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Thursday, March 28, 2019

'The Highwaymen' flips script on 'Bonnie and Clyde' and fires blanks

Despite the star power, "Highwaymen" rather simple-mindedly follows a familiar road map, nostalgically hearkening back to a day when nobody needed to worry about reading Miranda rights and a cop could say -- as Costner's Frank Hamer does -- "You know you're gonna have to put this man down."
That man would be Clyde Barrow, who with Bonnie Parker left a trail of bodies in their wake, while achieving Depression-era celebrity -- cold-blooded killers who were, it's noted, "more adored than movie stars."
Unlike the 1967 movie with Warren Beatty and Faye Dunaway (where did the time go?), the outlaws are essentially relegated to an off-screen afterthought, following an introductory sequence in which Bonnie helps break Clyde out of a Texas prison in 1934.
Texas' governor, Miriam "Ma" Ferguson (Kathy Bates, without much to do but snarl), agrees to enlist former rangers to undertake the manhunt. But even she sounds dismissive of the aging cowboys, referring to them as "a couple of has-been vaqueros."
Hamer is reluctant to reunite with Harrelson's Maney Gault, which, like almost everything about their interactions, plays as a tough-guy-movie cliché -- something like "Grumpy Old Lawmen." That includes the darker past they'd rather not discuss, concerns about growing older and a growing sense of conviction thanks to the collateral damage they encounter in the course of their pursuit.
Needless to say, Costner and Harrelson are well-suited to these 20th-century cowboy roles -- Costner has more than done his part to help keep the western alive -- and director John Lee Hancock (whose credentials include the 2004 version of "The Alamo") and writer John Fusco have some fun with the idea that these aging manhunters can't, say, outrun younger suspects the way they once might have.
Even with the handsome period trappings, though -- and what amounts to a tour of hardscrabble Texas life during the 1930s -- the whole exercise feels sluggish, as if it's running on autopilot until the inevitable payoff.
Netflix gave "The Highwaymen" an advance theatrical release, a testament to the streaming service's desire to have its movies perceived that way. Everything about it, however, smacks of an old-fashioned TV movie, and a pretty mediocre one at that.
"The Highwaymen" premieres March 29 on Netflix.

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