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Bonnie and Clyde (1967)
Bonnie and Clyde (1967) is one of
the sixties' most talked-about, volatile, controversial
crime/gangster films combining comedy, terror, love, and
ferocious violence. It was produced by Warner Bros. - the studio
responsible for the gangster films of the 1930s, and it seems
appropriate that this innovative, revisionist film redefined and
romanticized the crime/gangster genre and the depiction of
screen violence forever.
Its producer, 28 year-old Warren Beatty, was also its title-role
star Clyde, and his co-star Bonnie, newcomer Faye Dunaway,
became a major screen actress as a result of her breakthrough in
this influential film. Likewise, unknown Gene Hackman was
recognized as a solid actor and went on to star in many
substantial roles (his next major role was in The French
Connection (1971)).
The story of Clyde's rise and self-destructive fall as an
anti-authoritarian criminal gangster is clearly depicted. Both
tragic outlaw figures exemplify 'innocents on the run' who cling
to each other and try to function as a family. The film, with
many opposing moods and shifts in tone (from serious to
comical), is a cross between a gangster film, tragic-romantic
traditions, a road film and buddy film, and screwball comedy. It
exemplified many of the characteristics of experimental
film-making from the French New Wave (Nouvelle Vague) movement.
[Originally, the film was intended to be directed by Jean-Luc
Godard or Francois Truffaut, who opted out and made Fahrenheit
451 (1966) instead.] The film's major poster about the infamous
couple romanticized violence and proclaimed: "They're
young...they're in love...and they kill people."
[Earlier films that recounted similar adventures of infamous,
doomed lovers-on-the-run who are free and accountable to no one
include Fritz Lang's You Only Live Once (1937) with Henry Fonda
and Sylvia Sidney, Joseph H. Lewis' cult classic Gun Crazy
(1949) with John Dall and Peggy Cummins, Nicholas Ray's They
Live By Night (1949) (remade by Robert Altman with its original
title Thieves Like Us (1974) from Edward Anderson's source novel
and starring Shelley Duvall and Keith Carradine), and The Bonnie
Parker Story (1958) with Dorothy Provine and Jack Hogan. Later
outlaw-couple films include B-movie Killers Three (1968) with
Diane Varsi and Robert Walker, Jr., Terrence Malick's Badlands
(1973), Ridley Scott's Thelma and Louise (1991), Kalifornia
(1993), and Oliver Stone's Natural Born Killers (1994).]
The landmark film by post-WWII director Arthur Penn (who had
previously directed The Miracle Worker (1962), The Train (1964),
and Mickey One (1965) - also with Beatty) was ultimately a
popular and commercial success, but it was first widely
denounced by film reviewers for glamorizing the two killers and
only had mediocre box-office results. In the autumn of 1967, it
opened and closed quite quickly - enough time for it to be
indignantly criticized for its shocking violence, graphic
bullet-ridden finale and for its blending of humorous farce with
brutal killings. Then, after a period of reassessment, there
were glowing reviews, critical acclaim, a Newsweek cover story,
and the film's re-release - and it was nominated for ten Academy
Awards.
The film's screenplay by first-timers David Newman and Robert
Benton (both editors at Esquire who had never written a
screenplay) - a composite image of many early 20th century
outlaws, was loosely based on the historical accounts of two
1930s Depression-era, social misfit bandits who terrorized the
Midwest.
In the film, the two young and good-looking gangsters become
counter-cultural, romantic fugitives and likable folk heroes
with semi-mythic celebrity status, recalling Robin Hood and the
outlaws of the West. However, the sordid and bleak reality
behind the self-made publicity that the latter-day doomed couple
generates (through poetry and photos) is also revealed. The
Dust-Bowl period is effectively evoked, although the loose
adaptation is also an inaccurate and fictionalized retelling of
history. When they first met, the real Bonnie (19 years old) and
Clyde (21 years old) weren't glamorous characters, and their
romantic involvement was questionable. She was already the wife
of an imprisoned murderer, and he was a petty thief and vagrant
with numerous misdemeanors.
