Here is my third post on Caper Movies; this one contains my top ten favorite caper movies.
No 10: The Italian Job (1969 Original)

The most daunting caper movie to review, having been acclaimed by experts and the one that put down so many markers for this sub-genre.
We know the story. Michael Caine at his sexiest, is smart as a whip as Charlie Croaker, clever London thief and man-about-town. He gets a heads-up on a plan for robbing a gold shipment in Turin, Italy. He pitches the plan to Noel Coward’s criminal mastermind Mr Bridger. Bridger offers to bankroll Charlie and off our criminals go. The Mafia get wind of the plan and threaten to kill the English gang for poaching on their turf. But Charlie has a plan that involves a pervy professor and three beautiful English mini-minor cars.
Why is it still so good? Firstly the tone of the film is was perfect for it’s time . The gang’s irreverence and cheerful disregard of authority was new to the movies and done really well here. Secondly the gang do not exude menace so much as shambling stupidity. Caine’s frantic attempts to get his thick-eared gang not to screw up are still hilarious, even after seeing the movie many times. And finally of the course there is the mini-minor car chase, the most unorthodox chase ever filmed (at that time). This was all new and fresh, the colours vivid and the cinematography lively, the driving stunts excite in a way that special effects never can.
It still has that feel about it, even though clever visuals are now so far in advance of what The Italian Job was capable of. Overall The Italian Job has a feelgood factor that few movies are capable of achieving.
The Italian Job is available in the UK here and in the US here
No 9: Foolproof

Three smart yuppies-in-training plan interesting robberies and take-downs. They are meticulous, daring and clever but the twist is that they have no intention of executing their crimes, its all for fun. This all changes when a real professional criminal gets hold of one of their plans and blackmails them into executing a crime for him. The premise is very similar to that of Steal but Foolproof does it better.
Foolproof starts off with this slightly confusing not-real game but turns into a superb caper movie. The story becomes clever, complicated and and has a real keep-you-guessing edge. The pacing of this movie is excellent. Likewise the script is quick and the dialogue witty and sharp. I laughed out loud at some of the interplay between the characters. The actual takedown is great, full of smart moves, clever gadgets and tense moments, as our team hit a hi-tech vault for $40 million in bearer bonds.
The strong characters carry the movie past its wobbly beginning and really develop as our three heroes try to get out from under. Each of them are pushed to their limits as they try to steal the bonds from the formidable vault. Ryan Reynolds (looking incredibly young here) plays Kevin, leader and scammer, Kristin Booth plays Sam, athlete and pickpocket. These two give dramatic performance which really make Foolproof come alive. But the best performance comes from Joris Jarsky, acting his head off as Rob, the brains of the outfit, who wants to take things just that bit too far. David Suchet makes a smooth but very menacing gang boss and gives a gloss of quality acting to the movie.
Foolproof bombed when it was released but really did not deserve the harsh reviews. I think Foolproof is one of the best caper movies. Do yourself a real favour, rent or buy this one, it is really really good.
Foolproof is available in the UK here and in the US here.
No 8: Ocean’s Eleven
The casting of George Clooney as Danny Ocean in Soderbergh’s version of Ocean’s Eleven was pure genius. Clooney’s lazy cool energy is the trademark of the movie and all the other plays adopt the same tone. It is the simple fun of men being men together. I always feel that, if these guys were not planning a caper they would be sitting in a bar, joking and telling yarns. It’s the same kind of easy energy.
So if the energy of the players is slippery and slow (excepting Don Cheadle’s irascible cockney safecracker Basher) the pace is provided by Soderbergh’s knowing and clever direction, moving quickly from shot to shot but always making sure we are there with him.
There are too many great moments in Ocean’s Eleven to list and Soderbergh gets great performances from the entire crew. The script is sharp funny, clever, with Matt Damon’s Linus making a great straight man for Clooney and Pitt. The caper is really well executed, has perfect integrity and is very satisfying. The ending is the best of any caper and really seals the deal. It shows the closeness and camaraderie between Ocean’s gang and if you did not love them before, at that final moment you will.
Ocean’s Eleven is available in the UK here and in the US here
No 7: The First Great Train Robbery
Set in the Victorian England of the 1850’s, two thieves set out to steal a consignment of gold bullion. The bullion is intended to pay the army engaged in Britain’s war in the Crimea. Once a month the gold consignment is loaded on a steam train from London to Folkstone, from where it is shipped overseas. Our thieves conclude that the only way to successfully steal the gold is from the moving train.
