I'm surprised the rating is so high. Don't get me wrong: Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid is one of my all-time favorite movies. But it's going through a revisionist-criticism phase and it has taken quite a beating. It's on the downalator on the AFI Top 100, dropping 23 places between 1997 and 2007. It won't be on the next version of the AFI Top 100.
The minority view in 1969 when this movie was released—that Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid wasn't much of a western next to, say, Red River or even its contemporary, The Wild Bunch—has in the past twenty years become the zeitgeist. Roger Ebert gave Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid 2½ stars in 1969 and called it a "turkey" on a 1990 TV episode of "Siskel & Ebert." In his written review for the Chicago Sun-Times he takes particular issue with the "unbelievable dialogue" at the end of the movie.
I could listen to that dialogue every day for the rest of my life. I don't care whether the dialogue at the movie's end is unbelievable. It's hilarious. Of course it's unbelievable. It's supposed to be a comedic moment and, of course, in real life (assuming a scene like this occurred) there was nothing funny going on. So what?
The Wild Bunch almost certainly has real dialogue. I imagine soldiers, mercenaries, low-lifes, and cowpokes really talked that way in the early 20th century. But real or not, that dialogue is unlistentoable most of the time. I can watch The Wild Bunch with the sound off. But with the sound on it's a turkey. Give me Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid any day.
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