The chapter begins with Ted Hinton and Bob Alcorn’s efforts’ to catch Bonnie and Clyde. He and a number of other policemen had tracked the couple to Gibsland, Louisiana, the hometown of their then partner in crime, Henry Methvin. Hinton and the others following the group had began to think of a way they could trap the sneaky crooks, “the hunters of Bonnie and Clyde had discovered early of their quarries’ most vulnerable trait: the strong psychological dependence on their families” (195). After the lawmen learned of Methvin, they tracked his family to Gibsland and preceded to arrange an Ambush that would finally put an end to the pair’s spree. Methvin had been separated from Bonnie and Clyde, and Hinton and Alcorn suspected that they would try and rendevue with him at his fathers house in Gibsland. The officers, 4 from Texas and 3 from Louisiana, hid in bushes along the side of a road just south of Gibsland. After two days of tiresome waiting, they finally captured Irvin Methvin, Henry’s father and used his car as decoy for Bonnie and Clyde. However, the arrest of Irivin Methvin was entirely illegal, along with their seizure of his vehicle for the ambush. The officers were almost ready to quit on the ambush when Bonnie and Clyde came rolling down the road. The rest reads just like the movie, with the two being riddled by bullets while they sat in the car, with no time to fire a single shot.
Treherne’s book recounts the actual death of Bonnie and Clyde as described by the officers hunting them and gives truth to the final scene of the Penn’s film. The book, however, is from the policemen’s vantage point and creates an entirely different imagery of the final shootout. Methvin and his father had no intention or previous knowledge of a setup like C.W. Moss and his father did in the movie. The blood soaked shootout in the film, however, seems faithful to its original story, and the scene that set critics aflame was possibly the most loyal to the real account.
tagged account bonnie clyde cops history non_fiction real vantage_point by mrsilva ...on 10-APR-08
Parker, Emma, and Nell Barrow Cowan. Fugitives: The Story of Clyde Barrow and Bonnie Parker. Dallas, Tx: The Ranger Press, Inc, 1934
Fugitives: The Story of Clyde Barrow and Bonnie Parker is written by Emma Parker, Bonnie Parker’s mother, and Nellie May Cowan, Clyde’s sister. The book is a family account of the turmoil that surrounded the pair as they robbed, murdered and fled across the country for two years. These relatives, however, do not try to vindicate the criminals from their crimes or sell their personalities to emote empathy, but write about them as they believed they were, “they were monsters, they were outlaws, they did unspeakable things. So said the press, so averred the law. The Law and the press were both undoubtedly right” (1).
This account from the outlaws’ family members brings an entirely different feeling to the story of Bonnie and Clyde that either the film of even Treherne’s non-fiction account did. The family members describe the turmoil they suffered between 1932 and 1934. They describe the pair as filled with ideals and yearnings just as the film portrayed them, but completely miserable in their lives as fugitives, “Never for one instant did they experience a joy or a thrill which could possibly compensate them for the living hell which made up their lives. There was never a time, after the chase began, when they would not have traded places with the poorest and humblest couple on earth if they could have had peace and ordinary happiness” (iii). This description of the torment of both the family as well as Bonnie and Clyde themselves defines the two characters in an entirely different way.
Warren Beatty and Faye Dunaway became iconic because of their desire to be free, do as they wish and defy authority. Even the yokels within the film revere the two as folk-heroes of sorts. But the descriptions and accounts of family members give the truth behind the film. Bonnie and Clyde were really just sad outcasts, unable to escape from a series of mistakes.
tagged account bonnie's_mother clyde's_sister real_life by mrsilva ...on 10-APR-08
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