Monday, April 11, 2011

Blood and Gore

Crime was displayed in detail with a dash of humor. This was an extreme move in 1967 from the movies before Bonnie and Clyde. In movies before Bonnie and Clyde, women and youth were exempt from violent acts. Violence and crime was not displayed in bold detail. Penns Bonnie and Clyde employs an unprecedented depiction of violence and crime that shattered the Hays office production codes. The Hays offices of production codes of murder were stomped out by Bonnie and Clyde, especially the codes that brutal killings are not to be presented in detail. Bonnie and Clyde are full of brutal killings shown bluntly. In one of the scenes in Bonnie and Clyde the criminals are driving away after robbing a bank, and a bank employee gets shot at point blank range. The shot caused an explosion of Blood all over the employees face. After a reaction shot from Clyde, the employee is shown again with a Bloody face before he falls from the moving car. This is not your ordinary fast Blood less death that happened in the past films. One of the more gruesome scenes is the confrontation with the police at a hotel. In this scene Clydes brother Buck Borrow, is shot in the head in a gunfight. Blood splatters out of his head and covers his face. His wife Blanche takes a shot to the eye and the Blood squirt out as well. These images are clear depictions of brutality that broke the production code of no brutal killings presented in detail. Examples of the details that were not supposed to be presented were the Blood and the lingering scenes of suffering. Following this gruesome gunfight at the hotel, Buck Borrow crawls around on his hands and knees with a brutal wound on his head gushing out Blood. The men that capture Buck Borrow stand around him as he dies. This was the kind of detail that was not common for its time. The most gruesome and ultra violent depiction of violence in Bonnie and Clyde is the end of the film. Bonnie and Clyde get riddled with bullets from a pack of police officers. The scene has many montage elements of violence filled with slow motion of Blood erupting from the bullet wounds, their limp bodies flailing. This final scene of the movie was made famous for these reasons. Criminals in the past movies were not exaggeratedly killed. People killed in film were not shot beyond death, Blood was not visible, and the scenes were not in slow motion. Murders commonly were quick one gun shot scenes. Even after gunfire, the slow motion continues to show the lifeless bodies settle.

Penns Bonnie and Clyde is a revolutionary film because it took all the Hays office production codes that all film strictly followed and threw them out the window. After Bonnie and Clyde the waterfall began with many films having more and more depictions of ultra violence. The depictions of violence were unprecedented because it had all of the following aspects: women and youth were involved in violent acts; brutal killing presented in detail, heroic, and justified criminals, a inspiration of potential criminals with a desire for imitation. All of these aspects were new to film at the time. Arthur Penn definitely made a film that turned out to be a watershed for a new breed of films that break all the production codes, and that film is Bonnie and Clyde.

Mary Anne Winslow is a member of Essay Writing Service counselling department team and a dissertation writing consultant. Contact her to get free counselling on custom essay writing.


Author:: Mary Anne Winslow
Keywords:: Gore, Blood, Bonnie
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