Bonnie & Clyde (2013) | reviewed by: William O'Donnell | March 19, 2014
| plot | acting | sound | visuals | entertainment value | |
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| fidelity | dynamic range | dialogue | bass | soundstage | |
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| transfer | image depth | sharpness | color levels | contrast | |
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| featurettes | commentaries | deleted scenes | documentaries | digital extras | |
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Mostly clear with good colours but some shots have very noticeable blurriness. Sound is clear too so all in all it's a good transfer.
| genre | television | Crime |
|---|---|
| synopsis | Bonnie and Clyde is a two-part film about two Depression-era outlaws, starring Emile Hirsch as Clyde Barrow and Holliday Grainger as Bonnie Parker. It is based on the true story of Clyde Barrow, a charismatic convicted armed robber who sweeps Bonnie Parker, an impressionable, petite, small-town waitress, off her feet, and the two embark on one one of most infamous bank-robbing sprees in history. |
| lead actors | Holliday Grainger | Emile Hirsch | Dale Dickey | Lane Garrison | Holly Hunter | William Hurt | Sarah Hyland | Elizabeth Reaser |
| director | Bruce Beresford |
















