Grand Slam (1967) Poster

(1967)

User Reviews

Review this title
27 Reviews
Sort by:
Filter by Rating:
8/10
Grand Slam hits it out of the park
movieman_kev14 May 2005
An elderly school teacher (the late great Edward G. Robinson) employs an electrotech (Riccardo Cucciolla) , a playboy (Robert Hoffmann), a safe cracker (Georges Rigaud), and a military man(Klaus Kinskey) to complete a daring heist of 10 million in diamonds from a vault in Rio De Janeiro. This crime caper has a good buildup, the heist suitably engrossing. I could see the end coming (mostly), but that didn't detract much from my overall enjoyment of the movie. It still remains among the top caper movies that I've seen.

My Grade: B+

Blue Underground DVD Extras: Poster and Stills Gallery; and Theatrical Trailer

Eye Candy: blink and you'll miss tiny boobies courtesy of Jussara
14 out of 14 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
Sometimes the best surprise is no surprise .....
merklekranz8 October 2019
"Grand Slam" is a nice heist film, in search of an ending that makes some sense. The cast includes Janet Leigh, Klaus Kinski, and Edward G. Robinson, so the acting is totally acceptable. The intricate diamond caper is also depicted quite well, and the Rio locations another plus. What seems like an endless build up to the actual heist pushes the film into too long territory at just over two hours. Despite the length, interest is maintained until the startling surprise conclusion, an ending that will leave the bewildered audience gasping in disbelief after all that has preceded it. I defy anyone to explain the logic behind the ending of this film. To put things in perspective, even if things did take place off screen to support such a finale, it is far from believable, and leaves a very bad taste that is likely to linger for quite awhile. - MERK
3 out of 3 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
" If A Crime is Worth doing, it's worth doing right "
thinker169120 October 2008
Throughout the world, men with money and those without have created a game which for all practical purposes will never end. Those with wealth seek to design a box which will keep their valuables safe. Those without money then seek to break the box of riches even if it's against the law or if it's dangerous. Hopefully the 'box-makers' will eventually come up with a fool-proof design which will keep the thieves out. That is the premise of the film called " Grand Slam." Edward G. Robinson is Prof. James Anders a mild mannered school teacher who after years of research has discovered the 'perfect crime.' for stealing valuable diamonds worth millions. Secure that he has a fool proof scheme, he visits an old mafia friend, Adolfo Celi is Mark Milford and asks for a special team of professionals. The men chosen include Robert Hoffmann who plays Jean-Paul Audry a world re-known playboy and suave lady-killer who will meet his match in a cold, dispassionate secretary (Janet Leigh) with a secret. Klaus Kinski is Erich Weiss a military man who does not quit a job until it's conquered. Riccardo Cucciolla is Agostino Rossi and George Rigaud is Gregg, professionals in their own right. Together they accept the challenge of what is a deemed an unbreakable, thief proof safe. called the " Grand Slam 70 " series. A film which has become a favorite of many E.G. Robinson fans. ****
4 out of 5 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
A dazzler from the 60's; an Italian co-production with location photography in beautiful Rio De Janeiro.
TheVid30 September 2002
Released in the USA by Paramount as GRAND SLAM in the late sixties, this slickly-made heist film is a first-rate effort exploiting the Jules Dassin classic, RIFIFI. The all-star international cast is exceptional, with Klaus Kinski being the standout. One of the best of it's kind, and still enjoyable today. Ennio Morricone wrote the eclectic score, featuring some catchy bossa-nova tunes to complement the location. Thanks to Image Entertainment, the picture is now available on DVD in a widescreen version to capture all the excitement! Check it out.
3 out of 6 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
Caper flick with Klaus Kinski is pretty alright...
afkeegan9 December 2009
An all too familiar story in our world: A professor with too much time on his hands plots a diamond heist and enlists the help of a New York mobster and a team of nefarious experts who's specialties run the spectrum of various prerequisites for daring jewel capers, such as safe-cracking, etc. No surprises here- although one member of the team is a professional playboy- and are there really such things? How does one earn the title of playboy?- who's only job is to seduce the icy secretary with the key to the vault! You'll probably see the twist coming but they keep their cards close to the vest so there's still a tinge of surprise at the end. Fans of Kinski will not find a heck of a lot to snicker about as they watch their favorite crazy-friend-of- Herzog plod through another flick he probably just did for money. While Kinski isn't quite plausible as a hardened military man, he does a pretty fine, straight job in this role. Good times, all around.
1 out of 4 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
6/10
Caper film
BandSAboutMovies5 June 2022
Warning: Spoilers
Professor James Anders (Edward G. Robinson) is an American teacher in Rio de Janeiro who grows tired of working every day, so he retires and puts together a team to pull off a diamond heist during the Rio Carnival: Gregg (George Rigaud) the safecracker, Jean Paul (Robert Hoffman) the playboy, Agostino (Riccardo Cucciolla) the electronics expert and Erich (Klaus Kinski) the military man.