[The 'white trash' couple (described in the local newspaper as
"the Southwest's most notorious bandit and his gun moll") first
met in Texas in the early 1930s. Their brief, bloody crime spree
(involving kidnapping and murders) ended on May 23, 1934
alongside state Highway 154 near Arcadia, Louisiana (the town
nearest to the ambush site in north-central Louisiana), when the
desperados were ambushed and killed by four Texas lawmen (led by
Texas Ranger Frank Hamer), accompanied by Bienville Parish
Sheriff Henderson Jordan and his deputy Prentiss Oakley. Their
bullet-ridden vehicle was hit with 187 shots. In actuality, the
25 year-old Barrow and 23-year old Parker were armed and ready
for the ambush when they were killed. Currently, Louisiana's
largest outdoor flea market (held one weekend a month)
originated in 1990 in Arcadia as Bonnie and Clyde Trade Days.]
Cartoon-style slapstick comedy [a tribute to Mack Sennett's
silent films and Keystone Kops car chases and getaways] and
banjo music (e.g. Foggy Mountain Breakdown from Lester Flatt and
Earl Scruggs, helped to introduce country music to mainstream
films) and ballads accompany many of the film's scenes. The
film's overall impact was heightened by its open examination of
the gallant Clyde's sexuality-impotence and the link to his
gun-toting violence. [To fulfill heartthrob Warren Beatty's
image as a sex-symbol, he is finally able to consummate his love
for Bonnie by film's end.]
Penn's masterpiece won two Oscars for Best Supporting Actress
(Estelle Parsons in an over-the-top performance) and Best
Cinematography (Burnett Guffey) for its great evocation of
period detail, with eight other nods for Best Picture and Best
Actor (producer/actor Warren Beatty), Best Actress (Faye
Dunaway), Best Supporting Actor (Gene Hackman), Best Supporting
Actor (Michael J. Pollard), Best Director (Arthur Penn), Best
Story and Screenplay (Newman and Benton), and Best Costume
Design (Theadora Van Runkle, who later worked on The Godfather,
Part II (1974)). (Although Robert Towne, who later wrote
Chinatown (1974), worked on the final form of the screenplay and
served as a special consultant, he took no screen credit.)
In the late 1960s, the film's sympathetic, revolutionary
characters and its social criticism appealed to anti-authority
American youth who were part of the counter-cultural movement
protesting the Vietnam War, the corrupt social order, and the
U.S. government's role. [The same could be said for Mike
Nichols' The Graduate (1967), another popular film released in
the same year.] The restless couple's robberies of banks, viewed
somewhat sympathetically by the rural dispossessed, occurred at
a time when the institutions were 'robbing' and ruining
indebted, Dust Bowl farmers. The robberies of the glamorous,
thrill-seeking young couple - mostly innocent and minor at the
beginning of their crime spree, unfortunately escalate into more
violent and murderous escapades.
The influence of the film extended to commercial merchandise in
the form of hairstyles, authentic period music of the 30s, and
gangster retro-clothing (such as double-breasted suits, berets,
fedoras, and the maxi-skirt). The film also permanently changed
the form and substance of popular films - for better or worse.
Lobby cards for the film described its main elements:
Clyde was the leader. Bonnie wrote poetry.
C.W. was a Myrna Loy fan who had a bluebird tattooed on his
chest. Buck told corny jokes and carried a Kodak. Blanche was a
preacher's daughter who kept her fingers in her ears during the
gunfights. They played checkers and photographed each other
incessantly. On Sunday nights they listened to Eddie Cantor on
the radio. All in all, they killed 18 people.
They were the strangest damned gang you ever heard of.
Another lobby poster described their first auspicious meeting:
They met in 1930. She was stark naked, yelling at him out the
window while he tried to steal her mother's car. In a matter of
minutes they robbed a store, fired a few shots, and then stole
somebody else's car. At that point, they had not yet been
introduced.
