I managed to see this via Netflix streaming video.
Gary Gilmore might have been just another petty criminal turned murderer, we hear about them, unfortunately, all the time. But his case was famous because it was the first execution after the death penalty had been reinstated in the USA in 1976. This movie is basically his true story. It is a bit long, at over 2 hours, and it slows down at times, but overall it is gripping viewing, and Tommy Lee Jones is just mesmerizing as Gary Gilmore.
The story told here begins in 1976, during his last year of life, after he is once again paroled, this time to Provo, Utah where he had some relatives that would help him adjust and go straight. But Gilmore apparently was just one of those characters that had his own "morality", one where it only mattered what he wanted. If he wanted a case of beer, he just walked out of the store with it. He wanted a white truck that was more expensive than he could afford, and he needed a few hundred dollars in a couple of days. So robbery was the logical, to Gilmore, route. And killing the service station attendant, then the motel attendant, also seemed right to him. But he didn't get away with it.
Christine Lahti is good as his cousin, Brenda Nicol, who cares for Gilmore but is frustrated that she cannot do anything to help him. Even better is Rosanna Arquette, 22 during filming, as the 19-yr-old divorcée with two small children, Nicole Baker. She fell for Gilmore, and he thought he had gone to heaven when they were in bed together, but his temper kept him from being able to relate to her except sporadically. He was mostly abusive. Eli Wallach is his Uncle Vern Damico with the shoe shop.
This is a worthwhile movie, not only for the historical significance, but also for the performance of Tommy Lee Jones.