Standing in their way is the Grand Slam 70 security system, an alarm that uses microphones to detect any sound. Can they successfully seduce the girl (Janet Leigh), get the key, rob the safe and get out alive? And what if one of them isn't willing to share the loot? How does Adolfo Celi fit in?

The only other film by director Giuliano Montaldo I'd seen before was the Closed Circuit. This caper film moves quickly and has a great closing scene. It was written by Mino Roli, Augusto Caminito and Paolo Bianchini along with Marcello Fondato, José Antonio de la Loma and Marcello Coscia. It took more writers to do the script for a caper movie than crooks to pull the caper!
0 out of 1 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
Grand Slam
CinemaSerf6 March 2024
This is a surprisingly good little crime drama that has been largely forgotten since 1967 - which is a bit of a shame. Edward G. Robinson is a retired professor 'Anders" who assembles a rather disparate gang in order to execute the most fantastic of heists, from a seemingly impregnable vault, that will leave them the proud owners of $10m in diamonds. His meticulous, almost "League of Gentlemen" (1960) , planning accounts for every detailed aspect of the security around these jewels, and the execution of this part of the plot is (safe) cracking. As usual with most robbery stories, the plot seems to peter out after the criminal denouement, and sadly the ending is just a little to predictable. Good efforts from Klaus Kinski, Robert Hoffman and Janet Leigh as the duplicitous "Mary Ann" - alongside some really innovative use of some shaving foam - keep it enjoyably paced, and quite a bit better than average. The score is quite annoying, and the dialogue could do with just a shade of tightening up, but it's a good looking enjoyable escapade that I rather enjoyed.
0 out of 0 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
9/10
Oh I really liked this movie!!
planktonrules9 June 2005
What a brilliant caper movie! Before I go on, though, I need to point out that this movie is a reworking of the movie Rififi (1954)--a French caper movie. While Rififi generally gets higher marks among critics, I also liked this one.

The movie is unusual in that it has such a multinational cast and quite a bit of the movie is dubbed because of this. This didn't matter to say the least. However, it was interesting to see Adolfo Celi in the movie. He was the lead villain in Bond's THUNDERBALL and in this movie his voice is dubbed with a totally different voice and so he sounds a lot different.

Now on to what I loved--the complicated and exciting plot. It just keeps you guessing again and again--even up until the last scene. Also, the acting was great and the characters were well-written--everyone seemed to be at the top of their form.

