James Woods and Michael Madsen provide a masterclass in 90s villainy. Madsen, in particular, serves as the dark mirror to Doc—a man with no code and no attachments.
It captures that specific "New Hollywood" transition where action movies were becoming more refined, utilizing orchestral swells and moody lighting to elevate B-movie material. The Getaway (1994)
At its heart, The Getaway is a cynical exploration of trust. In the world of Thompson's fiction, everyone is a predator. The film thrives on the friction between Doc and Carol; Doc is haunted by the knowledge of what Carol had to do (with Benyon) to secure his release. Their journey to "El Paso" is as much a psychological battle to save their marriage as it is a physical run for the border. Why it Holds Up (And Why it Doesn’t) James Woods and Michael Madsen provide a masterclass
The 1994 Getaway is a competent, sexy, and violent crime caper. It may not reinvent the wheel, but it services the "lovers on the run" trope with enough star power and visceral action to remain a solid entry in the annals of modern noir. It’s a film about the heavy price of freedom and the realization that, in the criminal world, the only thing more dangerous than your enemies is your partner. At its heart, The Getaway is a cynical exploration of trust
While the 1972 original was defined by Steve McQueen’s stoicism and the dusty, sun-bleached nihilism of the 70s, the 1994 version is bathed in the polished shadows of 90s cinematography. Baldwin plays Doc McCoy with a more volatile, verbal intensity than McQueen, while Basinger’s Carol McCoy is given slightly more agency, evolving from a pawn in a criminal game to a partner who is equally capable of pulling the trigger. The Plot: Honor Among Thieves The core remains a classic heist-gone-wrong setup:
It inevitably suffers when compared to the Peckinpah version. It lacks the groundbreaking editing and the "desert-soul" atmosphere that made the original a landmark of the genre. Final Verdict