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Gangster Story
Titolo originale: Bonnie and Clyde
Regia:
Arthur Penn
|
Anno: 1967
Origine: United States of America |
Generi: Crime Dramma
Tag:
sheriff
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waitress
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ambush
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prohibition era
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submachine gun
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texas
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bank robber
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oklahoma
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impotence
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missouri
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texas ranger
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crook couple
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heist
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fugitive
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on the run
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bank robbery
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grave digger
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crime spree
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crime wave
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bank heist
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police shootout
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public enemy
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gun crime
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runaway couple
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witty
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fugitive lovers
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joyful
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tragic
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Cast:
Warren Beatty
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Faye Dunaway
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Michael J. Pollard
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Gene Hackman
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Estelle Parsons
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Denver Pyle
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Dub Taylor
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Evans Evans
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Gene Wilder
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Mabel Cavitt
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Patrick Cranshaw
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Owen Bush
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Clyde Howdy
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Russ Marker
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Ann Palmer
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Ken Mayer
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Nel 1933 a Dallas Clyde Barrow, giovane ladro d'auto, e Bonnie Parker, cameriera, si mettono insieme e diventano, con alcuni complici, la banda di rapinatori di banche più famosa d'America.
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Approfondimenti
For the climactic ambush, Warren Beatty and Faye Dunaway were covered with dozens of squibs embedded [...]
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With positive attention from the press and the critics, Warren Beatty pressured Warner Brothers to r [...]
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Just before Clyde robs the store, early in the film, he's seen chewing on a matchstick. His hat band [...]
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Leading Newsweek magazine film critic Joseph Morgenstern hated the film when he first saw it, but th [...]
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Cinematographer Burnett Guffey was dismissed during this production, due to artistic clashes with di [...]
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Roger Ebert had only been a film critic for six months when he saw this film, and hailed it as the f [...]
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Estelle Parsons had been appearing on Broadway in the title role of Tennessee Williams' "The Seven D [...]
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This was first shown on US television by CBS on Thursday, 20 September 1973.
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When scouting for locations, production designer Dean Tavoularis was delighted to see that a lot of [...]
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At the time, this was Warner Bros.' second highest-grossing film after My Fair Lady (1964).
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For the climactic massacre, Faye Dunaway's leg had to be tied to the gear shift to prevent her from [...]
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Film debut of Gene Wilder.
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Faye Dunaway nearly lost the part of Bonnie Parker as she had put on some weight for E venne la nott [...]
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Warner Bros. had so little faith in the film that they offered first-time producer Warren Beatty 40% [...]
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Technically, this is the only film rated "M" (the early equivalent of "PG," introduced in 1973) by t [...]
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C.W. Moss mentions in the first scene with Buck and Blanche that Myrna Loy is his favorite movie sta [...]
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Unusual for such a graphic and violent film, Arthur Penn intended it to be partly comic, almost like [...]
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Since this was Estelle Parsons' first film, she was amazed at the extent of the special effects. Whe [...]
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In the movie, Bonnie and Clyde meet when she catches him stealing her mother's car. In reality, it i [...]
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After bad reviews in The New York Times, Time, and Newsweek, a 9,000-word rave by Pauline Kael, who [...]
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Unlike the one shown in the movie, the license plate on the car the Barrow's died in was TEXAS 587-9 [...]
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Morgan Woodward was originally slated to play Frank Hamer, but he was held up when filming of Nick m [...]
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While they were shooting Bonnie and Clyde's confrontation in the fields after she tries to run away [...]
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Clyde's self-mutilation while at Eastham Prison Farm was part of a common practice among convicts to [...]
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The movie portrays Texas Ranger Frank Hamer as a bungler who is humiliated by Bonnie, Clyde, and Buc [...]
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Jack Warner told Warren Beatty that he would only finance the film if it was filmed in the style of [...]
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The real Blanche Barrow sued Warner Bros. over the way she was depicted in the film. In reality, Bar [...]
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To commemorate the 50th anniversary of this movie, Warren Beatty and Faye Dunaway were invited to pr [...]
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An inventory of the bullet-riddled Ford V-8 revealed Clyde and Bonnie possessed at the time of death [...]
