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Bonnie & Clyde
Some observations from Manolo the Shoeblogger about the real Bonnie & Clyde vs. the actors who portrayed them:
These photos are also striking because the take us beyond the differences in clothing and physical beauty, (Faye Dunaway is indisputably beautiful, and dressed by the famous professional, and yet Bonnie outshines her) into the realm of attitude and posture and pose.
The pose is superficially the same, but while Bonnie is all sinuous s-curves (hips, bosom, arms, legs), Dunaway is angular and erect. Faye leans away from us, Bonnie leans in. Dunaway is imperious and haughty; Bonnie frank, direct, and exceedingly dangerous.
It is one of the most fascinating feminine comparisons the Manolo has ever seen.
As for the men, Clyde Barrow is wearing clothing. Warren Beatty is wearing the costume.
The giveaway is Warren Beatty’s spectator shoes and narrow legged pants; he is dressed in the 1960s Hollywood version of what the 1930s suiting should look like. As the result, Beatty, the famously relaxed actor, looks stiff and false in his well-tailored costume, while Barrow, the stone killer, is relaxed and natural in his round-shouldered suit and full-legged pants.
....
However, the thing that really jumps out at the Manolo is Bonnie and Clyde’s attitudes, as expressed in the way they hold themselves and interact with each other and the camera.
Bonnie is the real deal, as authentic and as noticeable as the grizzly bear standing in your kitchen. Her attitude leaps from the photo and accosts you. (It is amazing what can be done with the low-tech Kodak Brownie, no?)
You cannot get that way, that attitude, through acting classes and regression therapy. This is why so many modern actors, even the good ones, are so unsatisfying, because some things cannot be acquired without difficult life experiences. Or, to put it differently, Leonardo Di Caprio will never be Lee Marvin.
Here are the few more photos of Bonnie.
http://texashideout.tripod.com/casual.html
read the rest here:
http://shoeblogs.com/2009/10/15/bonnie-and-clyde-style/#more-5557
Some observations from Manolo the Shoeblogger about the real Bonnie & Clyde vs. the actors who portrayed them:
These photos are also striking because the take us beyond the differences in clothing and physical beauty, (Faye Dunaway is indisputably beautiful, and dressed by the famous professional, and yet Bonnie outshines her) into the realm of attitude and posture and pose.
The pose is superficially the same, but while Bonnie is all sinuous s-curves (hips, bosom, arms, legs), Dunaway is angular and erect. Faye leans away from us, Bonnie leans in. Dunaway is imperious and haughty; Bonnie frank, direct, and exceedingly dangerous.
It is one of the most fascinating feminine comparisons the Manolo has ever seen.
As for the men, Clyde Barrow is wearing clothing. Warren Beatty is wearing the costume.
The giveaway is Warren Beatty’s spectator shoes and narrow legged pants; he is dressed in the 1960s Hollywood version of what the 1930s suiting should look like. As the result, Beatty, the famously relaxed actor, looks stiff and false in his well-tailored costume, while Barrow, the stone killer, is relaxed and natural in his round-shouldered suit and full-legged pants.
....
However, the thing that really jumps out at the Manolo is Bonnie and Clyde’s attitudes, as expressed in the way they hold themselves and interact with each other and the camera.
Bonnie is the real deal, as authentic and as noticeable as the grizzly bear standing in your kitchen. Her attitude leaps from the photo and accosts you. (It is amazing what can be done with the low-tech Kodak Brownie, no?)
You cannot get that way, that attitude, through acting classes and regression therapy. This is why so many modern actors, even the good ones, are so unsatisfying, because some things cannot be acquired without difficult life experiences. Or, to put it differently, Leonardo Di Caprio will never be Lee Marvin.
Here are the few more photos of Bonnie.
http://texashideout.tripod.com/casual.html
read the rest here:
http://shoeblogs.com/2009/10/15/bonnie-and-clyde-style/#more-5557