Skip to content
Surf Wiki
Save to docs
arts

From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base

Bonnie and Clyde (film)

1967 film by Arthur Penn

Bonnie and Clyde (film)

1967 film by Arthur Penn

FieldValue
nameBonnie and Clyde
imageBonnie and Clyde (1967 teaser poster).jpg
altPoster with a photo of five sharply dressed people holding various guns in front of an old-fashioned car
captionTheatrical release poster
directorArthur Penn
writer{{Plainlist
producerWarren Beatty
starring{{Plainlist
cinematographyBurnett Guffey
editingDede Allen
musicCharles Strouse
studioWarner Bros. Pictures
distributorWarner Bros.-Seven Arts
released
runtime111 minutes
countryUnited States
languageEnglish
budget$2.5 million
gross$70 million
  • David Newman
  • Robert Benton
  • Warren Beatty
  • Faye Dunaway
  • Michael J. Pollard
  • Gene Hackman
  • Estelle Parsons

Bonnie and Clyde is a 1967 American biographical crime film directed by Arthur Penn and respectively starring Warren Beatty and Faye Dunaway as Clyde Barrow and Bonnie Parker, outlaws and romantic partners in the Great Depression-era American South. The cast also features Michael J. Pollard, Gene Hackman, and Estelle Parsons. The screenplay was written by David Newman and Robert Benton (with uncredited contributions by Beatty and Robert Towne); Beatty also produced the film.

The film was released in the United States by Warner Bros.-Seven Arts on August 13, 1967. It is considered an American American film. Initial critical reception was mixed, but later swung positive, and the film became a significant commercial success, becoming one of the highest-grossing films of 1967. It was nominated for 10 Academy Awards including for Best Picture, winning Best Supporting Actress (for Estelle Parsons) and Best Cinematography (Burnett Guffey).

Bonnie and Clyde is considered one of the first films of the New Hollywood era and a landmark picture. It broke many cinematic taboos and for some members of the counterculture, the film was considered a "rallying cry". Its success prompted other filmmakers to be more open in presenting sex and violence in their films. The film's ending became famous as "one of the bloodiest death scenes in cinematic history". In 1992, it was selected for preservation in the United States National Film Registry by the Library of Congress as "culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant". It was ranked 27th on the American Film Institute's 1998 list of the 100 greatest American films of all time and 42nd on its 2007 list.

Plot

During the Great Depression, Clyde Barrow and Bonnie Parker of Texas meet when Clyde tries to steal Bonnie's mother's car. Bonnie, who is bored by her job as a waitress, is intrigued by Clyde and decides to take up with him and become his partner in crime. They pull off some holdups, but their amateur efforts, while exciting, are not very lucrative. Bonnie and Clyde turn from small-time heists to bank robbing.

The duo's crime spree shifts into high gear once they hook up with a dim-witted gas station attendant, C.W. Moss. Their exploits also become more violent. After C.W. botches parking during a bank robbery and delays their escape, Clyde shoots the bank manager in the face when he jumps onto the slow-moving car's running board. Clyde's older brother Buck and his wife, Blanche, a preacher's daughter, also join them. The two women dislike each other at first sight, and their antipathy escalates. Blanche has nothing but disdain for Bonnie, Clyde, and C.W., while Bonnie sees Blanche's flightiness as a constant danger to the gang's survival.

In Joplin, Missouri, local police show up at the gang's rented house after being alerted by a grocery delivery boy;[the police think they are dealing with bootleggers not bank robbers]; two policemen are killed in a shootout. The gang is pursued by law enforcement, including Texas Ranger Frank Hamer, whom they capture and humiliate before leaving him adrift on a boat while handcuffed. The five outlaws then pull a heist, during which a police chase disables their vehicle. They steal Eugene Grizzard's car and take him and his girlfriend captive before quickly abandoning them when they learn he is an undertaker.

Bonnie wants to visit her family in Texas and give them part of the heist funds, to which Clyde reluctantly acquiesces despite the risk. The gang is caught off guard by an ambush by law enforcement overnight, resulting in many casualties. Buck is mortally wounded by a shot to his head, and Blanche is injured in one eye, losing sight in it. Bonnie, Clyde, and C.W. barely escape alive, while Blanche falls into police custody. Hamer then tricks her into revealing C.W.'s name (until then he was only an "unidentified suspect").

