It is a Western film directed by Mateo Gil and starring Sam Shepard, Eduardo Noriega, and Stephen Rea.
Written by Miguel Barros, the film is a fictional account of an
aged Butch Cassidy living under
the assumed name James Blackthorn in a secluded village in Bolivia 20
years after his disappearance in 1908.
Initially released in Spain on July 1,
2011, the film was released theatrically in the United States on October 7, 2011.
PLOT
Twenty years after his disappearance in 1908, an aged Butch Cassidy (Sam Shepard), living under the assumed name James Blackthorn in a secluded village in Bolivia, decides to end his long exile and return to the United States after learning of the death of Etta Place. He writes to her son, Ryan, who is in fact his own son, telling him he intends to return. After years of raising horses and living a solitary life, Blackthorn sets off for Potosí to sell his horses. He tells his lover, Yana (Magaly Solier), that he will see her again before leavingBolivia .
Twenty years after his disappearance in 1908, an aged Butch Cassidy (Sam Shepard), living under the assumed name James Blackthorn in a secluded village in Bolivia, decides to end his long exile and return to the United States after learning of the death of Etta Place. He writes to her son, Ryan, who is in fact his own son, telling him he intends to return. After years of raising horses and living a solitary life, Blackthorn sets off for Potosí to sell his horses. He tells his lover, Yana (Magaly Solier), that he will see her again before leaving
At
Potosí, Blackthorn withdraws his savings from the bank, sells his horses, and
then heads back to his village. Along the way, he is ambushed and nearly
killed. He shoots his attacker, but not before Blackthorn's horse, Cinco, bolts
off with his money. The shooter is Eduardo Apodaca (Eduardo Noriega), a Spaniard mining engineer who claims
he was shooting at pursuers. He begs Blackthorn to save him, and offers to share
part of the $50,000 he stole from Simón Patiño, a powerful Bolivian industrialist and mine
owner. The money is hidden in an abandoned mine,
and he will compensate Blackthorn for his help.
Blackthorn and the Spaniard set
out across the desert plateau with Patiño's posse within a day's pursuit. They
reach the abandoned mine and find the money, but the posse catches up with
them. Following a shootout, Blackthorn and the Spaniard escape with the money.
They
make their way to Blackthorn's cabin, where the famous outlaw remembers his old friendships with the Sundance Kid and Etta Place , and how they escaped from
Pinkerton Detective Mackinley (Stephen Rea). Yana
joins the men at the cabin, and Blackthorn gives her a pocket watch he won in a
card game. At first she rejects it as a "gringo machine", but then
accepts the gift as something to remember him by. Despite his asking her to
spend one last night with him, she advises she must return to her own family. Later
that night, Yana returns to the cabin to stay
with Blackthorn on his last night before leaving.
The next morning, two female
members of the posse come to the cabin looking for the Spaniard, and in the
ensuing gunfight, Blackthorn is wounded, and Yana
is killed. A heartbroken Blackthorn and the Spaniard leave with the rest of the
posse not far behind. They set out across the Uyuni salt flats, hoping to reach
the coast where Blackthorn can find a boat to take him home. Halfway across,
the posse catches up to them, but Blackthorn and the Spaniard split up and are
able to kill their pursuers and escape.
When he reaches Tupiza, Blackthorn is treated by a
doctor, who notifies former Pinkerton Detective Mackinley—now living a quiet
life in Bolivia —of
his famous patient. Mackinley confirms the man's identity. For years Mackinley
claimed that the two bandits killed at San Vincente were not Butch Cassidy and
the Sundance Kid, and now he will finally be proven correct. But after
initially notifying the Bolivian army of the discovered outlaw, Mackinley
changes his mind, returns Blackthorn's pistol, and helps him escape. When
Mackinley later discovers that Blackthorn was involved with the Spaniard, he
reveals the truth to him about the Spaniard and his pursuers. Apparently, the
$50,000 the Spaniard stole was not from the powerful mine owner, Patiño, but
from the mining families who recently took control of the mines. The Spaniard
stole the money from "the people"—something Butch Cassidy would never
have done. Although disgusted with Blackthorn's involvement, Mackinley does not
betray him.
In flashbacks to those days when
he and the Sundance Kid rode together, he recalls how his partner, being wounded
and near death, asks for Butch to "do it," and so Butch regretfully
and lovingly takes the life of his best friend.
In the present, Blackthorn,
distressed, tracks the Spaniard into the Andes, with the Bolivian army not far
behind. When Blackthorn catches up with him and confronts him with the truth,
the Spaniard does not deny it, saying the money he stole was indeed from the
mine owners—just "different owners." Blackthorn shoots the Spaniard
in the leg and leaves him and the money for the Bolivian army, who soon arrive
and kill the thief. The soldiers continue on with Mackinley until they reach a
notoriously barren region, at which point the army commander leaves the
detective alone and without a horse, as punishment for helping Blackthorn
escape.
In the closing scene, Blackthorn,
remembering his life and friends in better days, is last seen looking back over
his shoulder and presumably escaping across the mountains.
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