• Summary: It’s been said (but unsubstantiated) that Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid were killed in a standoff with the Bolivian military in 1908. In Blackthorn, Cassidy survived, and is quietly living out his years under the name James Blackthorn in a secluded Bolivian village. Tired of his long exile from the US and hoping to see his family again before he dies, Cassidy sets out on the long journey home. But when an unexpected encounter with an ambitious young criminal derails his plans, he is thrust into one last adventure, the likes of which he hasn’t experienced since his glory days with the Sundance Kid. (Magnolia Pictures) Expand
Score distribution:
  1. Positive: 11 out of 20
  2. Negative: 2 out of 20
  1. Reviewed by: Joe Williams
    Oct 21, 2011
    75
    In place of a rousing adventure, Blackthorn is a haunting ode.
  2. Reviewed by: J.R. Jones
    Oct 13, 2011
    60
    Shepard is the whole show here, as weathered and elemental as the harsh Bolivian locations; the movie's best scenes are those that pit him against Stephen Rea as a former Pinkerton man who tracked the outlaws for years and can't believe Cassidy is still drawing breath.
  3. Reviewed by: Michael O'Sullivan
    Oct 13, 2011
    38
    Blackthorn feels less like a proper sequel to "Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid," which it purports to be, than a coattail rider.

See all 20 Critic Reviews

Score distribution:
  1. Positive: 1 out of 2
  2. Negative: 0 out of 2
  1. 7
    Great movie. Seeing as only a couple westerns in the past decade can even be considered decent, this was a real score. Too bad barely anyone even knows it was made... Expand
    • 0 of 1 users said yes
  2. Butch Cassidy didn’t die! Both he and the Sundance Kid somehow made it out alive at the end of Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid and escaped certain death at the hands of the Bolivian Army. Flash forward 20 years and Butch, now known as James Blackthorn (Sam Shepard), is still in Bolivia and living a quiet life breeding horses and enjoying the scenery. However, James knows it’s time to sell what he has and return home to the U.S. He is not young anymore, heck; he is not even middle aged anymore. There are some people he wants to see back in America but wouldn’t you just know it, now that James is trying to leave, local events unexpectedly descend right on his head and he gets mired in a side quest of money and revenge before he can finally go home. His sidekick this time is Eduardo Apodaca (Eduardo Noriega), a Spanish engineer who just stole a huge sum of money from the regional mining magnate and has not only a large bounty on his head, but a posse of extremely irritated tough guys on his tail. James and Eduardo get tangled up together as only two people can in the middle of nowhere Bolivia and they start working together to get the money and stay alive. But what happened in the 20 years from when we last left Butch Cassidy and what happened to the Sundance Kid? These events are slowly uncovered through flashbacks where young Butch (Nikolaj Coster-Waldau) and Sundance (Padraic Delaney) are first back in the U.S., make their way to Argentina, and finally Bolivia where it somewhat tells how they got out of that tricky business. Also in the flashbacks is a Pinkerton agent, McKinley (Stephen Rea), who chased the two bandits from the U.S. to South America. The Blackthorn screenplay was written by Miguel Barros, his first fiction credit, but could have been written by the Bolivian Tourism Office. Shot in Bolivia, the scenery should garner its own supporting actor credit. The camera lingers of high mountains, lush plains and valleys, winding rivers, and even barren salt flats. Frequently, James will sit down, stare at his surroundings, and mention to whomever he is with at the time just how gorgeous Bolivia is. Directed by Mateo Gil, known more for his writing (The Sea Inside, Open Your Eyes, Vanilla Sky), Blackthorn brought Butch Cassidy back to life, but did it really need to? According to this script, there was no need for a Butch Cassidy sequel right after the 1908 events with the Bolivian Army because Butch didn’t do anything except disappear into the countryside and settle down. Now the camera is back on him because of this Eduardo business. However, the whole mess is so blatantly contrived and small minded that the plot is just an excuse to bring back a very famous character. Also, it has briefly revived the moribund careers of Sam Shepard and Stephen Rea, two talented actors who do not receive very many scripts anymore. Shepard has popped up in very small roles recently in Fair Game and Brothers while Rea was more or less last seen in V for Vendetta and a 2009 episode of Law and Order: Special Victims Unit. It is a shame that not only does the Blackthorn script severely let down its predecessor, but when two aging actors finally get the chance to show they still have what it takes to carry a film, they are saddled with this one. Expand
    • 1 of 1 users said yes

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