C.W. takes the wounded Bonnie and Clyde to hide out at the house of his father Ivan, who thinks the couple have corrupted his son (as evidenced by an ornate tattoo Bonnie convinced C.W. to get). The elder Moss makes a deal with Hamer: in exchange for mercy for C.W., he sets a trap for the outlaws. When Bonnie and Clyde stop on the side of the road to help Mr. Moss fix a flat tire, as a nearby flock of birds flies away, the posse in the bushes gun the couple down. Hamer and his men come out of hiding and gather around the couple's bodies.

Cast

  • Warren Beatty as Clyde Barrow
  • Faye Dunaway as Bonnie Parker
  • Michael J. Pollard as C. W. Moss (composite character of W. D. Jones and Henry Methvin)
  • Gene Hackman as Buck Barrow
  • Estelle Parsons as Blanche Barrow
  • Denver Pyle as Frank Hamer
  • Dub Taylor as Ivan Moss
  • Evans Evans as Velma Davis
  • Gene Wilder as Eugene Grizzard

Cast notes

Gene Wilder was in his film debut as Eugene Grizzard, one of Bonnie and Clyde's hostages. His girlfriend Velma Davis was played by Evans Evans. The family gathering scene was filmed in Red Oak, Texas where many residents gathered to watch. When the filmmakers noticed Mabel Cavitt, a local schoolteacher, among the people gathered, she was cast as Bonnie Parker's mother.

Production and style

Advertisement from 1967

The film was intended as a romantic and comic version of the violent gangster films of the 1930s, updated with modern filmmaking techniques. Arthur Penn portrayed some of the violent scenes with a comic tone, sometimes reminiscent of Keystone Cops-style slapstick films, then shifted disconcertingly into horrific and graphic violence. The film has the French New Wave directors' influence, both in its rapid shifts of tone, and in its choppy editing, which is particularly noticeable in its closing sequence.

The first handling of the script was in the early 1960s. Influenced by the French New Wave writers and not yet completed, Newman and Benton sent Penn an early draft. He already was engaged in production decisions for The Chase (1966) and could not get involved in the script for Bonnie and Clyde. The writers sent their script to François Truffaut, who made contributions but passed on the project, next directing Fahrenheit 451. At Truffaut's suggestion, the writers, much excited (the film's producers were less so), approached filmmaker Jean-Luc Godard.

Some sources claim Godard did not trust Hollywood and refused. Benton claimed that Godard wanted to shoot the film in New Jersey in January during the winter. He purportedly took offense when would-be producer Norah Wright objected that his desire was unreasonable, as the story took place in Texas, which has a warm climate year-round. Her partner Elinor Jones claimed the two did not believe Godard was right for the project in the first place. Godard's retort: «Je vous parle de cinéma, vous me parlez de météo. Au revoir.» ("I'm talking cinema and you're talking weather. Goodbye.") After the 1968 Academy Awards, Godard sent Benton and Newman a cable that read, "Now, let's make it all over again!"

Soon after the failed negotiations for production, Beatty was visiting Paris and learned through Truffaut of the project and its path. On returning to Hollywood, Beatty requested to see the script and bought the rights. A meeting with Godard was not productive. Beatty changed his approach and convinced the writers that while the script at first reading was very much of the French New Wave style, an American director was necessary for the subject.

Beatty offered the directing position to George Stevens, William Wyler, Karel Reisz, John Schlesinger, Brian G. Hutton, and Sydney Pollack, all of whom turned it down. Penn turned it down several times before Beatty finally persuaded him to direct the film. Beatty was entitled to 40% of the profits of the film and gave Penn 10%.

When Beatty was on board as producer only, his sister and actress Shirley MacLaine was a strong possibility to play Bonnie. When Beatty decided to play Clyde, they needed a different actress. Considered for the role were Jane Fonda, Tuesday Weld, Ann-Margret, Sharon Tate, Leslie Caron, Carol Lynley and Sue Lyon. Cher auditioned for the part, and Beatty begged Natalie Wood to play the role. Wood declined, to concentrate on her therapy, and acknowledged that working with Beatty before had been "difficult". Faye Dunaway later said that she won the part "by the skin of her teeth!"

