
A recounting of some of the most famous and infamous crimes in recent American history, featuring such notorious figures as Bonnie Parker, Clyde Barrow, Pretty Boy Floyd, and John Dillinger, with many of their crimes and/or captures re-enacted. Also featured are lawmen such as FBI Chief J.

Is it worth it? If you love old true crime or just want to see how they told these stories back when movies were still finding their legs, sure. Watch it. If you want a slick documentary, you’ll probably hate it. It moves like molasses and feels more like a lecture than a movie. The March of Crime isn't really a movie...


Comparing the cinematic DNA and archive impact of two defining moments in cult history.

Unknown Director

Unknown Director
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"Is it worth it? If you love old true crime or just want to see how they told these stories back when movies were still finding their legs, sure. Watch it. If you want a slick documentary, you’ll probably hate it. It moves like molasses and feels more like a lecture than a movie. The March of Crime isn't really a movie in the way we think about them now. It's more of a scrapbook of the most famous gangsters of the day. Bonnie, Clyde, Dillinger—they’re all here, but they feel like cardboard cutou..."
Wedgwood Nowell
United States
1909 · IMDb 2.3
Unknown Director