So, if you want a movie about a gang of thieves pulling the ultimate heist and want to see one that's among the best, give this film a try--if you can find it, as it's not exactly a well-known flick. Perhaps with so many films like it ("Topkapi", "The Killing""Bob le Flambeur" and many others) it just got lost in the process.,
10 out of 11 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
6/10
Intrigue and done gritty like
This is intriguing and has enough coherence where things make sense. The tone is not light but has a gritty vibe. Also the finale is startling how the heist is finalized and def. a payoff that has to be checked out. Of course since it's Rio it's obligatory for a Street carnival to occur. The chemistry between the cast whittles down to K.Kinski and the guy who plays the Playboy expert R.Hoffmann as they row w each other cause of his Playboy skill yikes it is like do not they know they are there because of their expertise? But the finale works it all out and peeps get their due. A.Celi is also here. The heist itself is technical and long but whatever.
0 out of 1 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
9/10
SLAM-BANG GRAND SLAM
235SCOPE9 May 2001
This is a truly great caper in the RIFIFI tradition, with plenty of twists and surprises, spectacularly high-tech (for its day) action set pieces and glamorous location work in Rio de Janeiro, Rome and around the world. Many other capers since THE GRAND SLAM have borrowed shamelessly from it -- ENTRAPMENT being the latest that springs to mind -- but, trust me, this one did it better than the rest all the way to its uncompromising, un-Hollywood ending. This is the one to catch if it's ever around again!
16 out of 20 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
9/10
Sensational Italian heist flick!
The_Void6 May 2008
Rififi is a great movie, and like most great movies; it's often imitated, although unlike films such as The Exorcist, Jaws and Alien; the Rififi imitations are usually quite good. The field is lead by Jean-Pierre Melville's masterpiece 'The Red Circle', but following hot on its heels is this excellent little Italian thriller. Grand Slam mixes an intricate plot, interesting characters and a bucket load of style and the result is a film that constantly thrills and entertains. The plot follows the fortunes of a varied group of criminals brought together to carry out a daring robbery. Schoolteacher James Anders notices a chance in Rio de Janeiro to steal ten million dollars in diamonds and contacts his friend who gets in touch with several specialists to carry out the job. Aside from the obvious safe crackers, they also recruit a tried and tested womaniser to steal a key from a secretary. Everything is put into place for the robbery to go to plan, but naturally there are more twists and turns in store for thieves to deal with.

Grand Slam is an Italian film but features a host of international talent, including Hollywood performers Edward G. Robinson and Janet Leigh acting alongside cult stars such as Klaus Kinski, Robert Hoffmann and Adolfo Celi. The cast comes together very well and it's thanks to the great performances that this film works so well. Director Giuliano Montaldo keeps things ticking over nicely and the build up to the heist is always interesting. Naturally given the film's influences; the heist itself is a timed and careful (also wordless of course) affair that keeps the audience on the edge of their seats. The Rio de Janeiro setting provides some lovely locations and the film does look very nice on the whole. With the focus being on the plot, you can expect some twists in the tale and Grand Slam certainly does no disappoint in that respect as the film features a great twisted ending that fits what went before it very well indeed. Overall, Grand Slam is an excellent heist flick that more than does the classic French film that influenced it justice. Recommended!
8 out of 9 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
5/10
A guilty pleasure that could have been something more.
MOscarbradley14 August 2022
This Italian heist movie was released in English with about 90% of the cast dubbed though it was clearly sold on the casting of Edward G. Robinson as the elderly professor who plans the heist and Janet Leigh as the girl who just happens to get her name at the head of the cast. As heist movies go, "Grand Slam" is hardly memorable but, despite the not totally convincing dubbing, is still a lot of fun with director Giuliano Montaldo making excellent use of his locations while, even in such a small part, it's always a pleasure watching Robinson steal a movie from under the noses of his co-stars.

