Monday, March 26, 2012

Bonnie and Clyde: A Reflection of Shifting Culture

Is it really so good to be bad?  Faye Dunaway and Warren Beatty’s portrayal of notorious back robbers Bonnie Parker and Clyde Barrow sure make it appear so in the 1967 film Bonnie and Clyde.  Director Arthur Penn juxtaposes fervent romance with gory violence in a startling and effective way.  I use the word “effective” as synonymous for “memorable”.  How could one not bear the memory of the haunting final scene of Bonnie and Clyde’s bodies convulsing grotesquely while being ravaged by an onslaught of bullets.  In Cineaste magazine’s article “Film Criticism in America Today: A Critical Symposium”, Peter Travers of Rolling Stone magazine states, “Every honest critic knows that a positive review is far more difficult to write.”  Manohla Dargis of LA Weekly agrees with this sentiment saying, “It’s easier for me to write a negative review than a positive one.” I find these statements applicable to a film of such unique character as Bonnie and Clyde.  Upon viewing this film, I often found myself asking why I liked it as much as I did and I think it is a very complicated question to answer.  While I thoroughly enjoyed the Barrow gang’s comedic theft of Eugene Grizzard’s vehicle and the subsequent kidnapping of Eugene and Velma Davis, Bonnie’s swift shift in attitude at the end of the scene reminds the audience that this is, in fact, not a joke.

While it is a film that I find difficult to explain my interest in, I find myself agreeing with critic Pauline Kael’s favorable review of the film as opposed to Andrew Sarris’ review of outrage.  While Sarris’ outrage is understandable, there is something about his complete disregard for the film that projects a curmudgeonly image because, whether he accepts it or not, this is the turn that American film and culture was taking.  His use of words such as “cheap,”, “moronic”, and “sleazy” do not act only as a critique of the film, but as a critique of culture itself.  Personally, I find too much negativity in Sarris’ review.  There is no light at the end of his tunnel.  He spares no praise for Penn’s clever camerawork or the fast-paced progression of the film.  Kael, however, lavishes the film with excessive praise.  She states, “Audience’s at “Bonnie and Clyde” are not given a simple, secure basis for identification; they are made to feel but are not told how to feel” (154).  This is a powerful statement I both agree and disagree with.  Audiences find themselves rooting for Bonnie and Clyde, hoping for their escape or another comedic bank heist.
           
Upon the duo’s first bank robbery with their new sidekick C.W. Moss, Moss decides to neatly park the getaway car in an available parking spot.  “Why’d you park the car?” Clyde asks, puzzled.  Everything appears as well and good as a bank robbery could go.  There is a splash of comedy with a side of a thrilling chase; until a man hops dramatically onto the car to stop the thieves and is subsequently shot directly in the face.  Buck Barrow, played by Gene Hackman, asks Clyde, “You had to do it, right?” to which Clyde remorsefully replies, “I had to do it.”  Clyde’s battle with guilt and his willingness to allow Bonnie to flee to safety after the murder of the man makes him almost redeemable in the eyes of the audience.  A cold-blooded killer would never show remorse.  Yet the gang continues in their robberies.  If one man could die from a plan gone wrong, more could as well yet this does not stop the Barrow gang.  And more people do die.  In this, I feel that Penn does allow audiences to formulate their own opinion about the notorious gang.  While characters exude charisma or sympathy, they also bare a price upon their heads; a price that has been earned.
           
Bonnie and Clyde is a film that employs social morals while simultaneously breaking them, a contradictory point which I feel Sarris missed.  Kael picks up on the fact that the Barrow gang encourage morals that perhaps average people take for granted such as the importance of family and loyalty.  Even Sarris cannot take that away from them.  Each member is rewarded for their contributions in gaining the money.  Kael also states, “They [Bonnie and Clyde] know that newspaper readers want all the details they can get about the criminals who do the terrible things they themselves don’t dare to do, and also want the satisfaction of reading about the punishment after feasting on the crimes” (147).  While Sarris’ review seems to chastise society for embracing a film of such graphic nature, Kael has a dialogue with the audience as to why society embraces the film and how it can be beneficial.  Kael takes on a more approachable and open presence in her review where as Sarris appears rigid and standoffish.  Another reason why Kael’s review may have been better received than Sarris’ might be quantity and quality.  Sarris’ review is miniscule in comparison to Kael’s who delves into the history of the real life Bonnie and Clyde, acknowledges previous interpretations of the pair’s story, and (most importantly) addresses that discomfort produced from the film.  Penn’s telling of the story of Bonnie and Clyde is likely to be overly romanticized, which may act as a reason for its mass appeal.  The core story is very basic.  A beautiful, but trouble woman meets a devilishly handsome and dangerous man and it becomes them against the world.  And, perhaps, it still is them against the world as the controversy remains on admiring the film in spite of the violence.

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