. I'm a strong admirer of them. After all these years both of them are still in my top 5 actors and directors respectively. I remember those times near the end of 70s in Poland when I was 7-9 years old lad and my dear Dad showed me what the great cinema and great acting is. He was taking me to the movies (I just couldn't go for most of those films by myself because they were labelled "for adults only" and cinema staff people were not willing to discuss anything with a young boy) and really shaped my taste. I am still very grateful to him (and He's long gone now...). What a great actor Steve was! Being a boy then I wasn't able to understand everything but after the years gone by I'm being more and more impressed by his acting. Bullit, The Getaway, Papillon and Tom Horn are all simply choices but I need to notice one movie which is hardly available and because of that being rather unknown to the wider audience - I mean "An Enemy of the people", Steve's own adaptation of Ibsen's play. He shows how great stage-like actor he could also be. I think the movie is heavy underapprieciated and McQueen is stunning. And Sam... Innovator from technical point of view (slow motion, work of camera etc.) and in the way he showed the good ol' West (both in straight westerns and in films like The Getaway, Bring me the head of Alfredo Garcia and Convoy) with hard dillemas and choices of his heroes and the problems of destiny and determinism. Really great artists. It's been 40 years now since the untimely death of Steve and almost 36 years since the death of Sam. I was 10 in 1980 and now I'm 50. It's sad how time slips away.
I was thinking about just that this morn before reading your comment. Funny how time slips by. But I guess we were just lucky to have actors like McQueen, guys who seemed to wax melancholy on the same things we think of. Beneath the exterior, there was a lot going on. I've only seen Papillon, and was mesmerized with it. I'll try to catch the flick u mentioned. Time goes by, but it only gets better reading these comments.
My first car at 16 was a 69 Plymouth Fury III. White with a green interior..i can still remember every smell and sound of that old tank.
My first was a 71 Fury I. Retired Denver police car, white with blue interior and a 440.
At the top of his game, Peckinpah was one of the best film editors who ever directed a movie.
Bullshit
Absolutely! Sam peckinpah!
How many guys would like to do that?
to bad old Alec Baldwin's bitch ass was casted for McQueens role in the remake once again worthless fuckin Hollywood has no idea how or why the original movie was so good in the first place fuckin goddamned McQueen what the fuck else.
Second only to David Lean
That blaring sound right before he shoots the shotgun is superb.
McQueen had presence- without saying a word ,he said SO much.
The BEST movie EVER made...I should know, I was a 20 yr old extra in the train scene and even though Steve McQueen was a lot to himself and not a bad guy, Ali McGraw was the coolest and most sweetest person I have ever met because she took the time to sit down with you and just chat!!!!!
Did you get paid. If so - how much ?
Being an extra makes you an expert on films?
@@seymourskinner2533 where did he say he was an expert? You are a real asshole.
@@grayson1946 Thank you, David :)
@@seymourskinner2533 Can you look again at my comment and see ANYWHERE that I said I was an EXPERT??? REALLY?? Use you glasses and take another Pill dude!
I love the cutaways to the kids looking at the shooting from behind doors.
Also, how she pulls out before he gets in the car,.
Peckinpah was such a fine detailed director. This is one of his best films. And one of the best pure entertainment films of the seventies.
I read audiences were cheering during this scene in the cinema.
Yes they were, I was at one with my Dad.
My Dad started laughing every time McQueen started yelling or slapping her around.
I didn’t understand at the time what he was laughing at but later in life I finally got it.
And, looking cool as hell wearing a suit while doing it.
Neo Westerns : )
Steve McQueen was one of my favorite Actors back in the day Remembering seen this Movie on a Sunday afternoon with my Late Mother and She Loves it
Yes imagine a remake of that movie with Tom Cruise or Brad Pitt...they could never pull it off. Steve McQueen was the man.
To the dude who uploaded this film clip: that's the best description of a movie scene that I have seen on RUclips. IT ROCKS!!!!! 👍👍👍👍👍 😀😀😀😀 🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥
This was when movies were worth watching.
Steve was the King Of Cool.
This the most appropriate video title on RUclips.
Had a burger an Fries along with a Beer. With Steve in Boston in 1980. At the 99. On High St.
he seemed like a good dude?
I've seen you in many videos
That’s amazing! What was he like?
3 years later, wouldn't it be funny if the op came back like "Ah, the guy was a prick. He spilled his drink all over the table, slapped a waitress and made sure to let everyone in the whole restaurant know that his burger tasted like shit on a tampon. My burger was great though, I just wish I didn't take Steve."
