
Garcia is already dead and buried, so the head's not going to be that hard to get, or it wouldn't be if others weren't after it as well. Oates finds the body first, but bad things happen, after which Oates, maddened and enraged, goes on a killing spree unlike almost any other. The usual Peckinpah blood and guts and slo-mo deaths abound. Oates and the head, with which he holds one-sided conversations, go on a road trip. Oates spreads destruction like a crazed avenger, and in the end [SPOILER ALERT] everybody dies [END SPOILER ALERT].
Heads roll, go on road trips, take a shower. Critics hated this movie on its release, as do a lot of people now. Others find it an allegorical dark comedy that's a modern classic. You pays your money and you takes your choice.
6 comments:
Whatever the movie's shortcomings, you just can't deny the pop culture resonance of that title!
One of the great titles, for sure.
I know I have seen it but I can't remember if I liked it or not. I like Warren Oates so maybe I did.
Obviously, I love it.
Great title: I didn't think this movie was one of Peckinpah's better efforts, but the narrative was uniquely original. I suspect with a bigger named star in the role, this could have been a real classic film.
One of Simon Greene's Nightside stories mentions someone selling Alfredo Garcia's head in the titular Nightside, the secret interdimensional pocket in London.
When I read the story I had no idea what that was a reference to, so I had to look it up on the internet. Now I'm curious about the movie.
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