Our thieves are Sean Connery as Edward Pierce, gentleman thief and Donald Sutherland as an Irish safecracker. They discover that they need four unique keys to open the gold safe on the train and so the shenanigans begin.
There is great fun to be had in this movie as we watch Connery’s imposing Pierce leading pompous English officials around by the nose. As the movie progresses Connery sets Sutherland more and more difficult tasks, to which Sutherland responds by whining and complaining. Connery, dominant and completely self-assured, ignores Sutherland, to great comic effect. Lesley Anne Down as Connery’s put-upon mistress is also good, being obliged to play both an upscale French whore and a grieving young woman with a coffin, to advance the caper.
The caper itself is conducted in stages, including a night break-in at the railway station where the train will leave from. This is cleverly done, with our thieves coming within a knife-edge of discovery. The assault on the train looks and feels very real and for the first time we see Connery’s mastermind make a mistake.
Connery is the ultimate manly male in this movie, handsome and extremely virile. Dressed in Victorian frockcoats and brocade waistcoats he radiates power and self-assurance. This is Connery the sex-symbol at large.
Directed by Michael Crichton from his own novel, the First Great Train Robbery is partly based on a real crime. Crichton gives us a film that feels historically correct, is great fun and has a clever caper to enjoy.
The First Great Train Robbery is available in the UK here and in the US here.
No: 6 Nine Queens
A latin sting, with some judiciously timed capering thrown in at the end. Two con men meet during a supermarket sting in Buenos Aires. One offers the other a job as his apprentice and off we go. Ricardo Darin is Marcos, the admitted amoral master conman and Gaston Pauls is the likeable but callow Juan.
This is an unlikely start for what is one of the best con/capers I have ever seen. This was director Fabian Berlinsky’s first movie and gives us a crook’s tour of modern Buenos Aires, introducing us to the quirkiest and most entertaining characters. Amazingly all of these characters have an integral place in the movie and the story almost tells itself. 9 Queens is a joy to watch, effortless and fluid, picturesque and colourful. The two leads dominate the movie and the way they play off each other is great cinema and by turns funny and tricky.
As if by accident, our two con men get themselves into a big caper. Suddenly the clock is ticking as they see the big score in front of their eyes, with only a few hours to seal the deal and make the steal.
Arrogant businessmen, valuable stamps and Marcos’ beautiful but pissed-off sister all get thrown into the mix. Nothing goes according to plan and our leads spend more time patching their caper than they do executing it. But it all comes together.
As I write this I feel like the more I write about 9 Queens, the less I say. Buy or rent this and watch it. This is a great caper movie. Great movie
9 Queens is available in the UK here and in the US here.
No 5: The Good Thief

A remake of Bob Le Flambeur, the classic French heist but with a life and joy all of its own. Bob, gambler, heroin addict and American smart-ass, eking out a living in low rent card games in the arse-end of the French Riviera (the slums of Nice, smelly and dangerous). Bob is played by Nick Nolte, never more grizzled and handsome, never more charming. One of Nick Nolte’s best ever performances, a man at the bottom who knowingly gets himself into a caper of great danger.
One last job, the Casino Riviera in Monaco. Bob gathers two crews, for two separate capers, all the while knowing he is going to be betrayed to the cops. Great interplay between Nolte and the boss cop (Tcheky Karo, in an inspired performance) and superb ensemble playing from a charismatic and sometimes downright weird French cast. Topped off with a slinky sexy Russian femme who is only just on the right side of jailbait.
Sly and adult, with pinpoint-sharp man-to-man repartee. This caper has the best lines of any caper I have seen. These guys know it could be jail or death but, hey, no need to get too serious about it.
Neil Jordan directs with some sharp visuals and contrasting locations that keep you glued to the movie. He really captures the light and seductive colours of the Riviera and throws the slums of Nice and the wealth of Monaco into sharp contrast. He makes Monaco at night the glittering prize for the hard-bitten heist gangs. Add a superb soundtrack and some good changes of tempo and The Good Thief qualifies as a top-class caper. The heist is well-established and played out with integrity. There are a couple of dud scenes but really the Riviera has not looked this exciting since Grant and Hitchcock in “To catch a thief”. Plus a really satisfying ending.
The Good Thief is available in the UK here and in the US here.
