Burt Reynolds stars as a cowboy who inadvertently winds up taking Sarah Miles hostage during a train robbery. She’s on the run from her boring husband and is eager for a little excitement. They eventually have to contend with the members of Reynolds’ crew who all want to hump her. After ditching those mofos, Burt and Sarah predictably fall in love and try to start a life together; that is if an angry posse lets them. —TheVideoVacuum
Richard C. Sarafian (born 28 April 1930) is an Armenian-American TV and film director. Richard Sarafian has complied a versatile career that has spanned over five decades as a director, actor and writer. He is also the director of the film Vanishing Point (1971). He is the father of: Richard Sarafian Jr., Tedi Sarafian, Damon B. Sarafian, and Deran Sarafian. —Wikipedia
A film that left me puzzled. Sarafian leads us somewhere then changes direction and starts to lead us elsewhere. And, at the end of the film, we are left in the middle of nowhere. So, as I'm a hopeless optimist and as I don't like to get lost, here are a few clues that will maybe make you want to discover this movie: Burt Reynolds's initiation journey that reminded me of Richard Harris' in Man in the Wilderness, Sarah Miles riding in the desert with an umbrella, her slow transformation into a Cat Dancing's ghost, Sarafian's depiction of American Indians, Bo Hopkins's agony and death and the photography of the countryside. A DVD zone let's see it again.