Steve McQueen not just a character actor. But, at the high point of his career, he was picking roles, where he wanted to be the hero everytime, all the time, with few lines.
@Woody Meggs unfortunately he was egotistical
Clint Eastwood and Bronson and McQueen my all time Favorites! my favorite? Steve McQueen!!!my all time favorite!!!God Bless the the 1970 s my decade growing up...Grovyyy...
Jonny Vasquez Paul Newman. also
You forgot lee Marvin, Oh wait that was 60's
And you forgot Robert Dinero.
Jonny; If your thinking cool don't leave out James Colburn!
John Wayne gene Hackman also Lee Marvin add to that list
I have had a high standard since about '86 and never realized it is the same type as he used in this movie.
I HAVE THE EXACT SAME GUN, EVERYONE LAUGHED YEARS AGO AT MY HAVING A 9 SHOT 500 WOODEN PUMP IN MY COLLECTION..THEY AIN'T LAUGHING NOW.
That's actually a High Standard he's using.
@DG totally agree, but give me a Russian made Kal. just to be sure it won't jam...
@Topspeed350 Really... Why???
Why would they laugh though?
Caps lock? Btw they are still laughing
he was a real man, ain't nothing like him nowadays
Back then we had bank robbers. Today we have bankster robbers. Only they don't have to escape to Mexico, they take a cruise to the Bahamas.
back then you had ''bankster robbers'' too you ignorant kid, the banks were still printing money out of thin air.
and retire in the Israeli state since they do not extradite criminals to the USA.
Or become POTUS
@Főfasírozó I say the same thing. You are the only one I ever seen mention that. exactly
Today the robbers are the ones running the banks.
Steve was the King of Cool.....
Clint Eastwood has a different opinion. ;)
+Alfred F. Jones mcquern could beat clints ass and probably did.
steve studied under bruce lee for years and could beat up stuntmen
gary little
And Steve didn’t even try hard.
Steve was the king of movie actors back then no body was better. Bullet, The Cinniatl Kid, Pallion,The Sand Peebles, The Get Away, Neadva Smith My favorite actor of all times.
Yes, better than today anyone’s
A perfect once-in-a lifetime combination of Thompson, McQueen, and Peckinpah ---
Just To Be Clear, I Love Steve McQueen, I Love This Movie & I Love This Scene But You Would Never Have Fired On Those Cops With A Shotgun If Your Girlfriend Was Standing Next To Them.
Shot speads 1 inch per yard.
I love the way Mcqueen treats Ali in this movie honestly. It is so old fashion nowadays, but hell I am old too.
@eilliw nodrod What movies? They don't make movies worth seeing anymore.
@Lowell Calavera Say what? You need to watch the movie again.
james franks it's stupid fan editing..the real movie isn't like this video.
Probably McQueen's finest acting, along with Junior Bonner. Peckinpah had an incredible ability to get his leading men to over achieve.
they don't make films like this anymore
because they do not make money any more. audiences want a complex, smart plot. not a simple minded shoot em up film.
+john doe wrong todays crowds want gags,short mindless "action" bits strung together and called a film.
mindless drivel for their down syndrone slobbering minds
you live in a fantasy
this film actually had a S.T.O.R.Y ( look it up dr lexus)
you are right. i stand corrected. today's audience wants stupid fluff
Just think about the scene with that girl punched
unfortunately worthless fuckin Hollywood tries by remaking good movies without knowing what made them good in the first place it was fuckin McQueen not that bitch ass Alec Baldwin who they casted in the remake.
What’s funny is a lot of people mistook this gun for the more popular Winchester 1200 and it helped Winchester out of a rough patch while High Standard suffered due to QC issues.
Steve and Ali swimming, that was not acting, it was love, for as long as it lasted.
"Give me one of those portable jobs".
Tv store .
That‘s the reason why you should never mess with a shotty fully loaded with 00 buckshot lol
The way he handles the Shotgun was Classic
Best title for a video on RUclips I've ever seen.
Not having the release of Quincy's score is one of the greatest mistakes in soundtrack history.
That rumbling sound after the fourth shotgun blast sets the tone of the entire scene that this is a dangerous man
I really miss Steve McQueen he was the best male actor of all time 😊
the bit where McQueen is about to throw his shotgun into the back seat of the car, and he does a very awkward mis step shuffle as he is almost knocked over by the open car door as the car speeds backwards, that was totally unscripted and a genuine mistiming by Ali McGraw who was not such an experienced driver, McQueen was not expecting the car to speed backwards just at that point so that could be classed as a blooper but director Peckinpah thought ah hell, lets keep that mis step in the movie and do a quick cut to McQueen falling on his back on the ground to tie it up.