The film is forthright in its handling of sexuality, but that theme was toned down from its conception. Originally, Benton and Newman wrote Clyde as bisexual. He and Bonnie were to have a three-way sexual relationship with their male getaway driver. Penn persuaded the writers that since the couple's relationship was underwritten in terms of emotional complexity, it dissipated the passion of the title characters. This would threaten the audience's sympathy for the characters, and might result in their being written off as sexual deviants because they were criminals. Others said that Beatty was unwilling to have his character display that kind of sexuality and that the Production Code would never have allowed such content in the first place. Clyde is portrayed as heterosexual and impotent.

Bonnie and Clyde was one of the first films to feature extensive use of squibs—small explosive charges, often mounted with bags of stage blood, that detonate inside an actor's clothes to simulate bullet hits. Released in an era when film shootings were generally depicted as bloodless and painless, the Bonnie and Clyde death scene was one of the first in mainstream American cinema to be depicted with graphic realism.

Beatty originally wanted the film to be shot in black and white, but Warner Bros. rejected the idea. Much of the studio's senior management was hostile to the film, especially Jack L. Warner, who considered the subject matter an unwanted throwback to Warner Bros.' early period when gangster films were a common product. Moreover, Warner was already annoyed at Beatty for refusing to star in PT 109 and defying Warner's favorite gesture of authority of showing the studio water tower with the WB logo on it. Beatty said, "Well, it's got your name, but it's got my initials." Warner complained about the costs of the film's extensive location shooting in Texas, which exceeded its production schedule and budget, and ordered the crew back to the studio backlot. It already had planned to return for final process shots.

Music

The instrumental banjo piece "Foggy Mountain Breakdown", performed by Flatt and Scruggs, was introduced to a worldwide audience as a result of its frequent use in the movie. Additional banjo music was written and performed by Doug Dillard. The use of this music is anachronistic because bluegrass dates from the mid-1940s rather than the 1930s. But the functionally similar old-time music genre was long established and widely recorded in the period of the film's events. Long out of print in vinyl and cassette formats, the film soundtrack was released on CD in 2009.

Historical accuracy

The film considerably simplifies the lives of Bonnie and Clyde and their gang. They were allied with other gang members, were repeatedly jailed, and committed other murders. In the part of the movie where Bonnie and Clyde escape the ambush that killed Buck Barrow and captured Blanche, Bonnie is shown being wounded by a deputy sheriff, whom Clyde then kills. Although they escaped the ambush, no lawmen were killed. Between June 1933 and April 1934, however, the Barrow gang did kill three law officers in Texas and Oklahoma.

On the run, they suffered a horrific auto accident in which Bonnie was severely burned and disabled. In the scene depicting their death, Bonnie and Clyde are portrayed as having stopped their automobile, with Clyde exiting the car and then looking back at Bonnie as they realize they've been trapped, but reports say the car was still moving when lawmen opened fire.

The sequence with Wilder and Evans is based on the Barrow gang's kidnappings of undertaker H.D. Darby and his acquaintance Sophia Stone, near Ruston, Louisiana, on April 27, 1933. The real Darby and Stone were not romantically involved. The gang also stole Darby's car.

The film is considered to stray far from fact in its portrayal of Frank Hamer as a vengeful bungler who was captured, humiliated, and released by Bonnie and Clyde. Hamer was a decorated Texas Ranger when he was coaxed out of semi-retirement to hunt the couple down. He had never met them before he and his posse ambushed and killed them near Gibsland, Louisiana, on May 23, 1934. In 1968, Hamer's widow and son sued the movie producers for defamation of character over his portrayal. They obtained an out-of-court settlement in 1971.

In 1933, police found undeveloped film in Bonnie and Clyde's hastily abandoned hideout in Joplin, Missouri. When they printed the negatives, one showed Bonnie holding a gun in her hand and a cigar between her teeth. Its publication nationwide typed her as a dramatic gun moll. The film portrays the taking of this playful photo. It implies the gang sent photos—and poetry—to the press, but this is untrue. The police found most of the gang's items in the Joplin cache. Bonnie's final poem, read aloud by her in the movie, was not published until after her death, when her mother released it.

