Bonnie & Clyde Close-Up (“Ballet Of Death” Sequence)

Overview

The ending sequence of Bonnie and Clyde (Arthur Penn, 1967) displays the tragic demise of the titular couple. After sharing one final innocent moment of happiness together, C.W.’s father fools the couple into stepping outside their car, after agreeing to turn in the couple to the police in exchange for C.W.’s freedom. The couple are brutally gunned down by lawmen, led by Frank Hamer – the man that the gang taunted with earlier in the film. This abrupt final scene is both powerful and poignant – serving as a fittingly inevitable end to the couple’s tumultuous journey portrayed over the course of the film.

Key Elements, Context, and Representation

The sequence opens with a wide shot of Bonnie and Clyde framed centrally as they walk out of a shop, donning cream-coloured clothing that serves to emphasise their purity. The couple act playfully, exuding a sense of child-like innocence as Clyde puts on a pair of broken glasses. This final moment of playful happiness is captured through the use of a crane shot, a more traditional filmmaking technique that is closely associated with the Classical Hollywood style.

As the couple enter the car, unbeknownst to the fact that it will be their final journey, no Bluegrass score accompanies this action, creating a much more sombre mood than what is usually associated with the gang’s car journeys. This contrast between the couple’s playful behaviour and the lack of non-diegetic sound creates a foreboding sense of unease. Clyde’s clumsiness and child-like behaviour also serve to juxtapose the couple’s heinous actions throughout the film.

During the journey, the camera work employed is of particular interest. It departs from the utilisation of long lenses throughout the film, a technique associated with the French New Wave that allowed for ease of filming. Instead, the cameras are placed in close proximity to Bonnie and Clyde, bringing the viewer closer to their final intimate moments together. This is particularly evident in a tight two-shot of the couple in the car, which only becomes tighter as the sequence progresses. Bonnie and Clyde also share a pear during the car journey, perhaps serving as a symbol of comfort and familiarity for the couple. We then cut to a sequence edited in parallel between shots filmed from the perspective of the car’s windscreen and shots of Malcolm not-so-subtly beckoning the couple to pull over on the side of rural road he is blocking, encouraging them to check on an apparently flat tyre. This action is displayed through the implementation of a Dutch angle shot, serving to create an off-kilter atmosphere.

We then cut to a rapid frenzy of editing that alternates between reactionary closeups of Bonnie and Clyde. This indicates that the couple just begin to realise what is happening to them in their last living moments, a second before it is too late. The final moment shared between the couple is showcased through an eye-line match, creating one final moment of romance. As the lawmen open fire, deafening gunshots explode into the sound mix which immediately alerts the viewer and heightens the dramatic value of the scene. The excessive display of graphic violence that ensues defies the prior conventions of Classical Hollywood.

Slow motion is also employed within this scene for the first time in the film, serving to emphasise the brutality of the scene. Through this, the shot of Clyde’s corpse rolling to the side is prolonged, inciting empathy towards the character within the viewer. Notably, neither Bonnie nor Clyde are shot in the face – preserving their purity and glamour. The final shot of the massacre is a wide shot that lingers on the two lifeless corpses, leaving the viewer to ponder the journey undertaken by Bonnie and Clyde over the course of the film.

The final wide shot displaying the corpses of Bonnie and Clyde

During the brief aftermath of the shooting, the camera glides behind the shattered car window. A bullet hole is displayed out of focus, subtly reinforcing the events of the shooting. Instead, Penn chooses to frame the lawmen in behind the car in focus, distancing the camera from their stoic demeanours. The ringleader, Frank Hamer, is dressed in all black, portraying him as particularly villainous. The abruptness of this ending is perhaps reminiscent of the French New Wave, a movement that strove to present an authentic depiction of reality. There is no superfluous ‘epilogue’ sequence, the film merely ends with this inspection of the couple’s lifeless corpses.

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