'what the hell the matter with you', love this reaction so much...
This is very nice movie 🍿 by the Director Sam Peckinpah 👍😘
So the wild bunch !
lino klein meuleman Also” Bring me the head of Alfredo Garcia”. and Billy the kid
@@suphangko5812 and don't forget convoy
The cutaways to the kids on the street are really good. Peckinpah used that kind of thing in The Wild Bunch.
It was my grandpa's store that he held up in the previous scene!!!
What city?
@@thxmateolitown called Fabens Texas
A unheralded Peckinpah Classic.... Steve walks, talks, and shoots the part.....wow!!!!!!!
Classic 69 Plymouth Fury cop car being shot up by the King......The 69 Fury with a police spec 440 was the ultimate in cop car technology. It held a 147 mph top speed record for well over 25 years.....Back when America was great.....Before all the hippies sold us out to the Man.
America was never great. Just hid it for years by mortgaging future generations.
Pre Tesla days!
Watched them film this in Fabens Tx while at Ft Bliss in 1972.
Fabens TX still looks the same.
@@tavo2422 Where is Fabens, TX? Forgive me, I'm a Dallas boy but I have lived in Houston and Austin.
@@williamrowlett740 about 30 minutes southeast from El Paso, I currently live in this town
When Steve McQueen walks holding a plain brown paper package . . . it ain't Long Stem Roses
I saw Steve and Ali filming part of this movie in El Paso, Tx. Ironically Steve McQueen died across the border in Juarez, Mx.
Steve McQueen was one of the coolest dudes 60's-70's even when He did Hunter in 79' where He was a bit sick already RIP
Not one of the coolest at all! His nickname is the "King of cool" .........he's the coolest
I can't believe I still haven't seen this film!
The blue car she is driving sounds that so great most likely is a small block 327 high output.
the blue impala. yep maybe.
+Benny Sevier
Not really what it sounded like.
Sounded like a small block V8 with a glass pack. I have a Ford with a 390 V8 and it has that same raspy tone when I get on it, a little different in sound then the Chevy but still sounds nice, mine are Thrush glass packs, not sure what's on that Chevy, they had Thrush's then as well as Cherry bombs.
The car that made these two, equal-length tire marks had positraction. You can't make those marks without positraction, which was not available on the '64 Buick Skylark!
+Bayan1905 390 is an FE big block
Not sure which I liked more, the High Standard Riot King 12 gauge McQueen is using or that 68 Chevy his wife drives. That thing sounds vicious!
Bayan1905 What I like best is Peckinpah's dissatisfaction for the "modern" world and how he incorporates that in his films.....and who doesn't love slow motion shoot-outs?
Bayan1905 What about a Ithaca like the one they used on drag net it loaded and ejected from the bottom. I have always liked Remington 870's but with a wooden stock.
It's a 1969 Impala or Caprice. Rectangular taillights. '68s had round ones. The 396 put out that kind of power and exhaust note. 350s made good power also, so either one could have been spinning those tires.
You can eliminate the Caprice by looking at the dog dish standard caps a Caprice of that year had standard deluxe wheel covers
@@JW...-oj5iw I would say the '69 Impala had the 350.
Think ive seen this movie 100 times McQueen at the peak of his badassry
Not enough ;
Sam Peckinpah standard slow mo shooting.
Love it when the shopkeeper who called the cops legs it when McQueen reappears.
That’s how to treat a b... she will always be with you!
One of my favorite actors! LOVE THIS MOVIE!
Sam Peckinpah, what a director. And Steve McQueen. How can you go wrong.
Doc kept the brown paper bag over the stock of his shotgun. He could've thrown it away, but he was a good Texas citizen - after all, he didn't want to be a Litter Bug®.
I don't think I've ever heard someone use "shotgun" as a verb. Lol
Gimme two boxes of those double-aught bucks.
What're you gonna do, knock down a wall?
I love the laconic delivery of those lines and others like them.
I get the impression McQueen could have plugged those cops with little remorse.
I wanted to be Steve McQueen when I was a kid. Cool dude.
Apparently, Steve actually slapped out Ali in real life in the movie. Read that...so they kept it in the film.
r.i.p. Steve and 69 Plymouth fury.
