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Young Guns

 
Movies:

Young Guns

  • Director: Christopher Cain
  • AMG Rating: starstar
  • Genre: Western
  • Movie Type: Outlaw (Gunfighter) Film
  • Themes: Sheriffs and Outlaws, Vigilantes
  • Main Cast: Emilio Estevez, Kiefer Sutherland, Lou Diamond Phillips, Charlie Sheen, Dermot Mulroney, Jack Palance
  • Release Year: 1988
  • Country: US
  • Run Time: 107 minutes
  • MPAA Rating: R

Plot

In this Western based loosely on actual events and people, Emilio Estevez stars as William H. Bonney (aka Billy the Kid). Sought for a petty crime in Lincoln County, Billy is taken in by John Tunstall (Terrence Stamp), a British ranch owner seeking to make it in the cattle business. Tunstall employs a group of "regulators," comprised of wayward youths he's gathered over the years, to watch over his ranch; in turn, he teaches them how to read and reforms them into better men. Tunstall's business interests come into conflict with those of corrupt and murderous businessman Lawrence Murphy (Jack Palance), whose widespread connections make him a power to be reckoned with. When Tunstall won't budge from his right to pursue a living, Murphy's henchmen stage an ambush and kill him. This triggers a vow of vengeance from the quick-tempered Billy and his five fellow regulators, who are deputized to serve arrest warrants in the murder. However, when Billy decides to gun down the suspects instead of detaining them, his loyal pals become accessories in a vigilante spree to wipe the territory clean of Murphy and his web of conspirators. Soon, the supposed lawmen are on the run from bounty hunters, henchmen, and government soldiers, from all directions of the compass. This box-office hit also stars Charlie Sheen, Kiefer Sutherland, Lou Diamond Phillips, Dermot Mulroney, and Casey Siemaszko. ~ Derek Armstrong, All Movie Guide

Review

Young Guns was surprisingly successful at taking a rusty genre, the Western, and making it accessible and interesting to the Brat Pack generation. The result is a popcorn film popular enough to have spawned a sequel two years later, yet not good enough to land on many lists of favorite Westerns. Still, it's not as conventional as one might expect. For starters, Emilio Estevez's Billy the Kid is far more gleefully sadistic than most other Western antiheroes get to be, especially those designed for the consumption of teenagers. The film also features a narratively unimportant yet strangely fascinating sequence in which the characters trip on peyote, complete with vomit, dangerously aimless shotgun blasts, and an underwater-sounding audio track that seems like an experimental coup on the part of director Christopher Cain. Add in the premature death of one of the film's biggest stars, and Young Guns is not as easy to telegraph as it should be. Still, it's not as exciting as it should be, either -- the climactic set piece is the only sustained gun battle, and it gets resolved extremely improbably. While the back stories of the key characters are meant to give them soul, they are clumsily handled, particularly Kiefer Sutherland's tacked-on affair with a Chinese girl enslaved by his enemy. Young Guns has a certain comforting familiarity to its target audience, but not much of a following beyond that. ~ Derek Armstrong, All Movie Guide

Cast

Casey Siemaszko - Charley Bowdre; Terence Stamp - John Henry Tunstall; Terry O'Quinn - Alex McSween; Sharon Thomas - Susan McSween; Geoffrey Blake - J. McCloskey; Alice Carter - Yen Sun; Brian Keith - Buckshot Roberts; Tom Callaway - Texas Joe Grant; Patrick Wayne - Pat Garrett; Lisa Banes - Mallory; Victor Izay - Justice Wilson; Allen Keller - John Kinney; Cody Palance - Baker; Randy Travis - Ring Member; Jeff Prettyman - Judge Bristol; Forrest Broadley - Rynerson; Loyd Lee Brown - Soldier; Craig M. Erikson - Peppin; Gadeek - Henry Hill; Sam Gauny - Morton; Joey Hanks - Hindman; Gary Kanin - Col. Duoley; Daniel Karmin - Sheriff Brady; Pat Lee - Janey; Jeremy H. Lepard - Jimmy Dolan; Elena Parres - Manuela's Mother; Richela Renkun - Bar Girl; Alan Tobin - Bartender