No 4: Heist
Heist kicks in with an electric opening as crooks Joe Moore (Gene Hackman) and Bobby Blane (Delroy Lindo) rob a high-end jewellery store, in a city in a state somewhere below the 69th Parallel (might be Oregon, might be Illinois). Hackman loses his mask in the robbery and the store’s security video captures him full-face.
Now Hackman knows it is only a matter of time before he is tracked down and sets his mind to planning his last big job, the one that will get him out from under. He is hampered by his weaselly fence (Danny DeVito as a menacing slimeball) who demands participation in the big caper. The clock is is ticking and the complications numerous.
So Hackman sets up the big caper, a gold bullion robbery from an airliner which is about to take off. The time for the caper is measured in minutes and seconds and while it is running the sense of impending disaster, arrest and capture, is massive. This is a great caper, with tools and timing and some great evade and escape tricks. Hackman’s method for getting the gold out of the airport is, well, simply genius.
Heist is tight, the caper team are tight, the direction and plotting are tight, never a wasted moment, economy of vision translating into a crisp action movie that keeps moving and keeps its audience engaged. This is a movie about tough people, men and women of few words, squeezing their communication out in a few terse sentences. This caper feels real, you can taste the determination, the fear and the greed.
Other capers have humour, Heist has Hackman at his sarcastic, smartass best. There are some great lines in this movie and great interplay between Hackman and Delroy Lindo as the pro thieves. David Mamet directs with absolute certainty and gets deep, insightful performances out of his actors. Hackman is superb, as is Danny DeVito, but it is the ensemble playing that makes this movie shine.
Once the gold is liberated, alliances break down and the double-crosses start. Only the person with the most tricks up their sleeve will win. Misdirection and deceit take their toll and only at the very last moment do we see who is the last man standing.
Great caper, great acting, one of those movies where you see something new every time you watch it.
Heist is available in the UK here and in the US here
No: 3 Confidence
This is a caper that really sparkles! Ed Burns leads a team of grifters trying to get out from under, get revenge and make the big score. Aided by a superb script that really cares about its characters and some fast direction (James Foley), Confidence tells a story of a caper in Los Angeles. Burns is the grifter, Rachel Weisz is his shill and Paul Giamatti provides the vicious put-downs as the smart sidekick. Dustin Hoffman, who I have never previously warmed to, is a truly repulsive bad guy.
This is a clever, confident movie with a real tension in the story. Ed Burns is manly, smart and stylish. But, as Hoffman points out to him “Style will get you killed”. Needless to say that is not a sentiment we agree with here on What Makes a Man. So I was rooting for Burns.
There are so many good things about this movie, it is difficult to know where to start, or stop. The script sketches all of the characters really well, making it easy to identify with them. All of the actors produce superb performances, with Burns, Weisz, Hoffman and Andy Garcia slightly outclassing the other players. The scenes between Burns and Hoffman are electric and a sheer joy to watch. Everybody gives a great performance and the ensemble playing is just magical.
The cinematography is colourful and in places downright beautiful, in some places stopping just short of lush. A couple of the night scenes are contenders for the Michael-Mann-LA-is-beautiful award. James Foley directs like his life depends on it. This movie is quick, and I mean really quick and clever. The scenes move quickly, the dialogue moves quicker and the characters move quicker still. The movie sets the caper up for us but you really have to watch it closely. This is not a movie you can watch with half your attention, this is a movie that demands you engage.
Confidence draws you in and you want Burns and his crew to win. See it and see for yourself.
Confidence is available in the UK here and in the US here.
No: 2 The Italian Job

Fast, fun and warm-hearted. On its release it was hammered by lazy English journalists who did the ready-made “not a patch on Michael Caine” story. In my opinion, the remake is miles better than the original. The opening caper, involving a safe, Venice and some fast speedboat work, makes grown men roar with appreciation. Adrenaline-charged fun with boats.
Everybody in this film acts their heads off, from Mark Wahlberg as Charlie Croaker, criminal genius, to Charlize Theron’s beautiful but slightly brittle safebreaker. Jason Statham gets a role where as “Handsome Rob” he is a getaway driver who is irresistible to women. Statham shows he is a real actor and gives a great performance. Moss Def is droll and very funny as the ultra-cool explosives expert. They make a colourful, confident gang and the scenes between them have real warmth.
F. Gary Gray directed the movie, with a real eye for action and some quirky moments, including a pompous politically correct Ukrainian fence and a huge Samoan gang boss who must weight 30 stones if he weighs a pound. This is exactly what a caper movie should be, with a twisty plot and great characters. Occasionally it shows a hard edge, with a truly amoral villain who cannot be underestimated. The Italian Job has the qualities of being very carefully crafted and great timing.