Pumps the Shotty... checks the cops... messes the cop car... check slaps the lady... gets away... what a Classic lol...
The shell rolling toward the police was unspent.
12 Gauge with OO Buck is a devastating weapon. Much more than a AR-15. Yet, not aware of any state declaring 12 GA illegal. Shows the illogical mindset of the gun grabbers.
Doc should not have smacked Carol like that. She was very new to the heist business.
Only one Steve McQueen...then, now & always the King of Cool.
The love of steve mcqueen 40 aniversary of death 1930-1980
Because of this movie, shotties became a big part of my life. I was 10 when I saw it.
Excellent crime thriller, one of Sam's best films. God when he was one, he was really good.
Steve was at the top his game one of his.great movies
Steve McQueen was the man
before this scene the techies were loading the car to be shot up with explosives and Steve notes this and takes control and moves them out and loads the shotgun up with real buckshot and has them film him actually shooting up the cop car with real lead. Nobody else like Steve. Most realistic shoot up of a car in the movies. Thanx to Steve Mc Cool
That is interesting. Using real ammunition is completely prohibited on film sets for obvious reasons (although back in the '30s real ammunition was often used in film). Way too dangerous. If McQueen was using live ammo when shooting up the car it was a huge risk. I must admit it looks as if he really blasted the car. Using the "squibs" as is the case to simulate bullet hits probably wouldn't have been as effective. Bud Hulburd, the special effects man on this film was one of the best. He of course was Peckinpah's guy and was the head effects man on The Wild Bunch.
The way He smacks His woman around He could play in the N.B.A..
@Amadeus Eisenberg No they don`t. Don`t lower yourself to smacking a woman unless she`s trying to kill you.
I love the way he uses hell..and when she so tough said what the he'll do you want anyway...She definitely was nervous in this scene.
Maybe it's me but i just don't feel another actor would /could portray this kind of action like he could magical !
back when you had shotguns that didn't shoot 50 rounds before reloading
Filmed in downtown Fabens, Texas
I'm a simple man/boy
When I see Steve mcqueen, I click
I had a Winchester defender pump 12 g. . Just like Steve . Lol.
Not a Winchester. High Standard. Six rounds in the tube plus one in the chamber. 18⅛" cylinder bore barrel. After seeing the movie, I wanted one like it and the gun shop I frequented happened to get one in. Snapped it up in an instant, but not like Steve. I paid them for it. I have no idea how many rounds I've burned through it, but at one point, the firing pin broke and had to be replaced. I also did a smooth and refinish on the stock and forend. Still my favorite pump gun.
the greatest actor ever, he commanded the scene,one helluva marine,and found god at the very last,that means hes smart too,a real charmer
Literally every single car in this scene exeeds the quality of newly made cars 20 times
The late 60s and early 70s when outlaws ruled the movie theaters. There were very few hit films during that time that featured bona fide heroes on the right side of the law. The movie heroes of the day were bank robbers , murderers, crooks, hoods and con artists. We found ourselves cheering for the ones, like Steve and Ali, who got away at the end of the film. Good movie, though!
0:45 - He is very confident, the shot gun is pointed at the cops and MacGraw is right behind them, in McQueen's line of fire...
1:12 - Hence the reason for no more "Open Carry"....
i pass through this street here and there in Fabens, tx. not a lot has changed.
I read Al Lettieri and McQueen didn't like each other, you can tell when you watch the whole thing.
Ali McGraw had all the acting ability of a corpse in a morgue
i had one of those shotgun's in the mid 70s high standard riot pump 12 ga.
Thanks for posting!
The movement of his feet when she pulls away before he has a chance to get in the car. LOL! FUNNY!
Love the recoil of the shotgun! Too many movies show people shooting a 12 gauge and there is no recoil-so fake!
Damn probably scratched up their Colt Official Police revolvers.
Hickok45 brought me here 😆
I remember that shotgun i always wanted that type of riot gun, damn gun is a cannon
Lol! ...the 'Slap Edit'!! Ha ha ha!>...perfect. Old school Man, keepin' his woman In Line.
The king of cool and l love pump action shotguns I've own a few!
Best shot gun shot scene.
She backs up and just destroys all the badass he built up in that scene!
@Amadeus Eisenberg If he didn't loose major cool points for smacking her around earlier, he sure lost them here...
@@rrr43875 People forget he was playing a criminal in this film, and even the cool ones have tendencies which make them...criminals.