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Co-writer Robert Benton got the idea for his script from his father, who had attended the separate f [...]
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Initially, Warren Beatty refused to have Faye Dunaway billed above the title with him. Even during s [...]
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Billed as "America's Most Wanted Broadway Musical," "Bonnie & Clyde" was set to open on Broadway at [...]
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Bonnie's family reunion scene was shot through a window screen to give it a hazy, nostalgic effect.
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Gene Hackman was on the set one day when he noticed a guy standing behind him and staring. The man s [...]
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Allegations about Clyde Barrow's homosexuality may have stemmed from the fact that, as an inmate at [...]
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When the gang is being pursued by Eugene and Velma for stealing their car, Clyde suggests kidnapping [...]
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Warren Beatty and Arthur Penn quarreled constantly during filming, as Beatty questioned almost every [...]
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The family gathering scene was filmed in Red Oak, Texas. Several local residents were watching the f [...]
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Included among the "1001 Movies You Must See Before You Die," edited by Steven Schneider.
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The film is included on Roger Ebert's "Great Movies" list.
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Producer Warren Beatty owned 40% of this film, which made him millions of dollars since its release.
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Premiere voted this movie as one of "The 25 Most Dangerous Movies."
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Many consider one of the reasons why the film was so successful was because of its anti-establishmen [...]
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Michael J. Pollard's "C.W. Moss" character is a composite of several of Bonnie and Clyde's cohorts o [...]
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Prologue: "Bonnie Parker, born in Rowena Texas, 1910 and then moved to west Dallas. In 1931 she work [...]
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Jordan Christopher and Dennis Hopper were considered for the role of C.W. Moss before producer Warre [...]
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Warren Beatty wanted to produce this movie in black and white. This was rejected by Warner Brothers.
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During filming, Faye Dunaway was 25 years old and Warren Beatty was 29.
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A crucial fact left out of the movie was that Bonnie Parker was virtually incapacitated for the last [...]
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Julie Christie turned down the role of Bonnie Parker.
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The scene in which C.W. Moss parallel-parks the getaway car while Clyde and Bonnie are in the bank, [...]
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During the shoot-out at the Red Crown Tourist Court near Platte City, Missouri, the movie depicts th [...]
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After François Truffaut's departure from the project, the producers approached Jean-Luc Godard. S [...]
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In the movie, the Barrow Gang are ambushed in a field near where they escaped the Red Crown police r [...]
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One of director Arthur Penn's intentions was to make the character of Blanche as hysterical as possi [...]
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The first bank Bonnie and Clyde robbed, there was no money in it. The bank had gone bust three weeks [...]
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When François Truffaut was planning to direct, he had hoped for Terence Stamp and Alexandra Stewa [...]
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The Gene Wilder-Evans Evans sequence is based on the kidnappings of undertaker H.D. Darby and his ac [...]
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Warren Beatty and Michael J. Pollard had worked together on an episode of "The Many Loves of Dobie G [...]
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The film cast includes four Oscar winners (Warren Beatty, Faye Dunaway, Gene Hackman, and Estelle Pa [...]
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Faye Dunaway had tried to get an interview with Arthur Penn when he was directing La caccia (1966), [...]
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Originally, writers Robert Benton and David Newman wrote Clyde Barrow as bisexual (even though the r [...]
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Once Warren Beatty came on-board, one of the first things deleted from Robert Benton and David Newma [...]
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Jane Fonda appeared on the December 6, 2012, episode of Bravo's "Watch What Happens: Live" (2009), a [...]
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Michael J. Pollard didn't realize that in eating scenes you don't actually eat all the food because [...]
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Evans Evans, who played the role of Eugene Grizzard's girlfriend, was the wife of director John Fran [...]
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This is not the first time that Dub Taylor and Denver Pyle worked together as you can find them toge [...]
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Ann-Margret was approached to play Bonnie Parker, but negotiations broke down over salary. Tuesday W [...]
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Richard Brooks wanted his wife Jean Simmons as Bonnie Parker, but producer and star Warren Beatty tu [...]
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The story of Bonnie Parker smoking a cigar in a picture is accurate. She did it as a joke. But after [...]