The only two surviving members of the Barrow Gang when the film was released in 1967 were Blanche Barrow and W. D. Jones. While Barrow had approved the depiction of her in the original script, she objected to the later rewrites. At the film's release, she complained about Estelle Parsons's portrayal of her, saying, "That film made me look like a screaming horse's ass!"

Release

The film premiered as the opening film of the Montreal International Film Festival on August 4, 1967.

At first, Warner Bros. did not promote Bonnie and Clyde for general release, but mounted only limited regional releases that seemed to confirm its misgivings about the film's lack of commercial appeal. The film quickly did excellent sustained business in select urban theatres. While Jack Warner was selling the studio to Seven Arts Productions, he would have dumped the film but for the fact that Israel, of which Warner was a major supporter, had recently triumphed in the Six-Day War. Warner was feeling too defiant to sell any of his studio's films.

Meanwhile, Beatty complained to Warner Bros. that if the company was willing to go to so much trouble for Reflections in a Golden Eye (it had changed the coloration scheme at considerable expense), their neglect of his film, which was getting excellent press, suggested a conflict of interest; he threatened to sue the company. Warner Bros. gave Beatty's film a general release. Much to the surprise of Warner Bros.' management, the film became a major box-office success.

Reception and legacy

The film was controversial at the time of release because of its apparent glorification of murderers, and for its level of graphic violence, which was unprecedented at the time. Bosley Crowther of The New York Times wrote, "It is a cheap piece of bald-faced slapstick comedy that treats the hideous depredations of that sleazy, moronic pair as though they were as full of fun and frolic as the jazz-age cutups in Thoroughly Modern Millie." He was so appalled that he began to campaign against the increasing brutality of American films.

Dave Kaufman of Variety criticized the film for uneven direction and for portraying Bonnie and Clyde as bumbling moronic types. Joe Morgenstern in Newsweek initially panned the film as a "squalid shoot-'em-up for the moron trade", but after seeing it a second time and noting the enthusiastic audience, he wrote a second article saying he had misjudged the film and praised it. Warner Bros. took advantage of this, marketing the film as having made a major critic change his mind about its virtues.

Charles Higham]] in *The Art of the American Film: 1900–1971*. (1973).

Roger Ebert gave Bonnie and Clyde a positive review, giving it four stars out of four. He called the film "a milestone in the history of American movies, a work of truth and brilliance", adding, "It is also pitilessly cruel, filled with sympathy, nauseating, funny, heartbreaking, and astonishingly beautiful. If it does not seem that those words should be strung together, perhaps that is because movies do not very often reflect the full range of human life." More than 30 years later, Ebert added the film to his list in The Great Movies, writing: "The movie opened like a slap in the face. American filmgoers had never seen anything like it." Film critics Dave Kehr and James Berardinelli have praised the film. Stephen Hunter, writing in Commentary in 2009, criticized the film's failure to adhere to the historical truth about Barrow, Parker, and Hamer.

The fierce debate about the film is discussed at length in the documentary For the Love of Movies: The Story of American Film Criticism (2009). This film chronicles what occurred as a result: The New York Times fired Crowther because his negative review seemed so out of touch with public opinion. Pauline Kael, who wrote a lengthy freelance essay in The New Yorker in praise of the film, where she attributes the Hollywood success of the film and its unsettled spirit to that of the French New Wave. She was subsequently hired as the magazine's new staff critic.

The film was not expected to perform well at the box office but was a sleeper hit and by year's end had earned $2.5million in theatrical rentals in the US and Canada. It continued to perform well in 1968 and by March 1968 had been in the top 12 films at the US box office for 22 weeks. By the end of 1968 it had become the studio's second highest-grossing film of all time, behind My Fair Lady, with rentals of $19 million. By July 1968, the film had earned rentals of $10 million outside of the US and Canada. Listal lists it as one of the top five grossing films of 1967, with $50.7 million in US sales, and $70 million worldwide. Beatty's profit participation (which he shared with Penn) earned him over $6 million and Penn over $2 million.

