Review of Bonnie and Clyde (1967) by Kyle M — 29 Dec 2014
When you hear those two names Bonnie and Clyde, you would probably think of them as bank robbers that shoots and kills their obstacles when you probably haven't heard their whole story. Arthur Penn delivered to share the story and had presented an insight of the outlaws' lives that were filled with surprised moments of rare lightheartedness than just constantly doing trouble but instead trying to live free while avoiding the pay up of their predictable fate that awaits the two. The story was well-performed by Warren Beatty and Faye Dunaway as the titular pair with Gene Hackman as the bonus treat when enjoying this nicely-followed biopic. On the ending note, the notable fate that'd done most of the job to give this a film a reputation based on how well it was executed and how it proved its matching power of the atmosphere.
The original "Bonnie and Clyde" feature may be violent and has strange behavior among its characters, but it was well-made on being typically mostly accurate while the performances and the cinematography expressed the story well while matching the power - an ability that most or some biopics possessed. It's a film with the winning materials that'll bring you the enjoyment you'll mostly appreciate if ignoring the violence and the strangeness would be helpful to have a satisfying experience than knowing the basic fact and fate. (B+).
(Full review coming soon - with better wording probably).
This review of Bonnie and Clyde (1967) was written by Kyle M on 29 Dec 2014.
Bonnie and Clyde has generally received very positive reviews.
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