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Monday, March 9, 2026

Mystery Movie Review - The Highwaymen

 

Prior movies on Bonnie and Clyde had been made but the most notable was the 1967 movie, Bonny and Clyde, that starred a young Faye Dunaway, Warren Beatty, and Gene Hackman. It was nominated for 10 Academy Awards including for Best Picture, winning Best Supporting Actress (for Estelle Parsons) and Best Cinematography.  Its success encouraged other filmmakers to go against the norms to present sex and violence in their films. The film's ending became famous as "one of the bloodiest death scenes in cinematic history." Of course we have long past the milestone.

That is why this film is different.  Yes there is some violence, but not like the 1967 production. This time it presents the efforts of the two real-life Texas Rangers who tracked them across state-lines and hunted them down to put an end to the reign of terror.

What it's about:

"The Highwaymen follows the untold story of the legendary detectives who brought down Bonnie and Clyde. When the full force of the FBI and the latest forensic technology aren't enough to capture the nation's most notorious criminals, two former Texas Rangers (Kevin Costner and Woody Harrelson) must rely on their gut instincts and old school skills to get the job done." Netflix

Cast:

Kevin Costner as Frank Hamer

Woody Harrelson as Maney Gault

Kathy Bates as Governor Ma Ferguson

John Carroll Lynch as Lee Simmons

Kim Dickens as Gladys Hamer

William Sadler as Henry Barrow

Emily Brobst as Bonnie Parker

Edward Bossert as Clyde Barrow

Director John Lee Hancock

Writer John Fusco

Rated R / 2 hour 12 minutes / Netflix production

Rotten Tomatoes (58%) and Audience (75%):

-- "I get the inevitable complaints of “too slow” and “not enough action”. Yet I found myself loving it – the slow burn, the prickly Costner, the subtle moral questions it tosses out there."  Keith Garlington-Keith & the Movies

-- "The film is far too long but Costner and Harrelson make it worth your while what with their poignant, sincere performances." Charles Koplinkski-Real Talk with Chuck and Pam

-- "The famous outlaws Bonnie & Clyde hardly get a single close-up in this fascinating study of the rangers brought out of retirement to track them down." Adrian Martin-ScreenHub

-- "The story behind the demise of legendary Bonnie & Clyde at the well-armed hands of two ageing Texas Rangers gets a solid, unhurried treatment here...Director John Lee Hancock directs the drama with a hard nose and with no love for the celebrity criminals." Jim Schembri-3AW

-- "A lot of why this works is because of [Kevin Costner and Woody Harrelson's] chemistry together." Christy Lemire-film Week (LAist)

-- "It isn't as dynamic or memorable as it could have been, but The Highwaymen still builds a compelling drama using a fascinating chapter from history combined with some solid acting and impressive camera work." Sameen Amer-The News International

Noteworthy awards or rankings:

-- 2019 Nominee Satellite Award won for Best Motion Picture Made for Television

-- SXSW Film Festival 2019

-- Nominee: 2019 Audience Award-- Headliners

-- Location Managers Guild International Awards (LMGI)

-- Nominee: 2019 Outstanding location in a period film

Trivia (from IMDB):

-- The quest for historical authenticity prompted director John Lee Hancock to recreate the ambush/death scene at the actual location where it had occurred Wednesday May 23, 1934, just outside Sailes, Louisiana, in the rural Bienville Parish.

-- Kathy Bates portrays Miriam "Ma" Ferguson, the first female governor of Texas. 

 -- In 1935, after [Texas Governor] Miriam "Ma" Ferguson left office, the Texas Rangers were reconstituted.

-- The real Frank Augustas Hamer was the most celebrated Texas Ranger of all time. He returned home to his wife Gladys and retirement and died on July 10, 1955.

-- When Bonnie Parker limps away from the car at the beginning of the film, this is historically accurate as she'd injured herself earlier in a car accident when Clyde drove their Ford V-8 off a bridge into a dry riverbed where the damaged battery leaked acid over Bonnie's left leg causing her third-degree burns. Her injuries were so severe she walked with a limp for the rest of her life.