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The movie that Bonnie and Clyde go to see after their botched bank robbery when C.W. Moss parallel p [...]
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A screening for Jack L. Warner went very badly for Warren Beatty and Arthur Penn, Warner got up thre [...]
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In 2007, the American Film Institute ranked this as the #42 Greatest Movie of All Time.
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On Dec. 27, 1931, after 21 months on the lam, Buck Barrow voluntarily turned himself back in to comp [...]
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Thousand of berets were sold worldwide after Faye Dunaway wore them in this film.
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In reality, Buck Barrow's death was much more brutal. After being shot repeatedly, a police officer [...]
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Future filmmaker Curtis Hanson, who began his career as a photographer, took a series of modeling ph [...]
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Was Oscar-nominated in all the major categories of Best Picture, Best Director, Best Actor, Best Act [...]
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Ranked number five on the American Film Institute's list of the 10 greatest films in the "Gangster" [...]
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In real life, Blanche Barrow did not run from the Joplin apartment screaming with a spatula. In fact [...]
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The movie's line "We rob banks" was voted as the #41 movie quote by the American Film Institute (out [...]
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Ford introduced their V8 engine in 1932, and Clyde quickly developed a strong preference for Ford Ro [...]
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This was the final movie from Warner Brothers to use the classic WB shield logo until spring 1972. T [...]
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The antique cars used in the film came from Dallas-area collectors and were rented by the day. The o [...]
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One of the first films to feature an extensive use of squibs.
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In the Special Edition DVD Documentary, Estelle Parsons says she was the only member of the cast who [...]
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This is not the first time that Dub Taylor and Denver Pyle worked together, as you can find them tog [...]
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Convinced their phones were being tapped, the Parker and Barrow families used coded phrases when con [...]
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Costume designer Theadora Van Runkle had to deal with Warren Beatty's (6'4") worries that he would b [...]
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Michael J. Pollard admitted in later interviews that he borrowed his accent from Bob Dylan on the "B [...]
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A story that has been floating around for years about the final shootout is that Arthur Penn and/or [...]
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Named by Robert Zemeckis as his all-time favourite film in an AFI poll.
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Gene Hackman and Gene Wilder appeared in Frankenstein Junior (1974).
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The radio playing in the gang's Platte City hideout suggests it was a Sunday just before 9 pm. The C [...]
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In the early diner scene, Bonnie wears a predominant spit/kiss curl on her left cheek. Popular in th [...]
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Clyde's repeated struggles to consummate his relationship with Bonnie may have been tied to his brut [...]
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Ginger Rogers can be heard singing "We're in the Money" from La danza delle luci (1933) during the t [...]
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Warren Beatty offered George Stevens, William Wyler, Karel Reisz, John Schlesinger, Brian G. Hutton, [...]
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C.W. Moss (Michael J. Pollard) was a fictional conglomeration of all of Bonnie and Clyde's minor sid [...]
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Robert Towne accompanied the crew during the location shoot. In part, he was there to do last minute [...]
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While it was most likely W.D. Jones' interview with police shortly after his capture that lead to ru [...]
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Features Michael J. Pollard's only Oscar-nominated performance.
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In contrast to his infamous womanizing, Warren Beatty did not have an affair with Faye Dunaway. They [...]
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Originally, Warren Beatty intended to cast Leslie Caron, his main girlfriend at the time, as Bonnie [...]
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In reality, the bank robbers picked up about three people in their travels. This was merged into one [...]
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In the film, Clyde stops his car on a country road to help a friend change a flat tire. Once they re [...]
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Included among the American Film Institute's 2002 list of the top 100 America's Greatest Love Storie [...]
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In this film, set in 1933, Clyde Barrow offers $40 to CW Moss' father as payment for letting them st [...]
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The car in which the real Bonnie Parker and Clyde Barrow met their fate is on display (along with Ba [...]
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Sixteen-year-old Patsy McClenny (the future Morgan Fairchild), who at the time was active in Dallas [...]
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This film was selected by the Library of Congress for the National Film Registry in 1992 for being " [...]
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During one of the bank robberies, Buck Barrow (Gene Hackman) does a leap over the tellers' cage. Thi [...]
