As early as 1918, Swedish pioneer Victor Sjöström adapted Johann Sigurjonsson’s drama into the silent film The Outlaw and his Wife, long considered “the most beautiful film in the world” because of its illicit passion between an Icelandic outlaw and a landowning widow. Escaping social scrutiny, the lovers take off to the hills, weather several adventures, and finally freeze to death in a frosted embrace while the intertitles claim: “Death forgave them. The only law for them was their love.” This comports with the adage that Love throws Death off its scent, even if only for a short while.
Each generation revives that poetic doomed chase, of course, death hot on the heels of love, and various listicles rank their five favorites, or ten, or twenty-five “lovers on the lam” films. Those choices span decades of film history, often with connective tissue such as Fritz Lang’s precursor film noir You Only Live Once (1937), said to have inspired Nicholas Ray’s noir classic They Live By Night (1948), based on Edward Anderson's Depression-era novel Thieves Like Us (1937). Robert Altman likewise adapted Anderson’s novel in 1974 using the original title of the novel.
You Only Live Once also inspired Godard’s Pierrot le fou (1965) and, of course, Bonnie and Clyde (1967), Arthur Penn’s highly fictionalized and historically inaccurate recount of Depression-era outlaws Bonnie Parker and Clyde Barrow. A critical and commercial success, Bonnie and Clyde revived interest in the duo and romanticized their criminality. Earlier, William Witney had directed The Bonnie Parker Story (1958), which was more of a Grade-B exploitation film distributed to drive-ins on a double-bill with Roger Corman’s Machine Gun Kelly (1958). In 2019, John Lee Hancock depicted the manhunt for the public enemies from the point of view of the pursing lawmen in the Netflix film The Highwaymen (2019).
Which leads to the most recent lovers on the lam film Carolina Caroline (2025) directed by Adam Carter Rehmeier, written by William Thomas Dean IV, and starring Samara Weaving and Kyle Gallner, with a scene-stealing abrasive supporting turn by Kyra Sedgwick. With a 100% aggregate score at Rotten Tomatoes, Carolina Caroline has everything you would want from the genre. Chemistry is key and casting is stellar in that regard. Weaving and Gallner rival the sensuous conflicted energy of Faye Dunaway and Warren Beatty in Bonnie and Clyde, Farley Granger and Cathy O’Donnell in They Live By Night, Peggy Cummins and John Dall in Gun Crazy (1950), Sissy Spacek and Martin Sheen in Badlands (1973), Christian Slater and Patricia Arquette in True Romance (1993), Brad Pitt and Juliette Lewis in Kalifornia (1993) and on and on. It is essential that the lovers identify within their criminality the sense that their love is all they have against a world determined to beat them down. They resist for as long as they can. They escape the ordinary if even for just a few months of the extraordinary. Weaving and Gallner steam up the screen together, exciting, incendiary, compulsive.
Samara Weaving as Caroline excels as a young woman desperate to join the world and to escape her small town existence as a gas station attendant, brazen in her desire to hunt out a mother who abandoned her as a child to determine if she is anything like her. She seeks to situate herself in a dangerous quest for self-awareness, gambling with moral parameters. Is she, as she questions herself, a good person pretending to be bad or a bad person pretending to be good? A childhood of deprivation compels her to want more than she’s ever had and arguably more than she should ever have. In acting out a need to take from the world, to short change it, her passion accelerates beyond control, tragedy ensues, and Weaving reveals a woman whose self-destruction is marbled with a vulnerable naïveté, especially when the consequences of her actions set in and her fantasies collapse.
Kyle Gallner as Oliver, the guy who fatefully walks into her gas station, is Caroline’s charming and experienced guide, in love with and protective of Caroline’s efforts to discover herself, and unwilling or unable to stop their mutually-assured self-destruction. Harkening back to 1918, the only law for Caroline and Oliver is their love. Their romance is erotic, the pace of their crime spree thrilling, and the psychological authenticity of their star-crossed passion drives this road trip to its poignant and explosive conclusion.
Should Carolina Caroline leave you wanting more of the genre, here’s what I would suggest:
The Outlaw and His Wife (1918)
The 39 Steps (1935)
You Only Live Once (1937)
Obsessione (1943)
They Live By Night (1948)
Gun Crazy (1950)
Where Danger Lives (1950)
The Fast and the Furious (1955)
The Bonnie Parker Story (1958)
The Sadist (1963)
Breathless (1963) / Breathless (1983)
Pierrot Le Fou (1965)
Bonnie and Clyde (1967)
The Honeymoon Killers (1970)
Zabriske Point (1970)
The Getaway (1972) / The Getaway (1994)
Boxcar Bertha (1972)
The Rendezvous (1972)
Badlands (1973)
Dirty Mary Crazy Larry (1974)
The Sugarland Express (1974)
Thieves Like Us (1974)
Something Wild (1986)
Drugstore Cowboy (1989)
Wild at Heart (1990)
Thelma & Louise (1991)
My Own Private Idaho (1991)
One False Move (1991)
The Living End (1992)
Guncrazy (1992)
True Romance (1993)
Kalifornia (1993)
Teenage Bonnie and Klepto Clyde (1993)
Natural Born Killers (1994)
River of Grass (1994)
Love and a .45 (1994)
The Doom Generation (1995)
Butterfly Kiss (1995)
Mad Love (1995)
A Life Less Ordinary (1997)
Heaven’s Burning (1997)
Criminal Lovers (1999)
Burnt Money (2000)
Tengri (2008)
God Bless America (2011)
Sightseers (2012)
Sun Don’t Shine (2012)
Shangri-la Suite (2016)
Racer and the Jailbird (2017)
Queen & Slim (2019)
The Bride! (2026)





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