Plot Synopsis (continued)
On
their way to rob the train, Pike tells Dutch how he originally wounded
his leg, in the third flashback of the film.
[Note: This is another scene
essential to understanding Pike's motivations by depicting his possible
goal of having a family life, by illustrating Pike's consistent series
of miscalculations or mistakes that hurt the people closest to him
in his life and caused him to feel like a repeated failure.]
He was once involved in a love affair with a woman
named Aurora (Aurora Clavel) that he wanted to marry - a married
woman whose husband had deserted her. Pike arrived "two days
late" without explanation or apology, for a love-making rendezvous,
bringing conciliatory red roses and groceries. After being slapped
and told by Aurora that her husband wouldn't come back, he thoughtlessly
and carelessly let down his guard. He recalls:
She had a husband. If I'd had any sense, I'd have killed
him. He wasn't around. I got careless. One night, he walked in on
us. Got her with the first shot. Got me here with the second. Then
the damned coward turned and ran.
His misjudgment led
to the loving woman's death before a night of love-making. After
she removed her top and was half-naked, the hateful husband
appeared. He was first reflected in the mirrored door of the dark
bedroom's armoire behind her. Then, Pike was
shot in the leg by the irate, vengeful returning husband of the woman
he loved. Although Pike didn't catch up with the
cowardly killer, he admits that his guilt and the painful past still
haunt him:
"There
isn't a day or an hour that passes that I don't think about it."
Vowing
to prove himself and vindicate himself in front of his comrades,
Pike decides to sacrifice himself in one last job for the cause,
promising:
This is our last go-around, Dutch. This time, we
do it right!
The superb action scene of the train robbery begins
with views of passengers aboard the train - the sleeping bounty hunters
and incompetent US cavalry soldiers (earlier called "green recruits,
not worth a damn") and a vigilant Thornton who has anticipated
their plan. When the train stops to take on water from a tower, Angel
is hiding in the water chute, and the others emerge from under the
tracks. Angel, Pike, Dutch, and Lyle seem to outwit Thornton by uncoupling
the engine and shipment of crates of guns from the passenger car,
and then pulling away from the rest of the train.
Thornton, who is prepared for their scheming heist,
has horses ready to pursue the engine from one of the boxcars. During
the exciting chase, Angel saves Dutch from falling beneath the wheels.
The bounty hunters pursue them on horseback, but are unable to catch
up to the swift train. At a rendezvous point down the tracks, Tector
and Sykes are waiting. The train's cargo (of grenades and rifles)
is unloaded and transferred onto a wagon and hauled away. Pike then
reverses the train's engine, and sends the hijacked front portion
of the train speeding back toward Thornton where it crashes into
the stranded cars on the track - where the inept US cavalry soldiers
were still trying to get assembled.
Anticipating the bounty hunters' and cavalry chase,
Pike had earlier set dynamite to explode the main bridge across the
Rio Grande River on the border between the U.S. and Mexico. As the
loaded-up wagon is driven across the bridge, it falls through rotten
wooden planks, delaying the escape momentarily and increasing the
suspense as Thornton's posse catches up to them as well as the US
cavalry. Thornton yells at his own ignorant men to stop firing on
the cavalry: ("Don't shoot. It's the Army, you idiots!") - one soldier
is hit and blood spurts through the exit wound in his back.
Just before the dynamite detonates, Pike (on the Mexico
side of the bridge) removes his hat and gallantly but defiantly gestures
toward Thornton in a magnificent salute. The explosion is so violent
that Pike and his horse both flinch convincingly when the charges
blast. When the bridge collapses and Thornton's half-a-dozen men
and horses plunge into the water, the long-lens prolonged, slow-motion
images are aesthetically and expressively violent. [Note: The scene
is reminiscent of The
Bridge on the River Kwai (1957), also
starring William Holden.]
Due to the success of their getaway, Pike is restored
to his esteemed place of leadership by the gang, and the outlaws
share a drink from a common whiskey bottle while on horseback. They
burst out in laughter when an empty bottle reaches Lyle. They know
that Thornton has only been temporarily delayed, as Sykes reminds
them: "He'll be along and you know it."
