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Sam Peckinpah

Sam Peckinpah

Birthday: 21 February 1925, Fresno, California, USA
Birth Name: David Edward Samuel Ernest Peckinpah Jr.
Height: 175 cm

"If they move", commands stern-eyed William Holden, "kill 'em". So begins The Wild Bunch (1969), Sam Peckinpah's bloody, high-body-count eulogy to the mythologized Old We ...Show More

Sam Peckinpah
[on Kris Kristofferson] I like Kris because he writes poetry and he's a fucking good man. Working wi Show more [on Kris Kristofferson] I like Kris because he writes poetry and he's a fucking good man. Working with Kris on Pat Garrett & Billy the Kid (1973) was one of the great experiences of my life. Hide
[recalling how close 1963's _"The Dick Powell Theatre" (1961) {The Losers (#2.16)}_ came to becoming Show more [recalling how close 1963's _"The Dick Powell Theatre" (1961) {The Losers (#2.16)}_ came to becoming a series] "The Losers" was a funny show. We had Keenan Wynn and Lee Marvin locked up for a series with it until Tom McDermott wouldn't pay Lee's price. Well, after the show continued to draw a large segment of the audience around the sixth time out, McDermott called Lee and raised the ante to something like a million dollars and Lee told him to go stick it up his ass! I've always liked Lee for that--it cost me a lot of money at the time but I would've done the same thing in Lee's place. Hide
[on how screenwriting allowed him to become a director] Yeah, but it was hell, because I hate writin Show more [on how screenwriting allowed him to become a director] Yeah, but it was hell, because I hate writing. I suffer the tortures of the damned. I can't sleep and it feels like I'm going to die any minute. Eventually, I lock myself away somewhere, out of reach of a gun, and get it on in one big push. I'd always been around writers and had friends who were writers, but I'd never realized what a lot of goddamned anguish is involved. But it was a way to break in. I paid my dues in this business. I was a go fer, a stagehand. I swept studios and I watch a few good people work. The I started writing and finally selling TV scripts. And after a while I decided to try my hand at movies. I always had two or three projects going at a time. I'd put everything into them and I'd sell a few and then they'd disappear. Hide
The end of a picture is always an end of a life. The end of a picture is always an end of a life.
[Discussing the protagonist of his series, The Westerner (1960)] I wanted to create a truly realisti Show more [Discussing the protagonist of his series, The Westerner (1960)] I wanted to create a truly realistic saddle bum of the west. I wanted to make him as honest and real as I could do it. I drew him unlettered--most of these guys couldn't read or write. Not too bright. Certainly unheroic. I know cowboys. I grew up on a cattle ranch--in Merced County [California]. I wanted to draw a real one. No hero, no lawman, no bounty--a real saddle tramp. That's what Dave Blassingame is--a saddle tramp. Sure, sometimes he gets into funny situations--like in "Libby". Sometimes he tries to be a hero, like in "Jeff", tries to rescue a girl from a lousy life and the bum she's in love with. But he fails because he's not cut from any heroic mold. Hide
The whole underside of our society has always been violence and still is. Churches, laws--everybody Show more The whole underside of our society has always been violence and still is. Churches, laws--everybody seems to think that man is a noble savage. But he's only an animal. A meat-eating, talking animal. Recognize it. He also has grace and love and beauty. But don't say to me we're not violent. Hide
[on R.G. Armstrong] R.G. Armstrong played righteous villainy better than anybody I've ever seen. [on R.G. Armstrong] R.G. Armstrong played righteous villainy better than anybody I've ever seen.
There is a great streak of violence in every human being. If it is not channeled and understood, it Show more There is a great streak of violence in every human being. If it is not channeled and understood, it will break out in war or in madness. Hide
I want to be able to make westerns like [Akira Kurosawa] makes westerns. I want to be able to make westerns like [Akira Kurosawa] makes westerns.
[interview in Le Devoir, 10/12/74] I don't want to hear it said that I don't like women! I tried to Show more [interview in Le Devoir, 10/12/74] I don't want to hear it said that I don't like women! I tried to show in [Bring Me the Head of Alfredo Garcia (1974)] that I adore them. They represent the positive pole of the film, the life force and instinct. Hide
[on his departure from The Rifleman (1958)] I walked from the series because Jules V. Levy and that Show more [on his departure from The Rifleman (1958)] I walked from the series because Jules V. Levy and that group had taken over my initial concept and perverted it into pap. They wouldn't let [Johnny Crawford] grow up; they refused to let it be the story of a boy who grows to manhood learning what it's all about. Hide
[Responding to critics of his films as being too violent] Well, killing a man isn't clean and quick Show more [Responding to critics of his films as being too violent] Well, killing a man isn't clean and quick and simple. It's bloody and awful. And maybe if enough people come to realize that shooting somebody isn't just fun and games, maybe we'll get somewhere. Hide
[on Four Star Productions, Dick Powell, and the genesis of The Rifleman (1958)] I did this one scrip Show more [on Four Star Productions, Dick Powell, and the genesis of The Rifleman (1958)] I did this one script for Gunsmoke (1955) that Charles Marquis Warren turned down--said it was a piece of shit! I knew it was one of the best things I'd written, so I took it back and reworked it and Dick Powell at Four Star bought it as a pilot for "The Rifleman". Dick Powell was really a fine gentleman and the eagle behind Four Star's success; he helped me a great deal. I didn't direct the first "Rifleman"; Arnold Laven did that. I just wrote it. I did direct four of them before I left, however. The first one I directed I also wrote, called "The Marshal" [The Rifleman: The Marshal (1958)]. It was the episode that brought in Paul Fix as the reformed drunk who became the marshal--a part he played for five years. Hide
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