Same Story Was Told in "The FBI Story" (1959)
Formerly ecarle.
There's an old "square" movie from 1959 called The FBI Story, made when there were more conservatives in Hollywood and J. Edgar Hoover himself could demand veto power over the casting and the movie's plot.
James Stewart narrated and played the film's lead, a fictionalized "everyman" FBI agent who took time off from marriage and kids to be THE FBI agent involved in pretty much every plot foiled by the FBI and every criminal killed or captured. These were divided into short "episodes" told across the length of the movie.
James Stewart personally got Dillinger. He got Baby Face Nelson and Machine Gun Kelly.
And in two separate sequences, he got involved in two stories which -- decades later, have been made into separate major movies by separate major directors.
The first was in 2015 from Steven Spielberg -- "Bridge of Spies." The tale was about a Russian Communist spy in NYC passing information in hollowed out coins. In The FBI Story, that Commie was a no-good creepy ape-like guy, and Stewart caught him. In the Spielberg film, he became mild-mannered and sympathetic...and Mark Rylance won an Oscar for playing him.
But also in The FBI Story, Stewart "dressed Western" and went undercover to investigate the mysterious deaths of members of the Osage tribe. It took Jimmy about 20 minutes, start to finish, to tell THAT version.
The new movie will take three and a half hours, almost?
Anyway, interesting to me. Two major movies of the 21st Century can find their roots in a 1959 movie starring James Stewart.
It is worth seeing all three movies, I'd say.