Just before Pike and the gang deliver their load of
guns, General Mapache's forces, lacking the stolen guns to protect
themselves, are surrounded and beseiged at the Las Trancas train
station by Pancho Villa's revolutionary troops. The general's forces
have temporarily left Agua Verde and taken a train there to retrieve
a telegram message from the Bunch about their looting of the US munitions
train. Mapache nervously stands his ground defenseless on the train
tracks, as shells explode around him. He fearlessly refuses to scurry
for cover, acting heroically for a young, wide-eyed telegram delivery
boy (dressed in military clothing) who stands nearby, salutes, and
admires his newfound hero's courage. The delivered telegram informs
Mapache that the train has been successfully assaulted and Pike has
acquired the arms shipment ("the gringos assaulted the train,
they got the guns"). The boy salutes the general, and they walk
calmly together toward the train as the scene ends.
Meanwhile, Thornton is ashamed of his small force of
men (now only five men), and condemns his inept bounty hunters. He
wishes that he was with Pike instead:
And what do I have? Nothin' but you egg-suckin',
chicken-stealing gutter trash, with not even sixty rounds between
you. We're after men, and I wish to God I was with them. The next
time you make a mistake, I'm gonna ride off and let you die.
And Pike suspects that Mapache may double-cross them
when they meet near Agua Verde to exchange the guns for gold:
I figure that damn General will try to take this
load without payin' for it and shoot us in the bargain. Only thing
that'll change his mind is if somethin' would happen to these guns.
The gang finds a belt-fed Maxim, Browning
M1917 machine gun - a "Big Gun" in the haul, and Pike wants
to learn about the new advanced weaponry:
What I don't know about I sure as hell am gonna learn.
Angel's revolutionary followers surreptitiously surround
them in their rocky hideout and leave with a case of guns, fulfilling
Pike's earlier bargain with Angel. The villagers could have taken
the entire wagonload of munitions if they had wanted. Pike knows
their potential with the proper leadership:
If they ever get armed with good leaders, this whole
country will go up in smoke.
A little later, Mapache finds
his troops attacked and defeated by Villa's men. The concerned
Mapache watches empathically as his bloody, wounded men are treated
following their struggle with Villa's forces. He is reminded: "With
the new guns and ammunition, this would never have happened."
In a tense standoff in a steep canyon area when they
meet to trade with the double-crossing Mapache, the Bunch is cornered
and trapped by Mapache's followers lined on the tops of the canyon's
walls, led by Lieutenant Herrera (Alfonso Arau) down on the valley
floor. Pike forestalls their intentions to claim the arms without
making payment, by threatening to touch a lighted cigar to a fuse
attached to sticks of dynamite to blow everyone up:
Pike: Any trouble, no guns for the General.
Herrera: Ha, ha, ha. Very smart. That's very smart for you, damn
gringos. So nobody can rob the guns.
Pike: Nobody.
Herrera: I am not afraid. They are not afraid. You blow up the wagon,
you die. Or we kill you pretty soon. But we are amigos.
Dutch: Show 'em boys.
Tector and Lyle pull off a cover to reveal the awesome
machine gun; a shot is fired by one of the Mexican gunmen, and Pike
immediately lights the fuse to show that he means business. As it
sizzles in his hand, Herrera begs Pike:
"Please, cut the fuse!" The trigger-happy gunman is shot
and killed by his own troops, punished for endangering the safe delivery
of the rifles. On his own terms, Pike tells Herrera that they will
trade the guns the following day with the General in a rendezvous at
Agua Verde, and he repeats: "Any trouble, no guns." Thornton is also
seen witnessing the entire transaction from a high vantage point.
As agreed, the next day, Pike rides into the General's
fortress to trade the guns for money, but to prevent a possible double
cross and ensure payment, he will exchange guns for gold only in
three gradual allotments.
