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Aug 4, 2017 · Kicking off a revolution in Hollywood, Bonnie and Clyde is one of the most influential American films ever made. But which films paved the way for this controversial crime classic?
- Seven Samurai
One of the greatest films of all time Akira Kurosawa's Seven...
- Seven Samurai
- Special Mention: from Dusk Till Dawn
- The Doom Generation
- Natural Born Killers
- Easy Rider
- The Wild Bunch
- The Devil’s Rejects
- God Bless America
- O Brother, Where Art Thou?
- True Romance
- Heathers
Infamous and beloved for its jarring genre shift, Robert Rodriguez’s caper follows the Bonnie and Clyde mold up until a point. Centered on the psychotic Gecko Brothers, From Dusk Till Dawn looked like a gritty update of the criminal road trip before vampires and comical amounts of gore popped up. The movie is subversive but not like Beatty and Duna...
Though a period piece, Bonnie and Clyde embodies the generational angst of the ‘60s, and this bitterness is carried on in Gregg Araki’s black comedy. Focusing on a trio of aimlessly aggressive and hedonistic teenagers, The Doom Generation earns its name with its pessimistic outlook on life and rejection of a mundane future. The second entry in Arak...
Rightfully dubbed “the most expensive student film ever made,” Oliver Stone’s satire of crime and celebrity culture is basically Bonnie and Clyde on a bad drug trip. This movie is one of the best examples of “style over substance,” where surreal visuals and psychedelic delivery improve what could’ve been just another moralizing, cynical stab at soc...
Bonnie and Clyde may have birthed New Hollywood, but Easy Rider is that counterculture movement’s flagship. Like Penn’s movie, Dennis Hopper’s landmark film centers on a pair of disillusioned rebels (i.e. hippies) on a cross-country road trip to New Orleans in search of freedom. The bikers’ questioning authority and their futile hunt for the Americ...
Often blamed for killing the traditional Western, The Wild Bunch remains one of New Hollywood’s most defiant rejections of authority and what passes for civilization. If Bonnie and Clyde lamented the waning sense of freedom, The Wild Bunch's titular gang of aging outlaws propose that dying while fighting the changing times was better than waiting t...
Those who disliked the romanticism of Bonnie and Clyde will prefer how The Devil’s Rejects doesn’t bother making its serial-killing protagonists sympathetic, reveling in how sadistic yet pathetic they really are. RELATED: The Highwaymen: 6 Things That Were Accurate (And 4 Things That Were Pure Fiction) Rob Zombie’s most critically acclaimed exploit...
Directed by the voice actor of Pain in Hercules, this dark comedy borrows Bonnie and Clyde’s basics and ramps up the satire. With teenaged and middle-aged stand-ins for Bonnie and Clyde, respectively, God Bless America aims at American society instead of the system. God Bless America can be viewed as the opposite of Bonnie and Clyde since it target...
Taking place in the Deep South during the Great Depression and starring criminals on the run, the Coen Brothers’ (incredibly loose) adaptation of Homer’s Odyssey bears many historical, thematic, and visual similarities to Bonnie and Clyde except in one aspect: It is a comedy. Through the power of music and laughs, O Brother, Where Art Thou? tackles...
Tony Scott’s action-packed romance is the closest to a Bonnie and Clyde remake in this list. More idealistic and romanticized than its inspiration, True Romancefunctions more like a fairytale than a statement. The end result is a heartwarming if edgy love story that gives its lovers the happy ending that eluded Bonnie and Clyde. It also put Quentin...
This pitch-black comedy drops Bonnie and Clyde in a public high school setting, where it then proceeds to laugh at its criminal couple instead of idolizing them. In contrast to the outlaw lovers’ biopic, Heathers forgoes the idealization and shows how deranged and utterly stupid someone has to be to think that inflicting violence is romantic or a g...
- Features Reporter
- Bonnie and Clyde (1967) To top off this list, 1967's Bonnie and Clyde is the blueprint for this iconic movie duo. Bonnie and Clyde follows the chance pairing of Clyde Barrow and Bonnie Parker.
- Gun Crazy (1950) Sometimes, the best stories don't have to have direct references to their source. The 1950 noir crime film Gun Crazy does not have a Bonnie or Clyde character.
- Bonnie & Clyde: The True Story (1992) Bonnie & Clyde: The True Story is a 1992 drama film follows everyone's favorite crime-committing duo as they find companionship, loyalty, and love during the Great Depression.
- Bonnie and Clyde, Italian Style (1982) One of the best things about Bonnie and Clyde in the context of the film world is that the story works in every point of the world.
Feb 2, 2017 · The real-life crimes of Bonnie and Clyde have inspired books, plays, songs, musicals, and even fashion lines. Here are 10 of the best flicks based on the deadly duo.
- Mike Mcpadden
Aug 14, 2017 · This is the sensational finale to the watershed 1967 crime drama Bonnie and Clyde: a high-voltage, take-no-prisoners sequence that is among the most famous – and most shocking – endings in...
Mar 17, 2008 · Memorable Movies Inspired by Bonnie and Clyde With the re-release of the classic on Blu-ray DVD, we look at recent critically-acclaimed films that take on similar themes.
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Jul 8, 2017 · If the New Wave was a case of the French critics deconstructing the methods and iconography of American cinema in order to fashion something new and exciting, 1967’s Bonnie and Clyde was arguably the moment where these forward-thinking revisions truly found their way back to the States.
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