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Le Cercle Rouge
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Corey (Alain Delon) is the young gun in the French underworld who has just been released from prison. Escaped convict Vogel (Gian-Maria Volonté) hides in the trunk of Corey's car. The two enlist the help of an alcoholic former cop (Yves Montand) for an elaborate jewelry-store robbery. Police inspector Mattei (Bourvil) whom Vogel escaped in the beginning of the film is on the case trying to recapture the criminals. He is not opposed to using blackmail techniques to get answers out of the unwilling witnesses and criminals brought in for questioning. ~ Dan Pavlides, All Movie Guide
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liked it.
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"The first time I started watching Skinwalkers, I couldn't finish it. I got freaked out because it was late at night and everyone had fallen asleep, leaving me alone with my werewolf fear. However, the next time around, still alone, but this time during the day, it wasn't nearly as effective. The plot revolves around a group of werewolves who see the condition as a curse and a young boy who has been prophesied to save them. The there's the other group of werewolves who kind of like hunting and k " [More]
Taut heist
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loved it.
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"Until I watched Le Cercle Rouge, I didn't think about film language. I think most people take for granted their fluency in the director's shorthand. For example, if two people glance at each other in a crowded room, you expect that something is about to happen (someone throws a punch), they have a secret, or someone's lying. Like any other language, film language has changed over time. The Red Circle is an enjoyable and slightly psychedelic caper movie. I'm not familiar with Ita " [More]
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Re:Weekly Theme for September 8 ...
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"[quote user="mercurial"] I know a lot of people didn't care for it, but I really liked Woody Allen's Small Time Crooks...The whole plot has been done a hundred times, but the cast of losers trying to rob a bank by building a tunnel from their fake cookie shop next door is just pure comedy. [/quote] I agree that this is a much underrated film. What I love is that in most heist movies the crooks are all such experts in each of the fields needed to pull the heist off (the sharpshooter in " [More]
Weekly Theme for September 8: T ...
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"This one is pretty self explanatory. What's your favorite heist movie. What's your favorite heist scene. Last week, I watched Melville's Le Cercle Rouge. Which had an incredible jewelry store robbery. I think the original Thomas Crown Affair had one of the most inventive ideas for a heist ever. The list goes on and on. Guy Ritchie's fist two films, Lock, Stock and Two Smoking Barrels (1998) , and Snatch both have something to do with elaborate thievery. The Usual Suspects, Ocean's Eleven and " [More]
Re:Best Heist films and also th ...
by in Top 5
"There are a lot of movies that I love that have heists in them but they are usually a means to an end and the bulk of the film usually deals with the fallout of said heist. Straight up heist films I love are : Jean Pierre Melville's stylish and masterful Le Cercle Rouge and Un Flic. The Hot Rock and The Taking of Pelham One Two Three (good call, Rizzo) are two of my favorite seventies Heist movies. One Heist film I just love is The Great Train Robbery - there is one perfectly choreogra " [More]
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Review by All Movie Guide
All Movie Guide
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Part of the genius of Jean-Pierre Melville was that he was able to take the formal elements of the crime film and put a thoroughly individual stamp on them -- his best films take the stuff of a thousand grade-B thrillers and invest them with a singular intelligence and quiet cool. On the surface, Le Cercle Rouge concerns two criminals thrown into a slightly uneasy alliance with a corrupt and alcoholic ex-cop to pull off a heist, but in Melville's hands this becomes a story about kindred spirits brought together through chance and unforeseen circumstance; their lives on the other side of the law have as much to do with their own personal sense of ethics and honor as those of the lawmen who struggle to track them down. Melville's clean, elegant framing of shots and his appreciation of the value of silence gives this picture a spare but satisfying feel quite different from most European crime films, and the subtle but sharply etched performances of Alain Delon, Gian Maria Volonté, and Yves Montand are the ideal embodiment of Melville's notion that less is more. In 1970, Le Cercle Rouge received a spotty release in the United States in a version cut by some 40 minutes; the uncut print finally received a belated American release in 2002, and in its pristine form, Le Cercle Rouge reveals itself as a film whose subtle touch only adds to the tension and suspense it generates -- a valuable lesson for filmmakers who believe that the function of genre filmmaking is to slap the viewer about the face and neck. ~ Mark Deming, All Movie Guide
 

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