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The Newton Boys (1998)

6.1 | Mar 26, 1998 (US) | Crime, Action, Drama | 02:02
Budget: 27 000 000 | Revenue: 10 452 012

History is about to catch up with America's most successful bank robbers.

The four Newton brothers are a poor farmer family in the 1920s. One day, the eldest, Willis, realizes that there's no future in the fields and offers his brothers to become bank robbers. Soon, they gain notoriety and, five years later, execute the greatest train robbery in American history.

Featured Crew

Director, Screenplay
Production Design
Stunts
Sound Re-Recording Mixer
Stunts
Stunts
Casting
Stunts
Screenplay

Cast

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Matthew McConaughey
Willis Newton
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Skeet Ulrich
Joe Newton
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Ethan Hawke
Jess Newton
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Vincent D'Onofrio
Dock Newton
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Dwight Yoakam
Brentwood Glasscock
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Gail Cronauer
Mia Newton
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Julianna Margulies
Louise Brown
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Jena Karam
Orphan Singer
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Casey McAuliffe
Orphan Singer
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Regina Mae Matthews
Orphan Fiddler

Reviews

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CinemaSerf
6 | Jun 02, 2022
Richard Linklater has tried hard with his cast here, but somehow this tale of the real life Newton gang whose criminal career culminated in one of America's most infamous train robberies just doesn't catch fire - at all. Matthew McConaughey (Willis) leads his brothers Jess (Ethan Hawke), Joe (Sweet Ulrich) and the scene stealing Vincent D'Onofrio (Dock) as the young men conclude - with the complicity of their mother (Gail Cronauer) that they don't need to live in rural penury for ever, and that with some meticulous planning they can accrue a considerable fortune without harming anyone but by robbing the railroad. Sadly, though, the actors don't really gel - they are four men who seem to be vying for screen time as much as anything else; there is little evidence of a team on screen which rather belies the truth about why this gang were at all successful. It does move a long apace, though - there is plenty of gun action and some fun pyrotechnics as their antics gain momentum and their targets become bigger. Historically, the ending is quite interesting - and I think quite suitable, though I very much doubt the railroad saw it that way. It's watchable, the production is fine and the dialogue is quite lively at times, but in the end, the sum of the parts just doesn't make for much of an whole. Disappointing.