| Front Cover |
Actor |
Back Cover |
|
| Emilio Estevez |
William H. Bonney
|
| Kiefer Sutherland |
Josiah Gordon Scurlock
|
| Lou Diamond Phillips |
Jose Chavez y Chavez
|
| Charlie Sheen |
Richard Brewer
|
| Dermot Mulroney |
Dirty Steve Stephens
|
| Casey Siemaszko |
Charley Bowdre
|
| Terry O'Quinn |
Alex McSween
|
| Jack Palance |
Lawrence G. Murphy
|
| Terence Stamp |
John Tunstall
|
| Sharon Thomas |
Susan McSween
|
|
|
|
| Movie Details |
| Genre |
Western; Action |
| Director |
Christopher Cain |
| Producer |
Christopher Cain; Joe Roth; John Fusco |
| Writer |
John Fusco |
| Photography |
Dean Semler |
| Musician |
Brian Banks; Anthony Marinelli |
| Studio |
Artisan |
|
| Language |
English |
| Audience Rating |
R (Restricted) |
| Running Time |
102 mins |
| Country |
USA |
| Color |
Color |
| IMDb Rating |
6.5 |
|
| Plot |
| Part of what was touted as a late-1980s revival of Westerns (and you can see how long that lasted), this good-looking, empty-brained film was like a spurs-and-chaps version of a Joel Schumacher movie, filled with pretty faces, prettier imagery, and absolutely no new ideas. The idiotically grinning Emilio Estevez is cast as Billy the Kid, who slowly accumulates a gang of Brat Pack buddies (Lou Diamond Phillips, Kiefer Sutherland, Dermot Mulroney) and fashions them into a group of male models with six-guns. The action is confused and the script is trite, though Terence Stamp is intriguing as the old reprobate who helps the gang get its act together. Followed by an even worse sequel. --Marshall Fine |
|
|
| Product Details |
| Format |
DVD |
| Region |
Region 1 |
| Screen Ratio |
Fullscreen (4:3, Letterboxed) |
| Layers |
Single Side, Single Layer |
| UPC (Barcode) |
028485114289 |
| Release Date |
10/23/2001 |
| Subtitles |
English (Closed Captioned) |
| Packaging |
Snap Case |
| Audio Tracks |
Dolby Surround [English] |
| Nr of Disks/Tapes |
1 |
|
|
Extra Features
|
| Closed-captioned Dolby Widescreen Color |
|