Although many believe the film's groundbreaking portrayal of violence adds to the film's artistic merit, Bonnie and Clyde is still sometimes criticized for opening the floodgates to heightened graphic violence in cinema and TV. It holds a 91% rating on Rotten Tomatoes from 74 reviews, with an average rating of . The site's consensus states: "A paradigm-shifting classic of American cinema, Bonnie and Clyde packs a punch whose power continues to reverberate through thrillers decades later."

Accolades

AwardCategoryNominee(s)Result
Academy AwardsBest PictureWarren Beatty
Best DirectorArthur Penn
Best ActorWarren Beatty
Best ActressFaye Dunaway
Best Supporting ActorGene Hackman
Michael J. Pollard
Best Supporting ActressEstelle Parsons
Best Original ScreenplayDavid Newman and Robert Benton
Best CinematographyBurnett Guffey
Best Costume DesignTheadora Van Runkle
American Cinema Editors AwardsBest Edited Feature FilmDede Allen
Bodil AwardsBest Non-European FilmArthur Penn
British Academy Film AwardsBest Film
Best Foreign ActorWarren Beatty
Most Promising Newcomer to Leading Film RolesFaye Dunaway (also for Hurry Sundown)
Michael J. Pollard
David di Donatello AwardsBest Foreign ActorWarren Beatty
Best Foreign ActressFaye Dunaway
Directors Guild of America AwardsOutstanding Directorial Achievement in Motion PicturesArthur Penn
Edgar Allan Poe AwardsBest Motion Picture ScreenplayDavid Newman
Golden Globe AwardsBest Motion Picture – Drama
Best Actor in a Motion Picture – DramaWarren Beatty
Best Actress in a Motion Picture – DramaFaye Dunaway
Best Supporting Actor – Motion PictureMichael J. Pollard
Best Director – Motion PictureArthur Penn
Best Screenplay – Motion PictureDavid Newman and Robert Benton
Most Promising Newcomer – MaleMichael J. Pollard
Golden Reel AwardsBest Sound Editing – Feature Film
Grammy AwardsBest Original Score Written for a Motion Picture or a Television SpecialCharles Strouse
Kansas City Film Critics Circle AwardsBest Film
Kinema Junpo AwardsBest Foreign FilmArthur Penn
Best Foreign Director
Laurel AwardsTop Action-Drama
Top Female Dramatic PerformanceFaye Dunaway
Top Male Supporting PerformanceMichael J. Pollard
Top Female Supporting PerformanceEstelle Parsons
Mar del Plata International Film FestivalBest FilmArthur Penn
International Competition
Special MentionFaye Dunaway
National Film Preservation BoardNational Film Registry
National Society of Film Critics AwardsBest Film
Best Supporting ActorGene Hackman
Best ScreenplayDavid Newman and Robert Benton
New York Film Critics Circle AwardsBest Film
Best DirectorArthur Penn
Best ScreenplayDavid Newman and Robert Benton
Online Film & Television Association AwardsHall of Fame – Motion Picture
Writers Guild of America AwardsBest Written American DramaDavid Newman and Robert Benton
Best Written American Original Screenplay

Media recognition

YearPresenterTitleRankRefs
1999Entertainment Weekly100 Greatest Movies of All Time48
2005TimeAll-Time 100 MoviesN/A
2010Total Film100 Greatest Movies of All TimeN/A
2010The GuardianThe 25 Best Crime Films of All Time11
2013Entertainment Weekly100 All-Time Greatest Movies4
2014The Hollywood ReporterHollywood's 100 Favorite Films99
2014James BerardinelliJames Berardinelli's All-Time Top 10036
2020Time OutThe 100 Best Movies of All Time99

The film repeatedly has been honored by the American Film Institute:

  • 1998 – AFI's 100 Years...100 Movies – #27
  • 2001 – AFI's 100 Years...100 Thrills – #13
  • 2002 – AFI's 100 Years...100 Passions – #65
  • 2003 – AFI's 100 Years...100 Heroes and Villains
    • Clyde Barrow & Bonnie Parker – #32 Villains
  • 2005 – AFI's 100 Years...100 Movie Quotes
    • "We rob banks." – #41
  • 2007 – AFI's 100 Years...100 Movies (10th Anniversary Edition) – #42
  • 2008 – AFI's 10 Top 10 – #5 Gangster film

In 1992, Bonnie and Clyde was selected for preservation in the United States National Film Registry by the Library of Congress as "culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant."