Pike specifies that the first shipment of four cases
to Agua Verde, in a revealed location, are to be exchanged for $2,500:
When I get my share of the gold, twenty five hundred
dollars worth, I'll tell you where four cases are. The others are
waiting for me back at the wagon. If I don't show up pretty quick,
they'll blow it...The quicker I get back, the quicker you get the
next load...Up the arroyo about two miles, you'll find three cases
of rifles and one case of ammunition hidden in the bush.
To inspire good will, Pike promises the General that
although the machine gun was not part of the original transaction
for 16 cases and ammo, it will be presented to him. As Pike rides
away, the General beams: "I trust him."
The Gorch brothers are chosen for the next exchange
of cases, along with the machine gun, followed Angel
and Dutch for the final exchange. After the gun has been presented
to Mapache, his men fire it with no knowledge of how it works. In
the comic scene, people duck for cover and pottery is shattered,
as the wildly-aimed gun shoots up the entire Agua Verde compound.
When it is thought that the gun is finally silenced, Mapache holds
it in his arms - and it starts firing again, blasting hundreds of
rounds of bullets.
In the final exchange of information about the location
of the remaining cases, Dutch and Angel ride in to collect their
share of the loot, but Mapache knows of Angel's deceit and betrayal
- that he has diverted one case of the stolen guns to arm Mexican
revolutionaries. Dutch's coverup isn't convincing:
"(There were) sixteen cases of rifles. We lost one on the trail."
It is learned that the grief-stricken mother of the young Mexican's
girlfriend betrayed him to Mapache
to find justice for her daughter's murder (Lyle later characterizes
it this way: "Her own mama turned him in like some kind of a Judas").
Sensing the danger he is in, Angel attempts to ride to freedom, but
is seized and brought before the chieftain. Outnumbered and outgunned
by Mapache's forces, Dutch is torn between his own safety and loyalty.
He decides to claim that Angel is indeed a thief, abandoning him: "He's a thief. You take
care of him."
Now that Mapache is supplied with guns for his 200
men, returning to rescue the young gang member would be suicidal,
as Pike summarizes: "No way at all." While Sykes is riding
to rendezvous with the rest of the Wild Bunch with pack horses, the
gang watches as Thornton's bounty hunters open fire and Sykes is
seriously wounded in the leg by Coffer. Dutch is angered:
Dutch: Damn that Deke Thornton to Hell!
Pike: What would you do in his place? He gave his word.
Dutch: Gave his word to a railroad.
Pike: It's his word!
Dutch: That ain't what counts. It's who you give it to!
Running short of water and "tired of being hunted," Pike
fatefully decides to go back to Agua Verde (without Sykes) and seek
refuge there with Mapache's protection:
Pike: Let the General take care of those boys [the
bounty hunters].
Lyle: You're crazy. That General would just soon kill us as break
wind.
Pike: He's so tickled with those guns, he'll be celebratin' for a
week and happy to do us a favor. Thornton's not gonna follow us in
there. While they're busy pickin' over Freddy (Sykes), we'll find
a back trail off this mountain and head for town.
Dutch: What about our gold?
Pike: We'll take one sack to pay our way. Bury the rest - together.
After the wounded Sykes [shot in the right thigh, but
later seen with a bandage on his left thigh] has been pursued into
the hills by the bounty hunters, and thereafter approached from behind
by a Mexican revolutionary with a machete (the scene fades), Pike
and the four remaining members of the Gang ride back into the General's
compound at Agua Verde. A loud fireworks celebration is in progress.
In a drunken display of debauchery, Mapache crudely drinks in his
open carful of whoring women as it drives in circles, dragging Angel
in the dust from a rope tied to the rear fender. Children gleefully
shout and run after Angel's body as it is pulled around in the dirt
by the car. Pike and Dutch are both appalled by the new invention,
used for torture:
Pike: God, I hate to see that!
Dutch: No more than I do.