The largely international cast also includes Klaus Kinski, again fun to watch in any language, Robert Hoffman and Adolfo Celi and the plot has to do with a diamond robbery worth over ten million dollars but, of course, no matter how well thought out nothing seems to go quite according to plan and naturally, as a homage to "Rififi", the robbery has to be performed in complete silence. This is certainly not in the same class as Dassin's masterpiece but it's a very serviceable guilty pleasure nevertheless.
1 out of 1 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
9/10
Excellent heist movie
searchanddestroy-11 November 2020
This film belongs to the top ten that the sixties decade provided us, a gritty heist movie without comedy. Admit that the Italian co productions of those years were mostly semi comedy topics, maybe not hilarious, but light hearted. Once again, we have Edward G Robinson involved in a major heist, remember him in THE SEVEN THIEVES, directed by Hank Hathaway, back in 1959. No realism here, only myth and excitement, a great film de genre, on the same scale as SEVEN GOLDEN MEN, but maybe more serious though. Casting over the top for this kind of feature. And what I like the most in this picture is that there is no ONLY, UNIQUE lead character, but a bunch of lead ones, and not played by super stars, not widely known actors. The most known : Adolfo Celli and Eddy Robinson have only supporting roles, and at the lowest level. The influence of RIFIFI, TOPKAPI, CAPER OF THE GOLDEN BULLS is so obvious, for the heist itself, with no talk, and also the technological part of the preparation, with the alarm system and the safe. Rather dark story for this kind of topic. No light hearted for sure.
4 out of 4 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
A fantastic crime movie
hoosierthunder11 November 2006
I would be difficult for me to say enough good things about this movie. The Itallians came make a movie like no one else. This is a very stylistic heist movie. It co-stars the b movie hero, Klaus Kinski. The score was done by Ennio Morricone. What more could you ask for? This is truly outstanding example of the Itallian crime sub-genre. All the elements that make a movie of this type entertaining are present in spades: over the top schemes, gadgets, one-liners, and car chases. I have heard many of Enni Morricone's scores, but the opening piece is one of his best. Over the past few years, Blue Underground re-released some great, obscure movies. Watch this.
5 out of 6 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
9/10
In a word: awesome!
Coventry20 July 2020
All fans of uninspired and pretentious nowadays heist movies, like "Now you see me" or "Ocean's Eight", should also have the decency to seek out the older classics of the genre, because they are a dozen times more inventive, original and exhilarating. Yes, I do realize this statement makes me sound like an old and nagging sourpuss. Anyways, I'm referring to classics like "Charley Varrick" or the original "The Italian Job" (1968), but even more to the flamboyant Euro-Exploitation efforts, like "Kriminal", "Danger: Diabolik" or "Grand Slam". This downright awesome, near-perfect thriller owes a lot to the French landmark "Rififi", but stands on itself as one of the coolest crime-capers ever made!

The great Edward G. Robinson, film-noir legend of the 30s and 40s, stars as a recently retired schoolteacher who worked in Rio de Janeiro his entire career. For more than 30 years, he stared at a diamond company across the street, and had the time to meticulously plan the most daring heist of the century. He needs to recruit specialists in particular areas, however, and ask the help of his old pal Mark Milford (Adolfo Celi) who has the - hand down - most genius database of criminals, arranged by there area of expertise! Four men, including the almighty Klaus Kinski, are hired to pull off the heist, but many complications arise, like a difficult-to-seduce secretary who holds the office keys, a brand new & hi-tech alarm system, carnival parades in the Rio city center and distrust among themselves.