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The idea of shooting the final ambush in slow motion came from Arthur Penn, who wanted to make somet [...]
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Gene Hackman (Buck) and Estelle Parsons (Blanche) play siblings in the 1970 film 'I Never Sang For M [...]
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Warren Beatty requested that the sound of gunshots in the movie should be much louder than the rest [...]
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The six lawmen (including lead investigator Frank Hamer) who staged the May 23, 1934, ambush that gu [...]
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Before deciding to play the role, producer Warren Beatty's first choice for the role of Clyde Barrow [...]
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Ghostbuster and SNL-alum Dan Akyroyd went to see this movie on his first date.
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Bonnie Parker was 4'10" tall, nine inches shorter than Faye Dunaway.
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Arthur Penn was particularly fascinated with the way Akira Kurosawa handled violent action and death [...]
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Warner Brothers gave the movie a limited B movie-type release at first, sending it to drive-ins and [...]
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Gene Hackman and Faye Dunaway eventually went on to play the main villains in superhero films. Gene [...]
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When Warren Beatty was on-board as producer only, his sister Shirley MacLaine was a strong possibili [...]
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The poem that Bonnie reads aloud in the rented apartment is "The Story of Suicide Sal," written by B [...]
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In real life, Clyde Barrow was a highly dangerous marksman who had mastered most firearms, including [...]
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Half a dozen of the cars used in the movie, including the one stolen from Eugene Grizzard (Gene Wild [...]
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Although Frank Hamer went down in history as "the man who killed Bonnie and Clyde", the actual final [...]
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Screenwriter Robert Towne did uncredited work as a story consultant on the movie. He is featured in [...]
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Warren Beatty fought to shoot the film on-locations around Texas, partly to create an authentic imag [...]
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Before filming started, Faye Dunaway was told to lose 25 pounds off her 5'7" frame. For weeks she fa [...]
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According to the film's editor Dede Allen, the climactic massacre was meant to evoke Abraham Zaprude [...]
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Jack Nicholson was considered for the role of C.W. Moss. He was deemed too similar to Warren Beatty. [...]
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Near the end of the film, Bonnie and Clyde are lying in bed discussing marriage. In reality, Bonnie [...]
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The only Best Picture Oscar nominee that year to be also nominated for Best Costume Design.
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Legendary outlaw John Herbert Dillinger had a very low opinion of Clyde Barrow and Bonnie Parker, ca [...]
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On the day the company shot the scene in which Bonnie and Clyde wade through a river after they're s [...]
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In a 1968 interview, Warren Beatty mentioned that his last conversation with ex-girlfriend Natalie W [...]
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The first car that Clyde steals after the grocery store hold-up is a 1930 Willys-Knight Model 70-B. [...]
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According to Warren Beatty in the Special Edition DVD documentary, in the death scene, the make-up d [...]
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To avoid censorship problems, Warren Beatty held off sending a script to the Production Code Adminis [...]
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To get above-the-title billing, Faye Dunaway had to give back $25,000 of her $60,000 salary.
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The poem "The Story of Bonnie and Clyde" (aka "The Trail's End") recited by Faye Dunaway in the film [...]
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Arthur Penn originally turned the script down, but after various other directors did likewise, inclu [...]
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Timothy Carey was up for a big part in this film, but Arthur Penn didn't cast him because he was gen [...]
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Contrary to the film's portrayal of Blanche Barrow inadvertently divulging the identity of C.W. Moss [...]
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In one scene, while holding up a bank, Clyde Barrow tells a farmer he can keep his own money. ("Is t [...]
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Included among the American Film Institute's 2001 list of the Top 100 Most Heart-Pounding American M [...]
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The final car that Bonnie and Clyde steal, and the one they die in, is a 1934 Ford V8 Fordor. The re [...]
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Gene Hackman regretted his decision to film Buck's death scene in his vest. The scene was shot sever [...]
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The infamous climactic shoot-out was filmed with four different cameras, all running at differe [...]
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In planning her performance, Faye Dunaway wanted to wear slacks as Bonnie Parker, since the characte [...]
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The final moment of the field shoot-out in which the posse surrounds a dying Buck and a hysterical B [...]