Pike demands Angel's release in exchange for half of
his own personal robbery take/share:
"I want to buy him back." Mapache refuses (he claims that
he doesn't need gold), and Lt. Zamorra invites them to join the joyous
party instead - with whores and whiskey: "Why don't you go and
get a drink, enjoy yourself, there are women everywhere?" Dutch
mutters
"son of a bitch" as his commentary upon Angel's torture,
while Pike decides to stay: "Why not?"
[This is one of many instances of the use of language that demystifies
and shatters the ideal of the romanticized West within the film.] While
the men seek solace in the company of young Mexican whores and ignore
Angel's plight, a disheartened and concerned Dutch waits outside and
whittles on a piece of wood (possibly remembering how Angel saved his
life on the train).
Meanwhile, Pike enjoys the company of a young woman,
whose crying baby on the dirt floor reminds him of the family he
might have once had with Aurora [and reminds him also how he acted
wrongly in her defense]. While dressing in the adobe room, he watches
as the beautiful young woman delicately cleanses her upper chest
with water from a basin. When he offers her payment, she expresses
humiliation or disappointment, causing Pike to experience troubling,
remorseful second thoughts about being oblivious to one of the Bunch.
After finishing the remains of a whiskey bottle, Pike makes a silent
decision - to rescue their Mexican partner and Bunch 'family' member
- Angel. [Throughout his past, Pike had abandoned or betrayed his
partners by not sticking with them (e.g., Crazy Lee, Buck, Angel,
Sykes, and Deke), but now, he acts otherwise.]
The two Gorch brothers argue with another of the whores
regarding her payment price, claiming they earlier bargained a two-for-one
deal. Shortly afterwards, a steely-eyed and determined Pike enters
their room and summons the men to help their Mexican comrade Angel,
in one final act of redemption, without any explanation:
Pike: (flatly) Let's go.
Lyle: Why not!?
As they leave, a tiny sparrow tethered to a string
[the string recalls the rope that tied Angel behind the automobile]
that Tector was idly playing with, lies panting and dying on the
ground - a foreshadowing of the fate of the Bunch. Encouraged by
their unspoken, heroic, and courageous decision to arm themselves
and save one of their own, Dutch joins his comrades. Pike's victory
in his final robbery heist cannot be savored - he must lead his group
to uphold its honor, to live up to its pronouncements on solidarity,
to commit itself to a futile but necessary action, and to nobly sacrifice
itself for the persecuted and captive Angel in a final showdown.
The four load their rifles and march across town -
four abreast, reminiscent of the walk to the classic O.K. Corral
in other westerns - to confront the drunken Mapache, who holds court
next to the machine gun, his proud possession mounted on a table.
Pike demands the return of Angel ("We want Angel"), now
bloodied, maimed and near-death from torture. Mapache appears to
comply, assisting Angel's walk over to them and then cutting his
wrist ties with a knife. But in a brutal, full-frontal view, Mapache
slits Angel's throat and is immediately killed in retribution by
Pike and then by Dutch and Lyle.
The precipitation of their last stand - a violent,
seven minute bloodbath counter-attack of monumental proportions in
the open courtyard - is delayed with a long moment of silence. With
their guns drawn, the four men are able to hold off hundreds of surprised
and dumbstruck Mexicans, which now stand leaderless and still for
several seconds, gaping at what has happened. Warily and then gleefully,
Pike and Dutch smile and laugh, realizing that for an instant, they
just might succeed. Pike whirls around - not a single soldier moves.
However, they are outnumbered, surrounded, and condemned to die in
the pending climactic battle. [Other classic last stands in westerns
include They Died With Their Boots On (1941), My Darling Clementine
(1946), Gunfight at the O.K. Corral (1957), The Magnificent Seven
(1960), The
Alamo (1960),
Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid (1969), and Unforgiven
(1992).]
