
They’re young… they’re in love… and they kill people.
In the 1930s, bored European-American waitress Bonnie Parker falls in love with a European-American ex-con named Clyde Barrow and together they start a violent crime spree through the country, stealing cars and robbing banks.
- 7.5
- 1967
- Released
- 1h 51m

Warren Beatty
Clyde Barrow
Faye Dunaway
Bonnie Parker
Michael J. Pollard
C. W. Moss
Gene Hackman
Buck Barrow
Estelle Parsons
Blanche
Denver Pyle
Frank Hamer
Dub Taylor
Ivan Moss
Evans Evans
Velma Davis
Gene Wilder
Eugene Grizzard
Mabel Cavitt
Bonnie's mother (uncredited)
Patrick Cranshaw
Bank Teller (uncredited)
Owen Bush
Policeman (uncredited)
Clyde Howdy
Deputy (uncredited)
Ann Palmer
Bonnie's Sister (uncredited)
Ken Mayer
Sheriff Smoot (uncredited)














Released
en
$2,500,000.00
$70,000,000.00
- #sheriff
- #waitress
- #ambush
- #prohibition era
- #submachine gun
- #texas
- #bank robber
- #oklahoma
- #impotence
- #missouri
- #texas ranger
- #crook couple
- #heist
- #fugitive
- #on the run
- #bank robbery
- #grave digger
- #crime spree
- #crime wave
- #bank heist
- #police shootout
- #public enemy
- #gun crime
- #runaway couple
- #witty
- #fugitive lovers
- #joyful
- #tragic
Reviews

78/100 A fictionalized (but fairly accurate with the main points) depiction of the short career of Bonnie Parker and Clyde Barrow as notorious bank robbers and killers during the depression years of the early 30's. All the actors in this did stupendous jobs giving their characters a wealth of personality, humor, and depth making them likable and someone to cheer for despite their sociopathic ru

Bonnie Parker (Faye Dunaway) just happens to look out of her window one morning and spots a rather unsavoury looking fella (Warren Beatty) eyeing up her mother's car. Quick as a flash she is dressed and they are in this car never to look back. Realising that they are broke, they decide that robbing provincial shops and garages is actually a lucrative dawdle. It's at a garage, indeed, that they rec

Good afternoon, we are the Barrow gang. Bonnie & Clyde stands today as one of the most important films of the 60s, it's impact on culture alone marks it out as a piece of work to note, but as gangster films go this one is something of a landmark. Quite how writers Newman & Benton managed to craft a story of two deadbeat outlaws into cinematic heroes is up for any individual viewers scrutiny, bu