"Grand Slam" probably borrowed several ideas and crucial key-elements from other titles; - Italian films usually do that. But I also know for a fact that even more films, like "Entrapment" or the "Ocean's 11" remake, took nifty little e elements from this gem. The preparation for the heist is absorbing and intelligent, whereas the actual heist is nail-bitingly tense. The four master-criminals are amazing! It's too bad you know from beforehand this type of film never ends well for them, because you honestly will root for them. The ultimate twist is a bit tacky, admittedly, but back then movies just had to end with a harsh "crime doesn't pay" message. Final word of praise goes out for the fantastic soundtrack, courtesy of - who else - Ennio Morricone. Great music, for a great film!
5 out of 7 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
4/10
Great cast, awful pacing
Leofwine_draca3 December 2020
Warning: Spoilers
GRAND SLAM is a slow-moving Italian heist flick with a great cast and an exotic Brazilian setting. It should be better than it is, but as it stands it's a film let down by a real lack of focus and too many sub-plots which just drag things down, like a romantic interlude that feels like it belongs in a different movie. It's a shame, because key players here include Edward G. Robinson, Adolfo Celi, Janet Leigh, Robert Hoffman and Klaus Kinski, and watching them interact is fun in itself. It only really comes to life in the last half an hour or so, as the pacing before then is just way too slow. I did like the dark but inevitable climax, however.
2 out of 4 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
8/10
The Best Caper film ever.
Oblomov-223 December 2000
I think this is the best heist film ever made, surpassing its supposed inspiration, "Rififi". Fast pace, suspenseful and brilliantly photographed, it is a must see for all caper film buffs. The problem seems that no one seems to know WHO owns the rights to Telecast this film. It would be great on DVD too.
6 out of 10 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
Rio de Janeiro in the 1960s.
sborges4 November 2006
Been spreading the word around the neighborhood about this forgotten cultural curiosity like a virus! The amount of clichés and stereotypes in this piece make the entire thing hilarious and a good deal of fun to watch. Rio becomes this absolutely exotic venue, with non-stop carnivals and pageants, strange folk a galore and people who go by the name of "Stetuaka" (?!?!) - believe me, I have been born, raised and lived a good part of my life in Rio and have never, ever known anyone by the name of Stetuaka (played simply by one "Jussara" - may the Almighty bless her whoever she is!). But, and this is the main point of interest and solely for this I give it a ten, there are some exceptional external takes that give us a very good glimpse of Rio de Janeiro when it was still a breathtaking city and an incredible place to live (and not the violent, crime-infested & decadent urban disaster it is today) - excellent shots from the pre-expansion Copacabana Beach, Downtown, the Pavãozinho Slum and, most amazingly, a still pristine Barra da Tijuca, a very far cry from the horrendous scenario it has now become. For those of us, who live here or know Rio, a very nostalgic piece, not to be missed. Oh, yes, almost forgot...there's also some sort of a loosely built plot, about a heist around a handful of diamonds, but that's really secondary, of nil interest.
3 out of 7 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
8/10
Scenic Crime Thriller With Plenty of Thrills
zardoz-1314 November 2009
Warning: Spoilers
"Machine Gun McCain" director Giuliano Montaldo's "Grand Slam" qualifies as one of those traditional perfect heist capers where crime doesn't pay, as in "The Asphalt Jungle," "Topkapi," "Any Number Can Win," "The Anderson Tapes," and "The Italian Job." Furthermore, the mastermind of this audacious thriller is an elderly gentleman who assembles a team of experts to execute his 'meticulous' plan to the letter. Edward G. Robinson adds a certain grandeur to "Grand Slam" as a retired school teacher who has spent 30 years teaching in Rio de Janeiro when he hasn't been filming deposits at a diamond company occupying the building across the street from the school. Formulaic from fade-in to fade-out, "Grand Slam" ranks as one of the better examples of the genre. This nimble thriller opens with our protagonist consulting the mob in New York City to recruit an international gang that have no criminal records. Robinson personally speaks to each and then the heist occurs and everything comes full circle back to the mastermind and his moll. Not only do Montaldo and his writers put plenty of obstacles in the path of the criminals, but he also generates palatable suspense during the robbery. Cynicism, greed, treachery and surprise sets during the rollicking the second half.

Retired history professor James Anders pauses on the way to boarding his jet at Rio de Janeiro airport to listen as young students from a Catholic School serenade him before he flies off to New York City. In the Big Apple, Anders visits an old friend, Mark Milford (Adolfo Celi of "Thunderball"), who has acquired a notorious reputation as an underworld figure, though armed bodyguards surround him. Anders goes out to Milford's residence. Milford and he discuss old times and then Anders presents him with an innocuous 8mm film reel and they watch as Ander's describes his former occupation and the school where he taught history. Opposite it looms the building for a Brazilian diamond vault. Milford selects four men—a safecracker Gregg (Georges Rigaud), a gigolo Jean-Paul Audry (Robert Hoffmann), a strong arm man Erich Weiss (Klaus Kinski of "For a Few Dollars More"), and an electronics technician Agostino Rossi (Riccardo Cucciolla) to carry out his plan. He promises to pay each of them a million dollars when they split the loo. Anders buys each man a lighter that is identical and they use these lighters for their criminal cohorts to recognize them. Ander interviews each of his accomplices before he vanishes from the action and they perform the crime.

