Bonnie and Clyde
Bonnie and Clyde (1967)

Bonnie and Clyde

2/5
(10 votos)
7.8IMDb81Metascore

Detalles

Elenco

Errores

As the gang leaves a bank robbery in 1934, and 1940 Ford firetruck almost hits their getaway car.

The character of Ivan Moss is referred to as "Malcolm" by Bonnie in one of the final scenes.

Blanche is eating a doughnut in the back seat during a motor scene.

It goes from one bite missing to half-gone, then mysteriously back to one bite missing again.

While Clyde is consoling Bonnie in the field after she tries to run away, his hand is alternately on/off her shoulder between shots.

When CW offers Eugene back his hamburger, there are several small bites taken out of it.

When we cut to Eugene's reaction, it is one large bite.

While fleeing Texas law enforcement after a bank robbery, the gang drives into Oklahoma on dry land instead of over a bridge, as one might expect.

The substantial Red River forms the boundary between Oklahoma and the parts of Texas (northeast and north-central) in which they were active criminals.

The dry-land section of the Texas-Oklahoma boundary lies to the north and east of the Texas "Panhandle" which is quite far (about 200 miles at the least) from any of their known bank robberies.

Near the end of the movie, as they are riding on their car, Bonnie picks up a pear from a grocery bag and starts eating it.

In the following shot, she shares the pear with Clyde but the pear is upside down.

When Clyde enters Ritts Groceries to make a robbery, Bonnie stays in the middle of the street holding a cooler bottle.

When they run toward the car, however, the bottle disappears.

After he calls Bonnie to follow him, Clyde turns and goes to the car.

Then she calls him and points to him with her left hand, keeping her right arm by her side.

The next shot shows her with her right hand touching her own shoulder.

Otis Harris takes the gun from Davis holding it by the barrel and passes it like this to Clyde.

In the subsequent shot Clyde is holding it by the barrel too, instead of the handle.

When Bonnie says to C.

that the car is a "stolen, four-cylinder Ford coupe," she has her left arm leaning on the car door and the right one inside.

In the following shot she has her arms crossed on the door.

During the frustrated love scene on the bed, Clyde turns on his back and puts his left hand on his chest after kissing Bonnie.

In the next shot, however, his left hand moves off of her breast.

Still on the bed, after Clyde stands up, Bonnie appears with a gun near her face in close-up.

The subsequent shows her standing up with no gun nearby at all.

When Clyde is taking a picture of Buck and Blanche, he takes the cigar from his mouth and holds the camera with both hands.

In the next shot, the cigar is in his mouth again.

Inside the car, when Blanche and C.

go to buy some food, she lights a new cigarette with the butt of the other.

In the following shot the butt has disappeared.

In the very first scene when Bonnie is flailing around her bedroom, there is an obvious jump in film just as she begins to beat the bed frame with her fist.

During the final attack on Bonnie and Clyde, Bonnie's dress alternates between showing gray powder/squib stains and bloodstains.

In the final scene where Bonnie and Clyde are killed, the Ranger and his deputies are wielding Thompson sub-machine guns.

In actual fact, the weapons of choice were Browning Automatic Rifles (B.

When Buck yells, "Shut up!" at Blanche in the shoot-out scene, Gene Hackman's mouth doesn't move.

When C.

throws a grenade at the armored car it hits the front fender, and the fender breaks in half before the explosion.

Since the car is presumably a heavy steel vehicle, (which it was in real life) the light weight grenade shouldn't have broken the fender.

After the Texas Ranger spits on Bonnie's face, she then tries to rub the spit off moving her hands downwards as she is still wearing the hat.

On the next scene as she finishes rubbing off the spit, suddenly she is not wearing that hat.

In the movie Clyde is killed outside of the car when in actuality Clyde was killed inside the car from the first volley from the ambushers During the tourist court shoot out, the signage states they are in Platte City, Iowa.

In actuality the shootout took place near Platte City, Missouri, and near the present day Kansas City International Airport.

The approximate location of the tourist court is near Interstate 29 & NW Cookingham Dr.

The tourist court has since been torn down.

On the opening credits, the card giving Bonnie's background mentions that she was born in Rowena which is in west Texas, just outside San Angelo.

When Bonnie and Clyde are in the café and Clyde is talking about her background, he says, "You were born around east Texas, right?" to which she incorrectly responds, "Yeah.

" Bonnie pays the grocery delivery boy with modern Sixties-era currency - dollar bills looked quite different during Depression, when story took place.

The film portrays Texas Ranger Frank Hamer as a vengeful bungler who had been captured, humiliated, and released by Bonnie and Clyde.

In reality, Hamer was already a legendary Texas Ranger when he was coaxed out of semi-retirement to hunt down the duo, and never met either of them until the moment he and his posse successfully ambushed and killed them near Gibsland, Louisiana in 1934.

In 1968, Hamer's widow and son sued the movie producers for defamation of character over his portrayal and were awarded an out of court settlement in 1971.

The fire truck at the roadblock is a 1940 model.

It stands out as being too modern for the depression era.

Bonnie's hairstyle in the film is that of a 1960s style, and not of the 1930s.

Box Office

FechaÁreaBruto
January 1973 USA USD 50,700,000
January 1973 Worldwide USD 70,000,000
Sweden SEK 5,828,000

Comentarios

Bonnie and Clyde, the first movie Roger Ebert gave a 4/4 star score. The movie was incredibly edgy for its time with the glorified violence, fast-driving and the memorable scene of Buck Barrow getting shot in the head.

Many fairy tales end with happy endings and loveable characters. This is synonymous with a fairy tale in modern times, but most of the characters slip into killing sprees and moral dilemmas that usually result in poor decisions.

Bonnie and Clyde is maybe one of those classics that didn't age well, maybe because the world around it has changed so much since 1967. The movie that I saw last night had some nice aspects to it, nice characterisations, Faye Dunaway looks amazing, and there is also a healthy dose of reality in that Clyde isn't depicted as the dashing bankrobber but, while physically still very handsome, really he's a small time thief with a big time gun.

Almost 50 years later it is still easy to see how Bonnie and Clyde kickstarted the whole New Hollywood trend, and also why so many critics were up in arms about it, with one notable exception (Roger Ebert, RIP.)The movie is as raw and forceful as a bullet through the eyeball fired by a man to whom your head is just target practice.

I have heard the stories of Bonnie and Clyde many times and no some of the history behind that but this was the first time I ever seen this movie this movie was a great movie for anybody to watch it had lots of action drama and could be considered a love story as well the actors in the movie where very believable in the rules that they played throughout the entire movie there were a few parts that I thought were funny but most of it was or would be considered action or drama film the ending of the film was definitely a good ending loved watching this film and would definitely recommend it to other people and would definitely watch it again great movie!!!

1967's Bonnie and Clyde changed the landscape of American movies in a major way. This picture allowed movies with gratuitous violence and realistic sex scenes to make their way to the forefront.

From the innovative opening titles, a series of period photographs with shutter-sound (Fitzgerald-Stahl), through a sequence of short scenes, the first in Bonnie's bedroom (Guffey), proving sensuality does not require nudity, then catching Clyde in the act (theft) ("Hey, boy!"), her escape, their stroll, the dare, first heist, the getaway, rejection and the pact, the viewer will know from get-go that this is not your typical gangster flick.

Bonnie Parker(played by Faye Dunaway) & Clyde Barrow(played by Warren Beatty) are a depression era couple who commit a brazen series of bank robberies across the Midwest. They are eventually joined by Clyde's brother Buck(played by Gene Hackman) his wife Blanche(Estelle Parsons) and a gas station attendant named C.

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