Film Review
No film captures the mood of America in the late 1960s better, nor
shows the emergence of a vociferous counter-culture more vividly, than
this stylish revisionist gangster film. This was the film which
redefined American cinema at a momentous time in the country's history
and heralded the start of a brief but glorious period in Hollywood when
art took precedence over profit. With its strident
anti-authoritarian, anti-establishment tone,
Bonnie and Clyde provided a
rallying cry for all those who had grown disillusioned with the
failings of the country's institutions, in particular the government,
and helped to galvanise opposition to the Vietnam War.
At the time of its release,
Bonnie
and Clyde was a hugely controversial film, partly because it was
seen to glamorise gangsterism in a way that many thought was immoral,
but also because of its extreme portrayal of violence. No
previous gangster film had ever been this bloody nor shown the
consequences of gangsterism with as much visceral realism. The
film's shock ending - the slow motion slaughter of the principal
protagonists - was one of the most horrific sequences in film history,
although its impact today is diminished by the fact that it has been
endlessly copied ever since.
Yet, whilst
Bonnie and Clyde
courted considerable controversy, it was a major commercial
success. Taking 23 million dollars at the box office, this was to
be Warner Brothers' second biggest success at the time, after
My Fair Lady. Critical
reaction was generally positive and the film was nominated for nine
Oscars, although it secured wins in just two categories: Best
Supporting Actress (Estelle Parsons) and Best Cinematography. The
film provided a welcome boost to the acting career of Warren Beatty
(who was originally reluctant to play the lead role in a film that he
was producing) and made the then-unknown Faye Dunaway into an overnight
star. Gene Wilder made his screen debut in this film.
The history of
Bonnie and Clyde
is almost as interesting and improbable as the story it tells. At
the outset, the producers were determined that the film would be
directed by one of the directors of the French New Wave, in an attempt
to breathe new life into American cinema and presumably unleash an
equivalent
nouvelle vague in
Hollywood. François Truffaut was originally considered for
the job, but he had already committed himself to making an adaptation
of the Ray Bradbury novel
Fahrenheit 451. Jean-Luc
Godard was then approached to direct the film, but some of the ideas he
came up with frightened the film's backers so much that he was quickly
dropped. In the end, the directing job went to an American,
Arthur Penn, on the strength of his earlier work, notably
The Miracle Worker (1962).
Thanks to the sterling efforts of Arthur Penn and his talented team of
writers, actors and technicians,
Bonnie and
Clyde achieved what it set out to do, which was to reinvigorate
American cinema and provide audiences with a whole new viewing
experience. The romanticised account of the exploits of a
notorious gang is less important than the artistry that went into the
film. Jumping frenetically between wildly different genre types -
one minute gritty gangster film, the next a
Keystone Kops style farce, then a
brief romantic interlude, etc. - was something that was copied
successfully from the work of the French New Wave directors,
along with their editing and cinematographic techniques.
It is the wild switches in mood and style that make the drama feel
more real, more three-dimensional, and prevent the spectator from
anticipating just where the film is going. The reason why
Bonnie and Clyde is so enjoyable to
watch, and why it still has so much impact, is because it constantly
takes us by surprise. There is as much comedy and poetry in this
film as there is gory violence, as much humanity as vicious gun-blazing
thuggery. But what is most fascinating about this film is how
well it reflects America in the late 1960s - you can almost smell the
spirit of rebellion that was in the air when the film was first seen.
© James Travers 2009
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
In the early 1930s, America is in the grip of the Great
Depression. Life is hard, but Clyde Barrow, a young man who has
recently been released from prison, manages to scrape along by holding
up the odd store and gas station. He is about to steal a car when
its owner's daughter, Bonnie Parker, appears and makes a marked
impression on him. A waitress in a dull town, Bonnie has an
appetite for adventure and decides to tag along with the fanciable
Clyde. After a few amateurish hold-ups, the couple team up with
Clyde's brother, Buck, and a young gas station attendant, Moss, to make
a formidable gang. In the course of a bank robbery, Clyde shoots
a bank employee dead and the gang immediately become public enemy
number one. Relentlessly pursued by Texas Ranger Frank
Hamer, the outlaws go on the run, leaving a trail of mayhem and murder
wherever they go. Although she knows full well where this mad
adventure will end, Bonnie remains devotedly attached to Clyde and
refuses to leave him. Brief though their real-life coupling was,
the names Bonnie and Clyde will be tied together forever...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.