Frank's Movie Log

Movie Reviews and commentary from a guy who loves movies.

The Reivers (1969)

Grade: D+

The Reivers (1969) Poster

Synopsis: In turn-of-the-century Mississippi, a young boy steals his father’s car for a road trip with two scoundrels (Steve McQueen and Rupert Crosse).

The Reivers is a supremely well produced coming of age story that just doesn’t work.

Part of the problem is the tone. The film flip-flops between outright farce and serious drama, but never finds its footing. The comedy seems forced and over the top while the drama seems out of place and almost off-putting, like the scene where one young boy pulls a knife on another in a fight. For a film that had, to a large degree, felt like a Disney family film up to this point, it’s a somewhat jarring image.

The other problem is the cast. While he would have been perfect ten years earlier, McQueen, now pushing forty, simply looks too old for his role, as does Rupert Crosse. Both men give fine performances, but, as middle-aged men acting so ridiculous, seem almost creepy, as opposed to loveable rascals.

That said, The Reivers is a triumph of production design in its perfect recreation of the early 1900’s south. It’s a completely realized world and while there’s certainly some entertainment in simply enjoying the details, unfortunately it’s not enough to justify the 107-minute running time.

—Last viewed on Monday, June 9th 2008

“The Reivers (1969)” was posted on July 18th, 2008 at 3:07 pm in Movie Reviews and Steve McQueen. View this film's entry in the IMDb.

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