The Getaway (1994) ✔
Doc McCoy is rotting in a Mexican prison. To get him out, Carol strikes a deal with the corrupt Jack Benyon (James Woods).
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: The Getaway (1994)
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. Doc McCoy is rotting in a Mexican prison
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 Baldwin plays Doc McCoy with a more volatile,
Directed by Roger Donaldson, the film leans heavily into the real-life chemistry of its then-married leads, and Kim Basinger , creating a version of the story that feels less like a desperate crawl for survival and more like a high-stakes, stylish odyssey. A Different Kind of Grit
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.