Following a golden, old-style Warner Bros shield, grainy,
unglamorous, blurry, sepia-toned snapshots of the Barrow and
Parker families (at the time of Bonnie and Clyde's childhood)
play on a black background during the film's opening,
accompanied by the loud clicking sound of a camera shutter. The
credit titles are interspersed with flashes of more
semi-documentary, brownish-tinged pictures. The text of the
major credits fade from white to blood red on the dark
background. 30's hand-cranked phonographic music (Rudy Vallee's
popular love song of the period Deep Night) is faintly heard - a
haunting omen from another era. The snapshot immediately
preceding "DIRECTED BY ARTHUR PENN" is of three gunmen kneeling
- making an unconscious connection between camera shots and
fatal gunshots. The pictures of the Hollywood stars displace the
unglamorous, 1930s pictures of the historic pair - the last two
title cards describe the film's major protagonists:
BONNIE PARKER - was born in Rowena, Texas, 1910 and then moved
to West Dallas. In 1931 she worked in a cafe before beginning
her career in crime.
CLYDE BARROW - was born to a family of sharecroppers. As a young
man he became a small-time thief and robbed a gas station. He
served two years for armed robbery and was released on good
behavior in 1931.
The last title card dissolves into a colorful closeup of red,
luscious lips (that are being licked after lipstick has been
applied). The immense lips belong to blonde Bonnie Parker (Faye
Dunaway) - a bored, beautiful, and sexually-frustrated,
Depression-era Texas cafe waitress who is naked and
narcissistically primping in front of a mirror. It is a spring
day in the early 1930s in Depression-affected West Dallas,
Texas.
She is in her low-income frame house, and she is pouting -
despairing of her unattractive, narrow existence in a tawdry
environment. Aching from the enforced oppression of her
confining room (and life), Bonnie flings herself down on her bed
- appearing to be trapped behind the bars of the bedframe.
Frustrated, she repeatedly strikes the cage surrounding her. In
a closeup, her eyes reflect her torment. As she rises and goes
behind a dressing screen, the camera reveals the top of her
bureau - it is humbly decorated with a small, vulgar collection
of porcelain figurines and a rag doll, and a few photographs are
tacked on the drab wall.
Then, she looks out the screen of her second floor window and
sees a furtive young man casing the area and contemplating
hotwiring and stealing her mother's car in front of their yard.
When she catches him in the act - she speaks the first line in
the film: "Hey boy, what you doin' with my Mama's car?" When he
is caught, he spins around in astonishment, looks up toward the
window - obviously catching a glimpse of Bonnie's naked body
temptingly framed there, and smirks. The camera exchanges shots
between them. Drawn to the feeling of intense excitement and his
apparent potency, she calls out: "Wait there!," hastily throws
on some clothes from her closet, and urgently descends in loud
clunky steps down the dark stairs (in a low-angled shot pointing
upward) to meet the handsomely-dressed drifter named Clyde
Barrow (Warren Beatty) with a white fedora. When she gets down
to the outside porch (a sign behind her advertises "WASH TAKEN
IN HERE"), she boldly tells him: "Ain't you ashamed? You're
tryin' to steal an ol' lady's automobile." Before their
posturing, arrogant battle of wits and sarcastic repartee, he
proposes to treat her to a Coke in town.
When she flippantly tells him that she is "goin' to work
anyway," they both talk with flirtatious tones during their
sidewalk stroll (tracked by the camera with multiple stops and
starts) and discover each other's "line of work" - she's a cheap
cafe waitress and he's an ex-con for armed robbery:
Clyde: What kind of work do ya do?
Bonnie: None of your business.
Clyde (flattering): I'll bet you're a movie star? A lady
mechanic?
Bonnie (amused): No.
Clyde: A maid?
Bonnie: (She halts) What do you think I am?
Clyde (realistically and accurately): A waitress.
Bonnie: (Long silence when she grows sullen, and then begins
walking again.) What line of work are you in, when you're not
stealin' cars?
Clyde: Well, I'll tell ya, uh, I'm lookin' for suitable
employment right at the moment.