"Grand Slam" is predictable in the sense that the writers foreshadow the flaws in the plan too well. Happily, each character is etched with nuance enough to support their motivation. Kinski is believable as the never-say-die Nazi and Robinson is brilliant as the professor. "Grand Slam" is not without irony. Although the perpetrators don't escape with the loot, they are neither arrested nor face imprisonment. This movie contains a scene that the people who made "Entrapment" must have known about in advance because it so closely imitates the scene. The vault scene with the infrared light beams that criss-crossed the area reminded me of "Entrapment." The quirky Ennio Morricone orchestral soundtrack enhances the plot. Lenser Antonio Macasoli, who photographed both "Cannon for Cordoba" and "Guns of the Magnificent Seven," makes everything look impeccably cinematic, even the opening aerial shots around New York City. Sergio Leone's editor Nino Baragli cut things together. The process shots of Robinson in Rio at the airport look abysmal. Nevertheless, "Grand Slam" is an above-average perfect crime caper with more than enough suspense and surprises.
1 out of 2 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
3/10
Cheesy
fredmelden-120 March 2019
Warning: Spoilers
Let's see, a safe with beaucoup money that's impossible to break into. Original? Hardly, though if well done, is still a useful plot for a good movie. Let's begin with production values. The sagging laser lines, cited by another reviewer, is just the beginning. Sound quality is poor, even by 1967 standards. The automatic ramp (in the inner safe room noticeably shakes like the flimsy prop it is, rather than the advanced machine it is supposed to be. And as for plot holes? Yeah, only the secretary would be allowed to hold the key - which she takes home at night and leaves unguarded in her purse (not a safe). And how did the diamonds get from the tan case into her black case? The former never left Klaus Kinski's possession. The playboy's cartoon courting (with flowers) is about as convincing as Kinski removing the suspension cable (the one the thieves used to cross above the street) by giving it a quick yank. And Kinski's stiff-backed German soldier persona is as convincing as the Rigaud's stiff-upper-lip British cliche, or the Italian's, or the...

In short, this is movie was crudely made to fit a plot fashioned from cliches. For a much better example within this genre, see Rififfi, made 12 years earlier on a much smaller budget. In black & white, but sets the standard Grand Slam should have followed.
2 out of 4 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
8/10
It's a Slam Dunk of a Whopper!
JLRMovieReviews13 July 2012
Janet Leigh, Edward G. Robinson, and Adolpho Celi, known to American audiences as a Bond villain, star in this fascinating heist film. Robinson is the mastermind after he's been fired and he goes to a long-standing friend for the right key-men needed for the job: an expert safe-cracker, a demolitions man for the right TNT needed, etc. Despite its slow, meticulous pace, it manages to keep the viewers interest. But what really blows the viewers' mind, isn't so much what inevitably becomes to each of the gang, but the very last minute's twist ending. It's a shocker and leaves you all up in knots. You're sitting there, wondering if they were followed or was this some spontaneous action. If you love heist films, then find this one first. Then all others will suffer in comparison.
1 out of 2 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
8/10
Not enough Robinson, but that's ok
ripplinbuckethead2 September 2019
A professor (Edward G. Robinson) has been teaching American history in Rio for 30 years. He retires and returns to the States, where he goes to see an old friend in crime. He wants to rob the diamond repository across the street from his school in Rio. For that, he'll need to send four criminal experts to do the dirty work. It's a complicated plan, but things get much more complicated when they discover that the safe is now protected by a new multi-microphone system called Grand Slam 70, which sets off an alarm if it detects any noise above 14 decibels. Plus, there's the matter of getting a special key from the repository's special secretary (the special Janet Leigh), and that's going nowhere fast. Looks like the deal is off...

