Heist film
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Not to be confused with Heist: Who Stole the American Dream?.
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The heist film is a subgenre of the crime film.
It focuses on the planning, execution, and aftermath of a theft.
Versions with dominant or prominent comic elements are often called caper movies. They could be described as the analogues of caper stories in film history. A typical film includes many plot twists, with the focus on the characters' attempts to formulate a plan, carry it out, and escape with the goods. Often a nemesis
must be thwarted, who might be either a figure of authority or else a
former partner who turned on the group or one of its members.[citation needed]
Contents
The archetypical plot
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This section does not cite any references (sources). (June 2012) |
Usually a heist film will contain a three-act
plot. The first act usually consists of the preparations for the heist:
gathering conspirators; learning about the layout of the location to be
robbed; learning about the alarm system; revealing innovative
technologies to be used; and, most importantly, setting up the plot
twists in the final act.[citation needed]
The second act is the heist itself. With rare exception, the heist
will be successful, although some number of unexpected events will
occur.[citation needed]
The third act is the unraveling of the plot. The characters involved
in the heist will be turned against one another or one of the characters
will have made arrangements with some outside party, who will interfere
(often a wise, underestimated detective). Normally, most of or all the
characters involved in the heist will end up dead, captured by the law,
or without any of the loot; however, it is becoming increasingly common
for the conspirators to be successful, particularly if the target is
portrayed as being of low moral standing, such as casinos, corrupt organizations or individuals, or fellow criminals.[citation needed]
As an established archetype, it became common, starting in the 1950s,
to excise one or two of the acts in the story, relying on the viewers'
familiarity with the archetype to fill in the missing elements. Touchez pas au grisbi and Reservoir Dogs, for example, both take place largely after the heist has occurred.[citation needed]
Examples of heist films that take place non-linearly: The Killing (1956); Gambit (1966); Reservoir Dogs (1992).[citation needed]
History
Throughout the 1930s, thievery and scams were present in such films as Raffles, Outside the Law, The Unholy Garden and Ninotchka. The classic film noir
period of the 1940s and 1950s brought the genre to fame, by focusing
more explicitly on the heists themselves, with such films as John Huston's Asphalt Jungle, Jules Dassin's Rififi, Jean-Pierre Melville's Bob le flambeur and Le Cercle Rouge, Stanley Kubrick's The Killing or Mario Monicelli's Big Deal on Madonna Street. Since that time caper movies have been shot in many variations, ranging from light-hearted folly of the 1960s classic like It's a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World with its cast of clowns led by Jonathan Winters and the British made Crooks and Coronets to darker, more challenging treatments introducing innovative ways of craftsmanship, such as Quentin Tarantino's Reservoir Dogs or Christopher Nolan's Inception.[citation needed]
Even to contemporary Hollywood, the genre still remains promising, as the remakes of Ocean's 11 (2001, as Ocean's Eleven) and The Italian Job (2003) show. Examples of the variety of directions the heist film can take would include the comedy heist film such as Topkapi, the western heist film such as The War Wagon, the war/heist film such as Kelly's Heroes, numerous spy movies and television programs which had heist-like plots, most notably Mission: Impossible, It Takes a Thief and Leverage, and recently a sci-fi heist film combination with Robot and Frank.
Examples of heist films
Film title | Year of release |
---|---|
Ocean's 11 | 1960 |
Topkapi | 1964 |
The Italian Job | 1969 |
Kelly's Heroes | 1970 |
$ | 1971 |
The Hot Rock | 1972 |
The Great Train Robbery | 1979 |
Heat | 1995 |
Entrapment | 1999 |
Ocean's Eleven | 2001 |
Heist | 2001 |
Ocean's Twelve | 2004 |
Inside Man | 2006 |
Ocean's Thirteen | 2007 |
The Bank Job | 2008 |
Takers | 2010 |
Fast Five | 2011 |
Tower Heist | 2011 |
Man on Wire | 2008 |
Inception | 2010 |
Now You See Me | 2013 |
Ant-Man | 2015 |
Heist | 2015 |
Now You See Me 2 | 2016 |
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