Credit

Harold Thrasher - Art Director, Penny Perry - Casting, Christopher Cain - Co-producer, Joe Roth - Co-producer, Paul Schiff - Co-producer, Irby Smith - Co-producer, Richard Hornung - Costume Designer, Richard Von Ernst - Costume Designer, Christopher Cain - Director, Jack Hofstra - Editor, John Fusco - Executive Producer, James G. Robinson - Executive Producer, Brian Banks - Composer (Music Score), Anthony Marinelli - Composer (Music Score), Karoly Balazs - Makeup, Jane Musky - Production Designer, Harold Thrasher - Production Designer, Dean Semler - Cinematographer, James G. Robinson - Producer, Robert Kracik - Set Designer, Joe Quinlivan - Special Effects, Carey Lindley - Sound/Sound Designer, Michael Minkler - Sound/Sound Designer, Wylie Stateman - Sound/Sound Designer, Everett Creach - Stunts, John Fusco - Screenwriter, Louis Garfinkle - Screenwriter

Similar Movies

Butch and Sundance: The Early Days; The Long Riders; Billy the Kid; The Three Musketeers; The Parson and the Outlaw; Bad Girls; The Newton Boys; Texas Rangers; American Outlaws; Gang of Roses; Posse
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Young Guns

Young Guns movie poster
Directed by Christopher Cain
Produced by Christopher Cain
Joe Roth
Written by John Fusco
Starring Emilio Estevez
Kiefer Sutherland
Lou Diamond Phillips
Charlie Sheen
Dermot Mulroney
Casey Siemaszko
Jack Palance
Terence Stamp
Terry O'Quinn
Music by Brian Banks
Anthony Marinelli
Cinematography Dean Semler
Editing by Jack Hofstra
Studio Morgan Creek Productions
Distributed by 20th Century Fox (U.S. and Canada)
Vestron Pictures (outside North America)
Lionsgate (current distributor for all media except television)
Warner Bros. Television (domestic television distribution)
Release date(s) August 12, 1988
Running time 107 minutes
Country United States
Language English
Budget $13,000,000
Gross revenue $45,661,556 (domestic)
Followed by Young Guns II

Young Guns is a 1988 action/western film, directed by Christopher Cain and written by John Fusco. The film stars Emilio Estevez, Kiefer Sutherland, Lou Diamond Phillips, Charlie Sheen, Dermot Mulroney, Casey Siemaszko, Terence Stamp, Terry O'Quinn, Brian Keith, and Jack Palance.

Young Guns is a fictionalized retelling of the adventures of Billy the Kid during the Lincoln County War, which took place in New Mexico during 1877–1878. It was filmed in and around Los Cerrillos, New Mexico. A sequel, Young Guns II was released in 1990.

Contents

Plot

John Tunstall (Terence Stamp), an educated Englishman and cattle rancher in Lincoln County, New Mexico, hires wayward young gun men to live and work on his ranch. Tunstall is in heavy competition with another well-connected rancher named Murphy (Jack Palance) and their men clash on a regular basis. Tunstall recruits Billy (Estevez) and advises him to renounce violence saying that "He who sows the wind will reap the whirlwind." Tensions escalate between the two camps, resulting in the murder of Tunstall. Billy, Doc (Kiefer Sutherland), Chavez (Lou Diamond Phillips), Dick (Charlie Sheen), Dirty Steve (Dermot Mulroney), and Charlie (Casey Siemaszko), consult their lawyer friend Alex (Terry O'Quinn), who manages to get them deputized and given warrants for the arrest of Murphy's murderous henchmen.

