Very dated
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Petronius Arbiter II — 16 years ago(November 05, 2009 11:59 AM)
Balderdash. "Public Enemies" is not a "remake" of Milius' work. It's an almost completely different telling of the Dillinger saga.
I'm not going to say "Public Enemies" is "better" or "worse" than the 1973 "Dillinger," simply because it's a matter of taste, and those two words just confuse the issue. As far as historical accuracy goes especially including adherence to the basic characters of the real people (Dillinger, Purvis, Frechette, etc.), but also to "look and feel" details like the appearance of the Midwest in the 1930's well, in those respects, "Public Enemies" is by far the "better" movie.
"Dillinger" was dated from the get-go, in that far too much of this movie is derivative of "Bonnie and Clyde." Before I'd ever heard of "Public Enemies," I was already feeling a bit disappointed by "Dillinger," despite the virtuosity of the acting. To me, this movie had a certain air of stale unoriginality. But to remake it using a script derived from Milius' would just compound the problem.
"I don't deduce, I observe." -
hackraytex — 11 years ago(July 09, 2014 02:11 AM)
I enjoyed Dillinger and had to make myself go through Public Enemies. I like Johnny Depp but I feel the part did not fit him. Warren Oates will always be rememberd for Dillinger and I think it was one of his best along with Barquero and The Thief Who Came To Dinner. He could carry a lead when the right project came along and we lost him way too soon. Rest In Peace, Warren.