Midnight Cowboy

1969

Action / Drama / Western

Plot summary


Uploaded by: FREEMAN

Top cast

Jon Voight Photo
Jon Voight as Joe Buck
Barnard Hughes Photo
Barnard Hughes as Towny
Brenda Vaccaro Photo
Brenda Vaccaro as Shirley
720p.BLU 1080p.BLU
946.6 MB
1280*682
English 2.0
NR
23.976 fps
1 hr 53 min
P/S 2 / 9
1.79 GB
1920*1024
English 2.0
NR
23.976 fps
1 hr 53 min
P/S 3 / 31

Movie Reviews

Reviewed by MartinHafer7 / 10

If you are looking for FUN, then keep looking!

"Midnight Cowboy" is not the sort of film I'd usually watch. I generally avoid films like this and is the first X-rated film I have seen. However, because it won the Oscar for Best Picture and is considered a classic, I decided to give it a try. For others out there who are also hesitant to watch, understand that the film today would receive an R rating, as there really isn't much nudity in the film at all. However, since the film is about a male prostitute, it still isn't what you'd call 'family friendly'!

The film begins with Joe Buck (Jon Voight) leaving his home in Texas. He's headed to New York to make his fortune as a male prostitute. Considering he isn't gay and isn't willing to sleep with guys, that makes his prospects REAL slim. On top of that, he's as dumb as a tomato and walks about town in cowboy gear--hardly the look that will drive women wild (he actually looks a bit like the cowboy from The Village People minus the mustache). Not surprisingly, he goes broke very quickly--partly because no women want to pay him and partly because people keep cheating him because he's so naive. He eventually meets up with a low-life named 'Ratso' Rizzo and the two of them BARELY scrape by--stealing, scamming and living in a condemned building. The film explores themes of fears of homosexuality and rape. It's all very sad and pathetic and isn't at all the sort of film to lift your spirits--particularly the awfully dark ending.

So did I enjoy watching the film? No. It's not the sort of film anyone could actually enjoy. It's more a film that is a joint character study--an unpleasant but oddly fascinating one. It's well made but not a film I could heartily recommend--you have to be the sort of person that would enjoy or at least appreciate the film.

By the way, you might already have noticed that the Muppet character, Rizzo (the rat),is a play on Hoffman's character from this film. Thank goodness they are alike in name only!

Reviewed by TheLittleSongbird10 / 10

Dark, quite poignant and captivating

This movie is a very fine film with a lot of merits. The film does look great, with beautiful scenery and crisp cinematography and the lighting is very atmospheric and always fits perfectly with every scene. The music is wonderful, with the highlight being the excellent Everybody's Talking', the story is very strong focusing on the friendship of the two main characters and well-paced and the dialogue is thought-provoking and poignant. The direction is top notch using every trick in the book and wonderfully and the characters constantly captivate. And this is helped by the magnificent playing of Jon Voight and Dustin Hoffmann, especially Hoffmann who I personally think should have got the Best Actor Oscar that year. Overall, a truly fine film. 10/10 Bethany Cox

Reviewed by bkoganbing9 / 10

"Only The Echoes Of My Mind"

Midnight Cowboy has the dubious distinction of being the first and only X-rated film ever to win the Best Picture Oscar. Then the rules got changed and mere subject matter alone could not qualify a film for an X-rating. Today the sexual subject matter of this film wouldn't get a passing wink, male prostitution's been done quite a bit on the big and small screen.

Through a series of flashbacks we see what's created the character of Joe Buck that Jon Voight plays, living with a rather loose aunt played by Ruth White and finding his true love in Jennifer Salt to be not so true. Women are just sex objects to him, but when he decides to make use of his lovemaking talents in the biggest market of all, New York City, it's Voight who turns out to be the naive one.

Although street character Dustin Hoffman is among many who clip this Texan, later on Hoffman and Voight form an unusual bond. Hoffman's Ratso Rizzo is one veteran of the mean streets of New York, in fact he's lived in them for too long. When Voight and Hoffman meet, they don't know it, but Hoffman's health is beyond repair.

The pitiable Rizzo and the naive country boy Buck form one of the most unusual male bonding attachments ever brought to the screen. Rizzo is latently gay, but what upbringing he's had has told him that was wrong to have these feelings. Rizzo constantly uses the "F" word and rejects any companionship even when it's offered at that Sixties free love party with all kinds of substance aids.

As for Buck, he's gay when he's got to be though he hates it because of his upbringing. Note the scene with Bob Balaban making his screen debut in the movie theater when Buck needs money. And later on he robs Barnard Hughes who plays another self-loathing gay man. Hughes is quite good in the role, he could have been a US Senator he was that good.

Midnight Cowboy won Oscars for Best Picture, Best Director for John Schlesinger, and Best Adapted Screenplay for Waldo Salt. That last one must have been especially sweet for the formerly blacklisted Salt. John Voight and Dustin Hoffman were nominated for Best Actor, but with the competition being the man who put more people in movie seats than anyone else in history John Wayne, these two newbies didn't stand a chance that year. They both got Oscars eventually, but poor Richard Burton who was also up for Anne Of A Thousand Days never got the gold as did Peter O'Toole who was nominated for Goodbye Mr. Chips.

Sylvia Miles was up for Best Supporting Actress as the upper East Side grande dame who polishes off a quickie with Voight and turns the tables on him in the money department. It was Voight's introduction to New York and the scene is just brilliant. It was Miles's career role as an actress although she lost to Goldie Hawn for Cactus Flower. It's the highlight of Midnight Cowboy for me.

Midnight Cowboy coming out as it did in 1969 reflects its times quite accurately. It was the end of the Sixties and the Hippie generation, at the same time it was made just as people were rioting in the streets of Greenwich Village for their rights as GLBT Americans. People like Bob Balaban and Barnard Hughes's characters would no longer be the stereotypical self loathing gay men. Midnight Cowboy maybe even more than Boys In The Band is a glimpse of where we've come from.

It's not a pretty place, nor is Midnight Cowboy a pretty picture. But Jon Voight, that was indeed one beautiful cowboy.

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