In 2012, the Motion Picture Editors Guild ranked the film the fifth best-edited film of all time, based on a survey of its membership.

The February 2020 issue of New York Magazine lists Bonnie and Clyde as among "The Best Movies That Lost Best Picture at the Oscars."

Influence

Bonnie and Clyde has been cited as a major influence for such disparate films as The Wild Bunch, The Godfather, The Departed, Queen & Slim, True Romance, and Natural Born Killers.

Notes

References

References

  1. Dancis, Bruce. (April 3, 2008). "Forty years later, 'Bonnie and Clyde' still blows us away". [[Ventura County Star]].
  2. "The Age of Movies: Selected Writings of Pauline Kael (paperback)".
  3. (October 4, 2014). "The 40th Academy Awards (1968) Nominees and Winners". Oscars.org.
  4. "Pop Culture 101: ''Bonnie and Clyde''".
  5. Buckmaster, Luke. (August 14, 2017). "How Bonnie and Clyde's final scene changed Hollywood". BBC.
  6. (December 7, 1992). "25 American films are added to the National Film Registry". [[The Courier (Dundee)]].
  7. "Complete National Film Registry Listing".
  8. Brown, Scott. (June 15, 2010). "RED OAK, TX".
  9. Ballinger, Frank R. "From Real to Reel, the 1967 movie". Bonnie & Clyde's Hideout.
  10. ''The Movies'' by Richard Griffith, Arthur Mayer, and Eileen Bowser. New York: [[Simon & Schuster]], 1981 edition.
  11. (2001). "Flashback: A Brief History of Film". [[Prentice Hall]].
  12. (October 8, 2017). "'Bonnie and Clyde' Turns 50 and Still Packs a Bloody Punch".
  13. (1999). "Truffaut: A Biography". Knopf.
  14. Harris, Mark. (2008). "Pictures at a Revolution: Five Films and the Birth of the New Hollywood". The Penguin Press.
  15. Penn, Arthur. (2012). "Pictures at a Revolution: Five Films and the Birth of the New Hollywood, Luc Lagier". Magazine Arte.tv.
  16. "Arthur Penn et la Nouvelle Vague | Blow up - L'actualité du cinéma (Ou presque) | Cinéma | fr - ARTE". Magazine Arte.tv.
  17. ''Arthur Penn: American Director'' by Nat Segaloff. Kentucky: [[University Press of Kentucky]], 2011 edition.
  18. Mell, Eila. (2005). "Casting Might-Have-Beens". [[McFarland & Company, Inc.]].
  19. "Front Row at the Movies: Bonnie and Clyde -".
  20. "The Twisting History of Blood on Film". Topic.
  21. "Doug & Rodney Dillard (Part 3)". Burrito Brother.
  22. Sullivan, Steve. (June 2020). "Encyclopedia of Great Popular Song Recordings". Scarecrow Press.
  23. "Bonnie And Clyde Soundtrack CD". cduniverse.com.
  24. "Patrolman Edward Bryan Wheeler".
  25. "Constable William Calvin Campbell".
  26. Barrow, Blanche Caldwell, edited by John Neal Phillips (2005). ''My Life with Bonnie and Clyde''. Norman: University of Oklahoma Press. {{ISBN. 0-8061-3625-1.
  27. Guinn, Jeff (2009). ''Go Down Together: The True, Untold Story of Bonnie and Clyde''. New York: Simon & Schuster. {{ISBN. 978-1-4165-5706-7.
  28. Guinn, Jeff (2009). ''Go Down Together: The True, Untold Story of Bonnie and Clyde''. New York: Simon and Schuster, p. 364. {{ISBN. 1-4165-5706-7
  29. Roger Maserang. (December 31, 2008). "National Register of Historic Places Registration: Bonnie and Clyde Garage Apartment". [[National Park Service]].
  30. Barrow with Phillips, p. 245n40
  31. Desta, Yohana. (11 August 2017). "50 Years Later: How Bonnie and Clyde Violently Divided Film Critics". [[Vanity Fair (magazine).