Choosing his next target deliberately, Pike fires on
Mapache's German advisor Mohr and kills him with a single, well-placed
shot - and then Mapache's two seconds-in-command (Herrera and Zamorra)
are shot, followed by Mohr's aide. The real, pitched battle in the
fortress then begins in one of the most complex, highly-edited sequences
ever filmed. It is truly an orgy of slaughter in one of the bloodiest
scenes ever filmed, as the four remaining outlaws take down as many
men as they can. Although some of the Wild Bunch hold off the troops
momentarily by using grenades and by commandering the machine gun
[the ultimate symbol of the new industrial society] and firing it
with orgasmic intensity, they are soon wounded - first Tector and
then Lyle (both at the machine gun) fighting side by side, then Dutch,
and finally Pike. Dutch takes cover behind one of the prostitutes,
using her as a shield.
Trying to find cover, Pike backs into a room where
a woman appears reflected in a mirrored door of her wardrobe. He
fires at the reflection, killing a half-clad officer hiding behind
the door. He turns away from the Mexican whore, who leers at him
and suddenly shoots him in the back. He reflexively turns and fires
directly into the chest of the woman, crying out: "Bitch!"
[The use of this expletive was unusual in a western. For Pike, elements
in the scene brought back the thought of the earlier scene of Aurora's
death in her bedroom.] The two brothers are the first to be killed.
Pike then takes charge of the machine gun, blowing up boxes of grenades
and explosives to decimate even more of Mapache's army. A young child
in an ill-fitting army uniform fires the first of many fatal shots
into Pike's back at point blank range. He dies still clutching the
gun's trigger with its nose pointed upward, with Dutch calling out
to him and falling by his side to join him in death. In their violent
deaths, they have become liberated.
Images of death and slain bodies surround the compound
- vultures sit in anticipation on the town's walls, and peasant women
in black mourn the fallen where the wounded still move among the
dead. Now that the General's army is no longer a threat, Thornton
and his men ride into the town to take stock of the slaughter. The
vile, 'vulturish' bounty hunters scurry around, picking over the
bodies (searching for boots, gold fillings, and watches), as Thornton
sadly finds the corpse of his once closest friend and mourns his
death. Eyeing Pike's Colt .45 pistol still in its holster (unused),
Thornton claims it for himself - paying homage to the bygone past
by inheriting the talismanic object. The scurvy bounty hunters claim
responsibility for Pike's death:
Look at it. We got 'em all. Do you see? There he
is. There's Pike. You ain't so damn much now, are you, Mr. Pike?
After slinging the bodies of the dead Wild Bunch gang
over their saddles (as Harrigan wanted), the bounty hunters find
Thornton sitting in the blowing dust at the wall (outer gate) of
the town, electing to stay and not return to the U.S. with them.
Exhausted, he feels that his debt to Harrigan has been paid. The
other remaining Mexican survivors of the battle slowly file out of
the town with what they can carry. In the distance, Thornton knowingly
smiles when he hears the echoes of death in the whistling wind -
the revolutionary rebels (or the cavalry that had earlier been on
the train and fired upon the bounty hunters at the bridge) have probably
executed the worthless bounty hunters. A few moments later, a rescued
Sykes rides up with the revolutionaries and elder Don Jose from the
village - they find Thornton still sitting by the wall. Sykes confirms
the fate of the bounty hunters and then asks if Thornton wishes to
search for new adventures:
Sykes: I didn't expect to find you here.
Thornton: Why not? I sent 'em back; that's all I said I'd do.
Sykes: They didn't get very far.
Thornton: I figured.
Sykes: What are your plans?
Thornton: Drift around down here. Try to stay out of jail.
Sykes: Well, me and the boys here, we got some work to do. You wanna
come along? It ain't like it used to be, but, uh, it'll do.
They both laugh - they and the revolutionary Mexican
peasants are rid of their oppressors. Thornton mounts his horse and
decides to ride off with them and join in the Mexican Revolution,
thereby forming a 'new' Wild Bunch with Sykes, one of its original
members. Former 'reincarnated' images of the members of the old Wild
Bunch, when they would sit around together (and engage in laughter
- linking them to Sykes and Thornton), and when they rode away from
Angel's village, flash momentarily onto the screen as the end credits
roll up (accompanied by a reprised chorus of La Golondrina). |