With the stars of the 1969 film, "Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid," Butch (Paul Newman) and Sundance (Robert Redford) repeatedly run into a railroad worker named Woodcock. He is a person who will not allow the pair to get near the safe, which is owned by the railroad company.

In the movie, Butch Cassidy says to Woodcock: "You can't want to get blown up again." Woodcock states: "Butch, you know that if it were my money, there is nobody that I would rather have steal it than you. But, you see, I am still in the employment of E. H. Harriman of the Union Pacific Railroad!"

In light of actions that they take as criminals and robbers some critics and others have called them lovable rogues and iconic outlaws. Some versions of history even make them out to be famous men whose legacy has a firm hold on a good part the American cultural psyche. Butch and Sundance are remembered by many with true fondness. They were seen as underdogs and mavericks who fought against laws that targeted the poor in the country. These two guys were only regarded by a small number with abhorrence for being unrepentant clever criminals.

More Info: en.wikipedia.org