Bonnie: Yeah, but what did ya do before?
Clyde: I was, uh, I was in State Prison.
Bonnie: State Prison! (She halts again)
Clyde: Uh-huh.
Bonnie: Well, I guess, uh, some littl' ol' lady wasn't so nice.
Clyde: (expressed as part of a tough guy act) It was armed
robbery.
Bonnie: My, my. The things that turn up in the street these
days.
In the small, rural, Southwest Texas town where they walk along
the empty main street (except for one elderly Negro sitting on a
bench in front of a barber shop), Clyde asks her about her dull
life after passing the closed-down movie theatre and other
mostly-deserted shops: "Whatcha all do for a good time around
here - listen to the grass grow?" In a display of
unconventional, daring bravado, he points down to his right foot
and brags to her that he once chopped two toes off with an axe
"to get off of work detail" in state prison. [His awkward limp
is evident throughout the film.] She declines to look at his
dirty feet when he volunteers to demonstrate, but still wonders:
"Boy, did you really do that?"
With a matchstick in his mouth, Clyde guzzles from an upturned
Coke bottle (shot at an upward angle as a phallic symbol) that
he has bought from a run-down gas station's soft drink chest up
the street. Both of them drink from their Coke bottles in the
next shot - emphasizing their growing intimacy and affinity for
each other. And then she asks what "armed robbery" is like,
instantly intrigued and charmed by his recklessness, but knowing
that he is a liar. To prove that he isn't a "faker," he takes
his gun out from inside his jacket in his right hand, while
holding his Coke bottle in his left. Clyde shows her his large
pistol pointing upwards at hip level, a second phallic symbol of
his manhood, as he bounces the wooden match between his teeth.
She looks down at the gun - at first repulsed, but then
erotically fascinated, hypnotized and aroused by his assertive
show of banditry and dangerousness. After tentatively and
suggestively touching (fondling and caressing in a masturbatory
way) the barrel of the gun, she goads him on to be her
liberating hero by daring him with a sexually-loaded line: "But
you wouldn't have the gumption to use it." The matchstick stands
erect between Clyde's lips. To spontaneously impress her as part
of the sexual dare and to prove his courage, he lets her witness
his nonchalant, impulsive robbery of Ritts Groceries in the
small town ("You keep your eyes open") - his first grocery-store
robbery. In a long-shot, he strides across the vacant street -
the camera remains with her as Bonnie stays outside and watches
him from the middle of the street.
After a long moment of silence during the heist inside the store
(off-screen), he emerges with a wad of bills in his left hand
and his gun in his right hand. He awakens the unnatural quiet of
the tiny town with one sharp crack of his revolver - he
announces his own exhilarated manhood by shooting his weapon
noisily into the air above the head of the dumbfounded store
owner. Bonnie jumps into a car parked on the street, while he
hot-wires it for their getaway. They introduce themselves
formally to each other:
Bonnie: Hey, what's your name anyhow?
Clyde: Clyde Barrow.
Bonnie: Hi, I'm Bonnie Parker. Pleased to meet ya.
During their first escape in the stolen car, without pursuit,
she joins him for thrills and excitement - her ticket out of the
dull anonymity of the town. Without pre-meditation, she slowly
and unwittingly slips into a career in crime with him. During
the hurried getaway, banjo music by Lester Flatt and Earl
Scruggs ("Foggy Mountain Breakdown") plays on the soundtrack -
theme music that accompanies their escapes. She is sexually
excited and ecstatic, smothering him with hugs and kisses in
their first love scene, as they careen down a dusty country
road. His hold-up of the store is paralleled by her attempted
physical attack on him. When they reach a grassy grove of trees
in the shade, Clyde begs the seductive and eagerly aggressive
female to "slow down" and "cut it out," pushing her away and
getting out of the car. He shamefully and restlessly confesses
his latent homosexuality, sexual limitations and impotence, and
tells her to put aside her romantic intentions:
Clyde: I might as well tell ya right off. I ain't much of a
lover boy. But that don't mean nothin' personal about you. I-I-I
never saw no percentage in it. Ain't nothin' wrong with me. I
don't like boys. (He bumps his head on the driver's side door.)