  32. Crowther, Bosley. (August 14, 1967). "Screen: 'Bonnie and Clyde' Arrives; Careers of Murderers Pictured as Farce". [[The New York Times]].
  33. Gianetti; Eyman. ''Flashback'', p. 306.
  34. Kaufman, Dave. (August 9, 1967). "Film Reviews: Bonnie and Clyde".
  35. Goldstein, Patrick. (August 25, 1997). "Bonnie & Clyde & Joe & Pauline". Los Angeles Times.
  36. Harris, Mark. ''Pictures at a Revolution: Five Films and the Birth of a New Hollywood''. Penguin Press, 2008, pp. 341–342.
  37. Charles Higham. 1973. ''The Art of the American Film: 1900–1971''. Doubleday & Company, Inc. New York. {{ISBN. 0-385-06935-9 p. 302
  38. Ebert, Roger. (September 25, 1967). "Bonnie and Clyde".
  39. Ebert, Roger. (August 3, 1998). "Great Movie Reviews - ''Bonnie and Clyde''". [[Chicago Sun Times]].
  40. "Bonnie and Clyde (United States, 1967)".
  41. (September 29, 2010). "Arthur Penn, Director of 'Bonnie and Clyde,' Dies". The New York Times.
  42. Hunter, Stephen. (July–August 2009). "Clyde and Bonnie Died for Nihilism".
  43. Kael, Pauline. (October 21, 1967). "The Frightening Power of 'Bonnie and Clyde'".
  44. Schwartz, Sanford. (2011). "The Age of Movies: Selected Writings of Pauline Kael". The Library of America.
  45. Beaupre, Lee. (March 20, 1968). "Persevering of 'Bonnie & Clyde'; 22 Times on Weekly Top Dozen".
  46. (January 8, 1969). "All-Time Boxoffice Champs".
  47. "Bonnie and Clyde". Turner Classic Movies.
  48. (August 8, 1968). "Warren Beatty 'Bonnie' Share May Hit $6,300,000; He Gave Arthur Penn 10%".
  49. "Top Grossing Films of 1967". Listal.com.
  50. French, Philip. (25 August 2007). "How violent taboos were blown away". [[The Guardian]].
  51. "Bonnie and Clyde".
  52. "The 100 Greatest Movies of All Time by Entertainment Weekly". [[Filmsite.org]].
  53. "Is Full List one of the All-Time 100 Best Movies?".
  54. (2013-12-22). "100 Greatest Movies Of All Time". [[Total Film]].
  55. (2010-10-17). "Bonnie and Clyde: No 11 best crime film of all time".
  56. "The 100 All-Time Greatest Movies of All Time by Entertainment Weekly 2013". Filmsite.org.
  57. (June 25, 2014). "Hollywood's 100 Favorite Films". [[The Hollywood Reporter]].
  58. Berardinelli, James. "Specials". Reelviews Movie Reviews.
  59. "The 100 best movies of all time".
  60. (June 17, 2008). "AFI's 10 Top 10". [[American Film Institute]].
  61. (May 2012). "The 75 Best Edited Films".
  62. "The Best Movies That Lost Best Picture at the Oscars".
  63. Scott, A. O.. (August 12, 2007). "Two Outlaws, Blasting Holes in the Screen". The New York Times.
  64. Lavington, Stephen. Oliver Stone. London: Virgin Books, 2004.
  65. (2008). "Monty Python's Flying Circus: An Utterly Complete, Thoroughly Unillustrated, Absolutely Unauthorized Guide to Possibly All the References: from Arthur "Two-Sheds" Jackson to Zambesi". Rowman & Littlefield.
Info: Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

Want to explore this topic further?

Ask Mako anything about Bonnie and Clyde (film) — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.

Research with Mako

Free with your Surf account

Content sourced from Wikipedia, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

This content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.

Report