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The first choice for director, François Truffaut, expressed a keen interest in the project and ma [...]
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During the car chase following one of the bank robberies, there is a brief glimpse of a few Burma Sh [...]
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When Warren Beatty and Arthur Penn showed the finished movie to Jack L. Warner, he called it "the lo [...]
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Initially, Arthur Penn went for a realistic depiction of rural life in the 1930s. Many scenes were m [...]
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Veteran Cinematographer Burnett Guffey, an Oscar winner for Da qui all'eternità (1953), had frequ [...]
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Included among the American Film Institute's 1998 list of the Top 100 Greatest American Movies.
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Cher auditioned for the role of Bonnie Parker, but when her husband and manager at the time, Sonny B [...]
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Heavily influenced by the French New Wave directors, mainly through its rapid shifts of tone and its [...]
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In a television interview, director Arthur Penn pointed out that this film showed, for the first tim [...]
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The film has a dynamic soundtrack that gets much louder during the gunfights. The British premiere o [...]
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Connessioni
Nessun dato in archivio
Domande
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Errori
When CW offers Eugene back his hamburger, there are several small bites taken out of it. When Eugene [...]
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During the frustrated love scene on the bed, Clyde turns on his back and puts his left hand on his c [...]
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While Clyde is consoling Bonnie in the field after she tries to run away, his hand is alternately on [...]
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While fleeing Texas law enforcement after a bank robbery, the gang drives into Oklahoma on dry land [...]
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When C.W. throws a grenade at the armored car, it hits the front fender, breaking in half before the [...]
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When the Bonnie and Clyde gang takes a break to secretly meet with Bonnie's mother and other relativ [...]
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After he calls Bonnie to follow him, Clyde turns and goes to the car. Then she calls him and points [...]
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When Buck yells, "Shut up!" at Blanche in the shoot-out scene, Gene Hackman's mouth doesn't move.
D
Camera reflected on the group's truck, while Clyde looks for Bonnie in the cornfield.
D
In the Kodak scene, a hat falls onto the running board of Buck's car then disappears.
D
The character of Ivan Moss is referred to as "Malcolm" by Bonnie in one of the final scenes.
D
When Clyde enters Ritts Groceries to make a robbery, Bonnie stays in the middle of the street holdin [...]
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When Clyde boasts to Bonnie during their first meeting that he chopped off two toes on his right foo [...]
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Before crossing the state line into Oklahoma, the Barrow gang robs a bank. When they get into the ge [...]
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About 50 minutes into the film, Bonnie tells Clyde to pull the car over. Clyde drives into a field a [...]
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Near the end of the movie, as they are riding on their car, Bonnie picks up a pear from a grocery ba [...]
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During the Kodak scene, the door to Buck's car closes shut, but we do not see or hear him close it.
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In some chase scenes, tires are heard squealing or skidding as if they are on asphalt when they are [...]
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Otis Harris takes the gun from Davis holding it by the barrel and passes it like this to Clyde. In t [...]
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Clyde walks with a limp. At the start of the movie, when he is robbing the general store to impress [...]
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Bonnie and Clyde drive into a hay field (in 1933) and are surrounded by modern (for 1967) hay bales [...]
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The police car that rolls during the chase across the Oklahoma border has an obvious dummy in the fr [...]
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Bonnie pays the grocery delivery boy with modern 1960s-era currency - dollar bills looked quite diff [...]
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Inside the car, when Blanche and C.W. go to buy some food, she lights a new cigarette with the butt [...]
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During the tourist court shoot-out, the signage states they are in Platte City, Iowa. The shootout a [...]
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In the movie, Clyde is killed outside of the car, when in actuality, Clyde was killed inside the car [...]
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Bonnie's hairstyle in the film is that of a 1960's style, not of the 1930s.
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The film portrays Texas Ranger Frank Hamer as a vengeful bungler who had been captured, humiliated, [...]
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The fire truck at the roadblock is a 1940 model. It stands out as being too modern for the depressio [...]
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In the final scene where Bonnie and Clyde are killed, the Ranger and his deputies are wielding Thomp [...]
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When the gang drives out of the field, the left-hand headlight is broken and dangling above the bump [...]
