John Schlesinger’s Midnight Cowboy (1969) is often remembered as a landmark of the New Hollywood era—an unflinching portrait of urban alienation, poverty, and queer subtext, all set to the haunting strains of Harry Nilsson’s “Everybody’s Talkin’.” Yet beneath its gritty surface, the film offers a profound meditation on a central paradox: in a hyper-connected, performance-driven society, genuine human connection becomes both the most desperate need and the most elusive goal. Through the unlikely partnership of Joe Buck (Jon Voight), a naive Texan dreaming of becoming a male prostitute, and “Ratso” Rizzo (Dustin Hoffman), a sickly, limping con man, Midnight Cowboy deconstructs the myth of the American Dream as a solitary pursuit, arguing instead that identity itself is forged in the messy, transactional, and ultimately redemptive space between performance and authenticity.
It is here that Ratso Rizzo enters, the film’s scabrous, coughing conscience. Ratso is Joe’s mirror and his inverse: where Joe is physically magnificent but psychologically vulnerable, Ratso is physically broken but sharp-tongued and cunning. Their first “connection” is a con: Ratso pretends to know a pimp, steals Joe’s money, and disappears. Yet the film refuses to let this transaction remain simple. When Joe later confronts Ratso in a squalid, condemned apartment, something unexpected occurs. Instead of violence, there is recognition. Ratso, shivering under a pile of coats, offers a rationale for his betrayal: “Everybody got somebody. Nobody got nobody. It ain’t easy.” In this line, Schlesinger and screenwriter Waldo Salt distill the film’s moral universe. New York is not a city of villains but of the desperate, each clawing for a foothold in a system that rewards only the pretense of success. Midnight Cowboy
The film’s devastating final act unfolds on the road to Miami—itself a symbol of the failed American Dream of sunshine, health, and reinvention. On the bus, Ratso’s health collapses completely. In the most tender and tragic scene, Joe talks to him about Florida, describing a paradise he does not truly believe in, as Ratso drifts in and out of consciousness. “I’m walkin’ here,” Joe whispers, echoing Ratso’s own earlier line from a flashback, now transformed from a joke into a plea for existence. When the bus arrives and Joe realizes Ratso has died in his arms, he does not scream or weep theatrically. He simply holds him for a moment longer, then steps off the bus into the garish Florida sunlight. The final shot, a close-up of Joe’s face as he walks toward the camera, is empty and searching. He has lost the only person who truly knew him. Ratso is Joe’s mirror and his inverse: where
Crucially, the film does not sentimentalize poverty or illness. Ratso’s worsening cough, his matted hair, the increasing pallor of his skin—these are rendered with documentary-like brutality. The famous party sequence at Andy Warhol–like artist’s loft, filled with frantic, drugged-out revellers, offers a counterpoint to Joe and Ratso’s grimy existence. Here, too, is performance: the hipsters and heiresses perform coolness and liberation, yet their world is just as hollow as the Texas diner. Joe, trying to hustle an older woman, fails because he cannot sustain the lie of indifference. He is, at heart, too sincere for the game of surfaces. It is Ratso, the supposed parasite, who teaches Joe the value of that sincerity. When Joe later confronts Ratso in a squalid,