The final caper is magnificent and like the job in Venice, will take your breath away the first time you see it. Los Angeles makes a colourful and surprisingly varied caper venue, giving us some real surprises of location. The scenes with the mini’s have all the excitement and charm of the original, with the added twist that the mini’s are being chased around Los Angeles by helicopter.
This film has a huge heart, a truly great caper and every second of the movie radiates style. Simply the best.
Postscript
There is supposed to be a follow-up to the Italian Job, working title is the Brazilian Job. However like many movies, it has been delayed by the Hollywood screenwriters strike. The problem with information on the web about forthcoming movies is that it promises great movies in the future. The end result is that you wish your life away waiting for the movies you want to see. Still I hope the Brazilian job does get the original cast and director together and gets made.
The Italian Job is available in the UK here and in the US here.
No 1: The Thomas Crown Affair
The caper is ingenious and this movie leaps off the blocks, as the caper is committed during the very first scenes of the movie. A determined gang of thieves set out to rob a large New York museum. Their entry into the museum is outrageously daring and their progress through the museum is painstakingly tracked by the camera, excitement building all the time. John McTiernan, master of action movies such as the Hunt for Red October, makes these scenes urgent and tense. At this point in the movie we do not know where our loyalties lie and we are held at arm’s length, as McTiernan manipulates us, the audience, into place.
Pierce Brosnan, previously introduced as corporate financier Thomas Crown, is suddenly revealed as the caper boss, and steals a priceless Monet. He escapes, the crew are captured and the New York police are called in to clear up the mess. At this point Rene Russo’s insurance investigator appears.
The ensuing duel of wits between Brosnan’s art thief/Mergers and Acquisitions financier and Russo’s insurance agent sparks and pops all the way thorough the movie. Russo is old enough and stylish enough to take on Brosnan’s “self-involved, successful loner” (as the movie puts it). The message is obvious. For a real man, only a real woman will do.
Several things put the Thomas Crown Affair in a class of its own.
The movie uses the device of intercutting scenes of Thomas Crown with his therapist into the main story. This is masterful, it isolates Crown from the action and really allows us to see the man he is. As an added masterstroke the therapist is played by Faye Dunaway, who played the insurance investigator in the original Thomas Crown Affair.
The second thing that the movie has is John McTiernan’s direction. All of McTiernan’s movies have something intelligent to say about real men and Thomas Crown is his masterwork. In scene after scene he shows Brosnan as a dominant rogue male, powerful, ambitious and slightly contemptuous of the rest of the world. Brosnan is tired of Wall Street and can now only find excitement in tougher games, breaking the law.
There is no political correctness here, Brosnan is always ahead of Russo, always in control. The war between them moves and sways, but Russo’s is always on the back foot, until the final confrontation. For as Brosnan has been seducing Russo, he has fallen in love with her. This is brilliantly done, as Brosnan unwittingly reveals a chink in his armour.
This is McTiernan and Brosnan’s masterpiece. McTiernan directs a celebration of the
Alpha male. Brosnan, immaculately dressed by Italian master tailor Gianni Campagna looks every inch the billionaire financier and crucially has the manners and persona to match. Brosnan gives the best performance of his career, powerful and confident. The Thomas Crown affair has real style and taste.
This a movie that transcends the caper genre, it is sexy, stylish and has the timing and grace of an Aston Martin. It is the examplar of caper movies and in my opinion one of the best Hollywood movies ever made.
The Thomas Crown Affair is available in the UK here and in the US here
Some thoughts on Caper Movies.
I realised while writing this piece that the best caper movies are those where the capers have an integrity of their own. Where the actual take-downs are given centre-stage and are not cheated in order to make way for more action or laughs or provide a vehicle for a star. Capers are like music and have to have the right tempo, be it the silky bossa nova of Ocean’s Eleven or the angry jazz of Heist. The caper has to be the centre-piece or the movie falls between the stools of action and contrivance.
Also, the more style a caper movie it has, the better it runs. If a gentleman thief is gonna go a-robbin’ then it has to be for the best. Style, charm and great clothes might just carry the day, when tougher crews have failed.
Still to come
This post concludes my look at caper movies. Later I will post a review of a new caper movie; The Bank Job.
This seems to be a good year for caper movies. Later in the spring Michael Caine and Demi Moore star in Flawless, writeup and trailer here.
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