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In the opening credits, the placard giving Bonnie's background mentions that she was born in Rowena, [...]
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Blanche is eating a doughnut in the back seat during a motor scene. It goes from one bite missing to [...]
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The cash in the field is from a more contemporary period than the 1930s.
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After the Texas Ranger spits on Bonnie's face, she then tries to rub the spit off moving her hands d [...]
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As the gang leaves a bank robbery in 1934, a 1940s Ford fire truck almost hits their getaway car.
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In the gas station scene where Bonnie and Clyde meet C.W., the lights used for the camera are reflec [...]
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In the very first scene when Bonnie is flailing around her bedroom, there is an obvious jump in film [...]
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When Bonnie says to C.W. that the car is a "stolen four-cylinder Ford coupe," she has her left arm l [...]
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The newspaper with the headline "Where is he?" is supposed to be about Clyde, but has almost no info [...]
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In the scene with the homeowner being evicted by the Midlothian National Bank, after the two homeown [...]
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About 55 minutes into the film, after a bank robbery, three cars are coming down a hill in a field t [...]
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When Clyde is taking a picture of Buck and Blanche, he takes the cigar from his mouth and holds the [...]
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During the final attack on Bonnie and Clyde, Bonnie's dress alternates between showing gray powder/s [...]
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When Clyde and Buck put the Texas Ranger in the boat, when first seen, the boat is tied to the shore [...]
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Still on the bed, after Clyde stands up, Bonnie appears with a gun near her face in close-up. The su [...]
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Before Eugene Grizzard and Velma Davis are taken hostage by Bonnie and Clyde's group, the cameraman' [...]
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Frase
Clyde Barrow: Alright. Alright. If all you want's [...]
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Bonnie Parker: You're a smart fella. You sure do k [...]
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Clyde Barrow: [after a failed session with Bonnie] [...]
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[after Clyde shows off his marksmanship with a han [...]
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Clyde Barrow: [Bonnie can't stop laughing after Cl [...]
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[about Bonnie's poem] Clyde Barrow: You know what [...]
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Eugene Grizzard: Step on it, Velma. Step on it, Ve [...]
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Bonnie Parker: [after a shootout with the cops] *D [...]
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Bonnie Parker: Mama's an old woman now. I don't ha [...]
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Buck Barrow: Hey, you wanna hear a story 'bout thi [...]
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Bonnie Parker: When we started out... I thought we [...]
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Clyde Barrow: This here's Miss Bonnie Parker. I'm [...]
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Bonnie Parker: We rob banks!
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Farmer: All I can say is, they did right by me - a [...]
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C.W. Moss: I spent a year... I spent *A YEAR* in r [...]
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Clyde Barrow: There's nothing wrong with me, I mea [...]
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Clyde Barrow: You try to get something to eat arou [...]
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Bonnie Parker: [Turned around in the car to face t [...]
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Clyde Barrow: Now you just tell me what was wrong [...]
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Clyde Barrow: What're you writing? Bonnie Parker: [...]
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Bonnie Parker: [to Clyde, after he rebuffs her rom [...]
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[after failing to sexually perform with Bonnie] C [...]
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Clyde Barrow: I don't think he's lost. I think the [...]
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Bonnie Parker: [to Clyde] You're just like your br [...]
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Bonnie Parker: [reading her poem] You've heard the [...]
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Clyde Barrow: Honey, c'mon, I wanna talk to you fo [...]
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[Blanche wants a cut of the loot] Blanche Barrow: [...]
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Bonnie Parker: Hey, that ain't ours! Clyde Barrow [...]
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Clyde Barrow: ...the truck drivers come in to eat [...]
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Clyde Barrow: [to Texas Ranger Frank Hamer] You kn [...]
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[moments after Clyde has committed armed robbery a [...]
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[during a robbery, a bank guard pulls a gun on Cly [...]
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Clyde Barrow: Hell, you might just be the best dam [...]
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Bonnie Parker: What would you do if some miracle h [...]
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Bonnie Parker: [Bonnie to Buck and Blanche] Why do [...]
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Bonnie's Mother: You know Clyde, I read about you [...]
D
Elenchi
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