Bonnie (frustrated and stunned): ...Your advertisin' is just
dandy. Folks would never guess you don't have a thing to sell.
You'd better take me home now. Now don't you touch me!
As she gets out of the passenger side of the car, he follows
after her through the front seat and does a pratfall onto the
ground, but quickly uprights himself. Diverting her physical
arousal, he entices Bonnie into a glamorous life with his own
unrealistic, ignorant and childish fantasies of freedom, wealth
and fame. He encourages her to think of him as the answer to her
dreams - they could make history together:
Clyde: All right. All right. If all you want's a stud service,
you get on back to West Dallas and you stay there the rest of
your life. You're worth more than that. A lot more than that.
You know it and that's why you come along with me. You could
find a lover boy on every damn corner in town. It don't make a
damn to them whether you're waitin' on tables or pickin' cotton,
but it does make a damn to me!
Bonnie: Why?
Clyde: Why? What's you mean, 'Why?' Because you're different,
that's why. You know, you're like me. You want different things.
You got somethin' better than bein' a waitress. You and me
travelin' together, we could cut a path clean across this state
and Kansas and Missouri and Oklahoma and everybody'd know about
it. You listen to me, Miss Bonnie Parker. You listen to me.
Clyde instinctively appeals to her wanderlust to leave the
dead-end cafe waitress job she has and join him for adventure
and a career in crime:
Clyde: And now you wake up every mornin' and you hate it. You
just hate it. You get on down there and you put on your white
uniform...
Bonnie. Pink, it's pink.
Clyde: And them truckdrivers come in there to eat your greasy
burgers and they kid ya, and you kid 'em back. But they're
stupid and dumb boys with the big ol' tattooes on 'em, and you
don't like it. And they ask ya on dates, and sometimes you go
but you mostly don't because all they're ever tryin' to do is
get in your pants whether you want 'em to or not. So you go on
home and you sit in your room and you think, 'Now when and how
am I ever gonna get away from this?' And now you know.
After stealing a sporty convertible coupe, they hide out that
night from the law in a deserted, bank-foreclosed farmhouse,
where Bonnie sleeps on automobile seats placed on the floor:
"These accommodations ain't particularly deluxe." When she
awakens in the morning, she is initially frightened, but Clyde's
appearance (on the other side of a broken window) reassures her.
While demonstrating his accurate aim during target practice, he
shoots bottles off a wooden fence above a sign reading "Property
of MIDLOTHIAN CITIZENS BANK - TRESPASSERS WILL BE PROSECUTED."
He immodestly tells Bonnie: "I ain't good. I'm the best." Then,
in the sunlight he gives her his gun and offers her to try a few
shots, using an old rubber-tire swing as the target, while wind
blows ominously through the bushes [a foreshadowing of the
film's final scene]. The gunshots during her training session
attract the attention of the bank-displaced, evicted farmer Otis
Harris and his family (resembling the Joads from The Grapes of
Wrath (1940), Penn's homage to John Ford's classic film) who are
just driving by for a "last look" at their repossessed farm.
With a show of sympathy for the farmer's futile plight ("That's
a pitiful shame"), Clyde puts holes through the bank's sign.
Then as a symbolic gesture, he lets the farmer and his Negro
hired hand/sharecropper Davis shoot more bullets into the
abandoned building and the panes of its windows. Ironically, the
farmer's young child cowers in terror in his mother's arms at
the sound of all the gunfire.
Clyde boastfully (but shyly) introduces them with a disarming
smile, accentuating the bond they share with the country folk -
while anticipating (almost as an afterthought) the course that
they are committed to pursue - bank robbery:
This here's Miss Bonnie Parker. I'm Clyde Barrow...We rob banks.
The farmer turns - with an ambiguous and stoic look on his face
- and stares back at them.
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