-- The film was originally set up as a collaboration between Robert Redford and Paul Newman, but due to Newman's death in 2008, Redford left the project.

-- In 2013, Woody Harrelson was set to star alongside Liam Neeson, but Neeson left the project, and was replaced by Kevin Costner.

-- Kevin Costner was offered the role of Frank Hamer ten years earlier, but turned it down because he felt himself too young to play a grizzled, retired lawman called back into service. Having gotten older he felt the role was a better fit, though he still decided to gain 15 pounds to give himself a more over-the-hill appearance.

-- In 1994 Woody Harrelson and Juliette Lewis played an updated version of Bonnie and Clyde, Mickey and Mallory, in Natural Born Killers (1994).

-- The film's screenwriter John Fusco had the rare privilege of spending time with the late real-life Texas Ranger Frank Hamer's son (Frank Jr) as a means of structuring the story as historically accurate as possible.

-- At the time of the ambush there were $26,000 in reward pledges but when they tried to collect on this most of the pledges simply vanished. In the end, each of those involved received just $200. Hamer also kept most of the outlaws' guns for himself.

-- The events in the film take place before the United States federal investigative service, the Bureau of Investigation (BI or BOI), was renamed as the Federal Bureau of Investigation or FBI. (The Bureau is correctly named in dialogue although misidentified-it reads FBI-on an aircraft.) 

-- Clyde Barrow and Bonnie Parker's funerals were held on May 23, 1934. Barrow's funeral drew 15,000 people, Parker's drew 20,000. One of the attendees was Ellery Douglass Benton, father of writer-director Robert Benton who would be Oscar-nominated over 30 years later for his screenplay for Bonnie and Clyde (1967).

-- In the beginning Kathy Bates' character talks about digging up Wyatt Earp. Kevin Costner played Earp in Wyatt Earp (1994). At the time this film is set (1934), Earp had only been dead for about 5 years. The real Frank Hamer was born 3 years after the infamous gunfight at the OK Corral and was 36 years younger than Earp. Costner was born the same year that Hamer died (1955).

My Thoughts:

Kevin Costner, Woody Harrelson, and Kathy Bates give great performances. I have seen the previous 1967 movie (Bonny and Clyde with Faye Dunaway, Warren Beatty, and Gene Hackman) and it romanticized the two cold blooded murderers to a degree. 

This is the unglamorous story of the two real-life retired Texas Rangers (Frank Augustas Hamer and Maney Gault) brought back into service who raced across the country trying to catch the pair. I loved learning about these men whose names should be more famous than Bonnie and Clyde.  Most of the police let Bonnie and Clyde slip through their grasp, perhaps afraid they would be murdered like so many other cops the pair slaughtered. 

I appreciate a movie on the topic that doesn't glamorize vicious criminals nor sensationalize the murders. Those aspects are presented for what they were and how Bonnie and Clyde had no conscious.

I appreciate the real life complication of Texas Governor Miriam "Ma" Ferguson being brought into the light, as she was crooked, spiteful, and dangerous in her own right. She disbanded the Texas Rangers, but when she left office they were reformed. This movie immortalizes the truth about her in regards to Hammer and Gault.

The movie shows the experience of these older Rangers makes more headway than the young agents using other newer methods. I always appreciate movies that show older folks are still useful and needed. 

They bring to the forefront that the outlaws had superior weapons compared to law enforcement chasing them. These two old-timers knew they had to change that fact if they had any chance.

I do believe the movie could have been cut about 15-20 minutes to speed it up and it would be better for it. But with that said I think it is well and truly worth it to watch the entire movie. It isn't a thriller but a historical police procedural, and police work can be less glamorous and there isn't instant results. 

After the movie I thought long and hard on how so many common law-abiding people were cheering and rooting for this horrible pair. This was a thought-provoking movie on a few issues.

The "R" rating is because of the violence and some bloody images, so keep that in mind. If the rating, some violence, and some bloody images scattered throughout don't bother you, then give this movie and chance.  I recommend.

Movie Trailer:


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