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Angelus News | April 19-26, 2019 | Vol. 4 No. 15

People hold candles during the Easter Vigil service at Westminster Cathedral on April 4, 2015, in London, England. Also known as the Paschal Vigil, the nocturnal liturgy celebrating the victory of Jesus Christ over death was for early Christians a night full of anticipation and dramatic symbols, rites, and singing. On page 10, contributing editor Mike Aquilina takes us back to the experience of the primitive Church to understand why the vigil was “the night of nights” for those Christians — and why it should still be for us, too. On page 16, Caitlin Yoshiko Kandil speaks to local catechumens about their road to conversion and why they’re looking forward to the “new life” of the baptism they’ll receive at this year’s Easter Vigil.

People hold candles during the Easter Vigil service at Westminster Cathedral on April 4, 2015, in London, England. Also known as the Paschal Vigil, the nocturnal liturgy celebrating the victory of Jesus Christ over death was for early Christians a night full of anticipation and dramatic symbols, rites, and singing. On page 10, contributing editor Mike Aquilina takes us back to the experience of the primitive Church to understand why the vigil was “the night of nights” for those Christians — and why it should still be for us, too. On page 16, Caitlin Yoshiko Kandil speaks to local catechumens about their road to conversion and why they’re looking forward to the “new life” of the baptism they’ll receive at this year’s Easter Vigil.

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The dangers of curiosity<br />

More than eight decades later, ‘The Highwaymen’<br />

takes on the immoral glorification of Bonnie and Clyde<br />

BY SOPHIA BUONO / ANGELUS<br />

A<br />

cream-colored car pulls<br />

slowly into a quiet alley.<br />

A woman emerges from a<br />

nearby building, and when<br />

she sees who is sitting in the car, she<br />

gasps and hastens away. She has just<br />

caught sight of Bonnie Parker and<br />

Clyde Barrow, the wanted robbers and<br />

murderers who have been on the run<br />

for two years, since <strong>19</strong>31.<br />

But when the woman returns, she<br />

is accompanied not by legal authorities<br />

or an angry mob, but a throng of<br />

adoring fans. Screaming with delight,<br />

the people call the felons’ names,<br />

reach out to touch them, and ask for<br />

autographs.<br />

Such is the scene in the recent<br />

Netflix feature, “The Highwaymen.”<br />

Directed by John Lee Hancock, the<br />

historical drama follows Frank Hamer<br />

(Kevin Costner) and Maney Gault<br />

(Woody Harrelson), the two former<br />

Texas Rangers who were brought back<br />

on the job to nab Bonnie and Clyde.<br />

But as that moment with the fawning<br />

crowd hints, the film is not just a simple<br />

“good guy catches bad guy” story.<br />

Hamer and Gault’s mission is anything<br />

but popular. “Some folks are<br />

saying Parker and Barrow are heroes,”<br />

says a reporter. “They’re calling them<br />

Robin Hoods.” As the Rangers roam<br />

the streets of Texas, Oklahoma, and<br />

Kansas, they see women dressed in<br />

the same style as Bonnie Parker. “It’s<br />

all the rage,” they observe bleakly.<br />

One Texas official describes them<br />

aptly: “cold-blooded killers who are<br />

more adored than movie stars.”<br />

How could anyone idolize such people?<br />

“The Highwaymen” does a stellar<br />

job offering a disturbing but profound<br />

answer. It captures the mystery and<br />

excitement of Bonnie and Clyde’s<br />

legacy.<br />

For most of the film, we hardly see<br />

the criminals’ faces. They move in<br />

the shadows and drop cigarettes and<br />

liquor bottles when and where they<br />

please. By the light of streetlights,<br />

Woody Harrelson and Kevin Costner in “The Highwaymen.”<br />

© NETFLIX<br />

30 • ANGELUS • <strong>April</strong> <strong>19</strong>-<strong>26</strong>, 20<strong>19</strong>

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