New American Cinema: "Bonnie and Clyde," Arthur Penn
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In 1967, Arthur Penn and Warren Beaty broke the stronghold on Hollywood studios by introducing a biography of the counterculture Bonnie and Clyde Barrow gang that terrorized middle America by robbing banks during the depression. They introduced not only violence, but a heaping tablespoon of sex into their film. Some critics praised the film and it had its share of those who hated it. Beatty eventufally made 6 million profit and Penn 2 million from the seond grossing profit of all time, behind "My Fair Lady." Playbill, history, background, notes: 10 pages; 3151 words; many visuals
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