Billy quickly challenges Dick's authority as leader, vowing revenge against Murphy and the men responsible for killing Tunstall. The men call themselves "The Regulators" and arrest some of the murderers, but hot-headed Billy is unable to wait for justice. He guns down unarmed men and goes on to kill one of his fellow Regulators in the paranoid (but correct) belief that he was still in league with Murphy. The men are stripped of their badges, which they find out about by reading a newspaper. That same paper also confuses Dick for Billy, showing a picture of Dick labeled "Billy the Kid," a nickname to which Billy takes an immediate liking.

While the local authorities begin their hunt for Billy and the boys, The Regulators argue about continuing with their warrants or to go on the run. One of the men on their list of warrants tracks them down, barricades himself in an outhouse, and Dick dies in an intense shootout. Billy appoints himself as the new leader, the gang becomes famous and the U.S. Army is charged with bringing them to justice under Murphy's corrupt political influence.

The gang eludes attention for some time, but is tracked down and trapped while in the home of their lawyer on the main street of Lincoln, New Mexico. Another intense shootout begins as the authorities enter the house. Billy once again shows his shooting prowess by first calling out one of the besiegers by name, then killing him with a snap long-range gunshot out the window that should have been impossible with a handgun. A ceasefire is called for the night, but the battle continues the next morning when the Army rolls in, accompanied by Murphy. They torch the house and Chavez runs out the back of the house, causing Steve to assert that he has deserted the gang. As the house begins to burn down, the men come up with an escape plan. They begin throwing the possessions of Alex, their lawyer, out the windows of the second floor. Billy places himself inside of a large trunk, and when it lands in front of the house, he takes his opponents by surprise when he leaps out and begins to open fire.

Almost at the same time, Doc bursts out of the stairway leading to the top floor with guns blazing, followed by Charlie and Steve. As all the men make it to the lawn, Billy is shot twice in his arms. Charlie challenges the bounty hunter John Kinney (Allen Keller); Kinney shoots Charlie and Charlie fires back. Charlie kills Kinney, but in the process takes a few more bullets and dies.

Chavez takes the Army by surprise. Screaming "Regulators!", he rides in leading horses for the others. He comes from behind the army and jumps their barricade to get his extra horses to the surviving Regulators. Billy jumps on one horse as Doc gets on the other. Doc is shot as his girlfriend Yen Sun (Alice Carter), Murphy's Chinese sex-slave, screams; he rides over to her and picks her up, and they ride off. Chavez tries to get Steve on a horse, but is wounded and falls to the ground. Steve helps Chavez mount a horse and sends the horse off so Chavez can escape, but is then left without a horse and unarmed. He is shot multiple times by the Army and Murphy's men. He falls into a dirty puddle, dead.

Alex cheers on the boys as they ride away. The army opens fire on him with a Gatling gun and he is killed. As the remaining men ride away, Murphy hurls threats and curses after them, but is stunned when Billy turns back, beyond gunshot range of most normal men. Saying, "Reap it Murphy, you sonuvabitch," he makes another impossible long-range pistol shot, shooting Murphy right between the eyes.

The final scene is a voice over of Doc explaining what happened afterward. In Doc's explanation, he includes that Alex's widow caused a congressional investigation into the Lincoln County War. Chavez took work at a farm in California; Doc moved east to New York and married Yen Sun, whom he had saved from Murphy; and Billy continued to ride until he was gunned down by Pat Garrett, who in this film is shown as barely knowing Billy. Billy was buried next to Charlie Bowdre at Fort Sumner. A stranger went to the grave of Billy the Kid late at night and made a carving into the headstone. The epitaph read only one word: "PALS."

Cast

Availability and rights issues

Once the film was released on home video, Fox surrendered its North American rights to Vestron Pictures and Video. Today, Lionsgate (Vestron's successor company) owns full rights to the movie except domestic television distribution, which under contract is handled by Warner Bros.

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Movies. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Movie Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Young Guns" Read more

 

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