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Thief on DVD (1981)

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Average rating: 66%
12285201615410
3.0
from 164 members
 
Starring: James Caan, Tuesday Weld, Willie Nelson, James Belushi, Robert Prosky, Tom Signorelli, Dennis Farina
Director: Michael Mann
Studio: MGM ENTERTAINMENT
Run time: 119 mins
Certificate: 18
Genres: Drama
Languages: English
Released: 21/07/2003

Brief synopsis of Thief

After 11 years in prison, an ageing master safecracker (James Caan) decides to pull one more job before retiring to a quiet, peaceful life. However, the mob finds him much too valuable and refuses to let him retire, keeping him trapped in the life he so desperately wants to leave behind. An introspective look at a man re-evaluating the life he's lived, THIEF is a fascinating, intense film, based on the novel by Frank Hohimer.

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Critics Reviews

Rating of 4 stars out of 5 Radio Times

This crime drama — the auspicious feature debut of director Michael Mann — pins its story of a professional jewel thief (James Caan) to a near-abstract idea about the criminal's urge to self-destruct, despite the meticulous way he plans his life. The terrific opening sequence, involving a diamond robbery set to the music of Tangerine Dream, establishes the mood and style for a movie that's almost too intellectual for its own genre. Nevertheless, this is one to see from a director who would later make the epic The Last of the Mohicans and the thriller Heat.

Time Out

A silently professional night-time jewel robbery, reduced to near-abstract essentials and paced by a Tangerine Dream... Read more on www.timeout.com

Total Film

"...THIEF remains one of the most accurate movies ever made about career criminals..."

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Members Reviews

Reviews Voted Most Helpful

Rated - 5 starsNeon klepto-thriller

Fidz from London , 13/10/2004

Set mostly at night or in the rain under the glow of neon this film contrasts the freedom of the lifestyle of our master safe thief with the captivity of the life of crime as he inexplicably gets involved with the Mafia and thinks he can drop them after one job.

Not a girls film at all but interesting to see Michael Mann develop a style he later explored in Miami Vice and films such as Heat.

  5 out of 5 people found this review helpful
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Rated - 5 starsMichael Mann's Lost Classic

Marc Smith from Bishop Auckland , 16/05/2005

Mann, director of Heat and Collateral, began his obsession with the world of the career criminal with this stunning film. Thief is about Frank, a man who by day runs a car dealership and several other businesses, but by night, is a proffesional gem thief.Frank loves his little sideline, and is very good at it. After taking down a safe in the opening scene, he passes the merchandise onto his fence, who then meets with an untimely demise at the hands of local mobster, Leo (Robert Prosky, who turns in a terrifying performance)Frank demands his money back, Leo folds and gives it back, but asks him to come and work for him, taking down scores as an employee.

What makes Frank take this risky decision is a sudden and logical need to go straight, find a woman, have kids and live a normal life. And in wanting this dream, he ends up paying dearly.

In an assured and astounding first feature, Mann opens up the neon lit, fast moving work of the career criminal for all to see and provides a thrilling and at times moving portrait of a man who is good at what he does, but just wants to be legit.

Yes, it's old. Yes it feels at times like a product of its time, but mix in James Caan's best performance he ever put on screen, superb support from Tuesday Weld, James Belushi & the aforementioned Robert Prosky, a superb and smart script and a story that gets better with every viewing, and Thief is a superb crime thriller.

  4 out of 4 people found this review helpful
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Rated - 2 starsUnengaging

A customer from Watford , 27/03/2006

The first 30 minutes are not very engaging and as a result my enjoyment of the film suffered. The sound is also very poor indeed which means you have to concentrate hard on the film rather than taking in the style of Mann's direction.

  1 out of 1 person found this review helpful
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Rated - 4 starsHighly recommended movie!

MrMagic from Essex , 20/09/2005

What really impressed me about this film was the cinematography. Michael Mann clearly loves the sprall of urban life, liking it to a palette from which he is able to paint a picture to surround his characters.

Thief, apart from being an exciting heist movie (And similarities are a plenty with this movie and Michael Mann's Heat), also works for me as a mirror on our everyday wants and desires. After all don't we all just yearn to live a comfortable life even sometimes giving an appraising wink to someone who attains that, even if not through wholly legal means.

  1 out of 1 person found this review helpful
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Most Recent Reviews

Rated - 5 starsMichael Mann's Lost Classic

Marc Smith from Bishop Auckland , 16/05/2005

Mann, director of Heat and Collateral, began his obsession with the world of the career criminal with this stunning film. Thief is about Frank, a man who by day runs a car dealership and several other businesses, but by night, is a proffesional gem thief.Frank loves his little sideline, and is very good at it. After taking down a safe in the opening scene, he passes the merchandise onto his fence, who then meets with an untimely demise at the hands of local mobster, Leo (Robert Prosky, who turns in a terrifying performance)Frank demands his money back, Leo folds and gives it back, but asks him to come and work for him, taking down scores as an employee.

What makes Frank take this risky decision is a sudden and logical need to go straight, find a woman, have kids and live a normal life. And in wanting this dream, he ends up paying dearly.

In an assured and astounding first feature, Mann opens up the neon lit, fast moving work of the career criminal for all to see and provides a thrilling and at times moving portrait of a man who is good at what he does, but just wants to be legit.

Yes, it's old. Yes it feels at times like a product of its time, but mix in James Caan's best performance he ever put on screen, superb support from Tuesday Weld, James Belushi & the aforementioned Robert Prosky, a superb and smart script and a story that gets better with every viewing, and Thief is a superb crime thriller.

  4 out of 4 people found this review helpful
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Rated - 4 starsHighly recommended movie!

MrMagic from Essex , 20/09/2005

What really impressed me about this film was the cinematography. Michael Mann clearly loves the sprall of urban life, liking it to a palette from which he is able to paint a picture to surround his characters.

Thief, apart from being an exciting heist movie (And similarities are a plenty with this movie and Michael Mann's Heat), also works for me as a mirror on our everyday wants and desires. After all don't we all just yearn to live a comfortable life even sometimes giving an appraising wink to someone who attains that, even if not through wholly legal means.

  1 out of 1 person found this review helpful
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