No, of course it's not. ;) This was fun movie, a grand caper featuring the beautiful backdrop of Rio during Carnival (with some scenes taking place in Rome, London and New York as well), with some good Mission: Impossible-style ingenuity and obstacles, and even some infighting, providing decent tension. I liked it a lot, from beginning to end. Only a couple of downsides, in that Robinson was barely in it (and I'm not big on the apparently always miserable Klaus Kinski, though I admit he is good at what he does), plus the setup, essentially the first 1/4 of the movie, felt a little longer than necessary. The whole movie could've easily worked in 90 minutes or less. Other than that, though, it's a really good'un!

P.S. That categorized master criminal list was pretty impressive. Wonder how many crimelords really had something like that, let alone that many connections.
1 out of 2 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
8/10
Italian Crime Movie with Janet LEIGH and Robert HOFFMANN
ZeddaZogenau27 February 2024
Diamond heist in Rio with Janet Leigh and Robert Hoffmann

This Italian-Spanish-German heist thriller by Giuliano Montaldo was released in West German cinemas in 1968 and was only seen by 198,000 cinemagoers. But don't be put off! Great images from Rio de Janeiro and iconic music by ACADEMY AWARD winner Ennio Morricone (awarded in 2017 for THE HATEFUL EIGHT) make this film a genre pearl.

For decades, Professor Anders (Edward G. Robinson) was a very good English teacher in beautiful Rio. Shortly before his retirement, he visits an old school friend (Bond villain Adolfo Celi) in NYC. This Mark Milford is now an underworld boss and puts the laid-back Prof in touch with four professional criminals for a spectacular diamond robbery. There is the brutal mercenary Weiss (Klaus Kinski, but with a fake voice), the electrician Rossi (Riccardo Cucciolla) and the safe-cracker Gregg (George Rigaud). Not to forget: the dazzling-looking marriage swindler Jean Paul Audry (Robert Hoffmann)! The dashing gigolo is supposed to look after the somewhat spinster secretary Mary Ann (Hitchcock star Janet Leigh), who has exclusive access to the coveted diamonds. The blonde handsome boy almost bites his teeth into this gray mouse. But at some point he finally gets her to bed so that his cronies can start their raid, which is not coincidentally reminiscent of the classic RIFIFI (1955). But that's by no means the end of the story...

Very good genre film that still inspires today! GOLDEN GLOBE winner Janet Leigh plays particularly convincingly. Crime doesn't pay? Definitely in the movie!!!
0 out of 0 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
3/10
quite disappointing
andybarss22 September 2001
I rented the movie based on several recommendations that it was a superb (perhaps the best) heist movie, including Roger Ebert's remarks in his review of The Score. I found the movie pace lagged a lot in the middle, and I found the events after the in-bank theft scene unpleasant (the movie as a whole was darker than I had expected). The main theft scene was well-done, and the technical wizardry of the thieves quite impressive (particularly given the 1967 production date). I liked a few of the characters, the heist scene, and that was about it. Several of the characters were eminently dislikable, the Rio culture scenes were irritating, and the movie lacked two things vital to a heist caper: a very tight plot, and a likable cast of characters who make you root for them to succeed. Without giving too much away, there was one plot element in the last third of the movie that I found too deus-ex-machina for my liking. Rent *Sneakers* instead, or read any of Donald Westlake's superb Dortmunder heist novels, for the good stuff.
5 out of 17 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
4/10
Grand Slam
henry8-313 June 2021
Edward G Robinson retires after 30 years of teaching in Rio De Janeiro having planned all along the audacious robbery of $10m worth of diamonds. He consults an old friend who helps him pinpoint and recruit the 4 experts he needs to carry out the job.

Strange, but not wholly unenjoyable euro pudding production with Robinson and Leigh bought in and largely at the sidelines so the film would sell tickets in the US. The bulk of the film concentrates on the planning and robbery by the 4 who each give rather unconvincing performances, with Klaus Kinski as wired and angry as ever. The heist itself is quite well orchestrated but thereafter it all gets rather messy. Passable spaghetti heist thriller if you can manage your expectations.
1 out of 3 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
An error has occured. Please try again.

See also

Awards | FAQ | User Ratings | External Reviews | Metacritic Reviews


Recently Viewed