The Getaway (1994 film)

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The Getaway

Theatrical release poster
Directed by Roger Donaldson
Produced by David Foster
John Alan Simon
Lawrence Turman
Written by Jim Thompson (novel)
Walter Hill
Amy Jones
Starring Alec Baldwin
Kim Basinger
Music by Mark Isham
Cinematography Peter Menzies Jr.
Editing by Conrad Buff
Distributed by Universal Pictures (USA)
Release date(s) 1994
Running time 115 min.
Country U.S.
Language English

The Getaway is a 1994 remake of the 1972 film starring Steve McQueen. The movie stars Alec Baldwin, Kim Basinger, Michael Madsen, Philip Seymour Hoffman, Jennifer Tilly and James Woods. The film was directed by Roger Donaldson, who also directed The Recruit, Thirteen Days, Dante's Peak, and Species.

Contents

[edit] Plot summary

Married couple Doc (Baldwin) and Carol (Basinger) McCoy drink beer and shoot at empty tin cans in the desert. Carol tries out several handguns and decides she prefers the bigger .45 caliber autoloader. Rudy (Madsen) arrives on a motorcycle and proposes the three break a fourth person out of jail in order to gain a $300,000 payment, (which the three would ostensibly split between them). The job turns out to be a doublecross, however, and for the remainder of the film, the McCoys are on the run from the mob boss who got McCoy out of jail, Travis, and the law.

This film is a remake of The Getaway (1972 film). Some character names and locations are changed. The writers and producers did not make this version of the film more faithful to Jim Thompson's novel than Sam Peckinpah's 1972 version; the 'El Rey' ending from the novel was not included in this film.

[edit] Selected cast

[edit] Filming locations

The film is a criminal road trip movie taking the couple across the American southwest. Locations in the script include Phoenix, Flagstaff, Arizona, New Mexico and border town El Paso, Texas. Standing in for these communities, the film was actually shot in Yuma, Phoenix, and Prescott, Arizona. An exterior, establishing shot for one scene is believed to have been filmed in San Luis del Río, Sonora, Mexico. The location portrayed as the Border Hotel in El Paso is believed to be in Yuma, Arizona.


[edit] Continuity errors

  • In an early scene at the Border Hotel, a character puts the barrel of a loaded revolver into hotelier Gollie's mouth and cocks the hammer of the revolver. After a cut four seconds later, the hammer is no longer cocked.
  • Elevators that move up and down the hoistway on a cable are called overhead traction elevators. Since the early 1900s, elevators have had safety devices that prevent the elevator car from plummeting down the hoistway if the cable breaks.
  • The wrong starter sound is used for the Forest-Service-green, Club-Cab Dodge pickup seen in the last ten minutes of the film. 1960s Dodge starter motors have a unique sound.

[edit] Ratings

  • This version of the film was given an R rating in theaters and later unrated on home video. The original was rated PG and later re-rated R.

[edit] Trivia

[edit] External links

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