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The Thomas Crown Affair

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The Thomas Crown Affair (1968)

June. 26,1968
|
6.9
|
PG
| Crime Romance
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Young businessman Thomas Crown is bored and decides to plan a robbery and assigns a professional agent with the right information to the job. However, Crown is soon betrayed yet cannot blow his cover because he’s in love.

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Laikals
1968/06/26

The greatest movie ever made..!

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Blucher
1968/06/27

One of the worst movies I've ever seen

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KnotStronger
1968/06/28

This is a must-see and one of the best documentaries - and films - of this year.

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mraculeated
1968/06/29

The biggest problem with this movie is it’s a little better than you think it might be, which somehow makes it worse. As in, it takes itself a bit too seriously, which makes most of the movie feel kind of dull.

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virek213
1968/06/30

What does a late 1960s playboy who has everything do with his time? How about pull off the ultimate robbery…and just for the ever-loving hell of it? That's just what Steve McQueen manages to do as the title character in director Norman Jewison's 1968 crime film THE THOMAS CROWN AFFAIR. McQueen was one of those actors that is depressingly rare in today's high-glamor, hardcore violent Hollywood: an actor where you only have to look at him to know exactly what he is thinking. He's a rich, successful bank executive who's got so much money and leads such a playboy lifestyle; and yet, he is so bored that, perhaps just for entertainment purposes, he concocts a scheme to rob a bank in Boston, initiated by four associates of his. It seems like the perfect crime. But he hasn't counted on a gorgeous insurance investigator, played by Faye Dunaway, finding her way into his life in an attempt to nail him for this huge heist. And at the same time, Dunaway hasn't counted on her quarry's warped nature either.This is just simply one of those films that takes you back on a time trip of sorts to a time when, after the old Hollywood studio system had collapsed and the way of making films got so radically changed, experimentation in editing, cinematography, and plot were the in things. With respect to THE THOMAS CROWN AFFAIR, that feeling is enhanced by the inventive direction of Norman Jewison, who had directed McQueen on 1965's THE CINCINNATI KID, and had also done IN THE HEAT OF THE NIGHT. Jewison, together with legendary cinematographer Haskell Wexler (who had worked with him on IN THE HEAT OF THE NIGHT), combines inventive editing styles and the use of split-screen, a technique later used by Brian DePalma in several of his films (including SISTERS and CARRIE), McQueen and Dunaway really do strike sparks in ways that not even Pierce Brosnan and Renee Russo could in the 1999 reworking of this movie. Jack Weston (one of the vicious heavies in 1967's WAIT UNTIL DARK), Yaphet Kotto (in an early role), Paul Burke, Gordon Pinsent, and Richard Bull also do good turns here, helped out by the original screenplay of Alan R. Trustman (who shortly thereafter co-wrote the screenplay for McQueen's mega-hit BULLITT).The film also features a lush orchestral score by French composer Michel LeGrand that also includes the Allan and Marilyn Bergman song "The Windmills Of Your Mind" (sung in the film by Noel Harrison, but better remembered in the version by Dusty Springfield that was a hit in the spring of 1969). "Windmills" itself won the 1968 Oscar for Best Song, and rightfully so.By our standards, the crime and sex may seem hopelessly tame, especially in comparison to, say, a Quentin Tarantino bloodbath; but with people like Jewison, McQueen, and Dunaway involved, THE THOMAS CROWN AFFAIR still ranks as one of the best of its genre type and its era.

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John austin
1968/07/01

The King of Cool, Steve McQueen, plays a wealthy businessman and thrill seeker who masterminds a bank heist for no other reason than personal gratification. Faye Dunaway plays an investigator who is able to connect him to the crime and falls in love with him over the course of her investigation.It's a slick, high gloss production with A list stars and a big time director in Norm Jewison. It's an engrossing plot with some intriguing police procedure, well played by McQueen and Dunaway. 1960s films always look great to me because of the filming technique used at the time, although you wouldn't necessarily be wrong if you said this one looks pretty dated. Our preoccupation with high technology was starting to show even in 1968. There are numerous scenes of big punchcard computers, electronically controlled typewriters and the like, all cutting edge stuff back then but pretty antique looking now. McQueen cruises around the beach in an orange dune buggy, an iconic 1960's image if there ever was one. While this movie has a pretty familiar crime drama at its core, there are some defects. The only reason McQueen gets implicated in the crime is Dunaway's wild guess that the mastermind shipped the money to Geneva in numbered bank accounts. The police don't have a smidgen of evidence that this actually happened, but he fits that profile, making numerous trips there shortly after the robbery. However, several others fit the profile as well, and she only focuses on McQueen because she finds him personally attractive, and her female instinct tells her that he's the one. As the movie goes on, they really don't get any hard evidence connecting McQueen to the crime. McQueen plays it close to the vest and implicates himself only by his silence and evasiveness on the subject- he never says he did or didn't do it. Only near the end does he tire of the cat and mouse game and tell Dunaway to call in and make a deal with the cops. That's the closest thing to an admission we get. The motivation behind the crime is a little uncertain and a little thin. Thomas Crown is a rich businessman who wouldn't seem to have any incentive to pull off this particular crime. He's a thrill seeker-piloting gliders, playing polo, etc., so we're invited to make the inference that this is just another way for him to get off. There's also a subtle suggestion that after his divorce life is empty, and maybe he doesn't care if he risks everything with this. They do set up Thomas Crown as a rich man who's got some disdain for other rich men, but there's no indication that he's punishing the bank for something, and he's got no problem risking his henchmen or the innocent public to pull off his bank robbery thrill. One man does get shot in the robbery, so although you like his character, you could easily argue that Thomas Crown is not a very sympathetic good guy and maybe actually a bad guy. Good guy or bad, McQueen gets the last laugh as another robbery takes place while he leaves Dunaway high and dry and escapes to rich man's paradise on a private plane.

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tles7-676-109633
1968/07/02

A few thoughts...some of the ways that they try to capture the crooks are so unethical that truly all the law enforcement and insurance investigators would be up on criminal charges. What a previous reviewer found sexy in the chess game would probably draw snickers from today's audiences...almost as a parody. Lastly, I guess they still felt that the cops and robbers had to wear hats, when this was really filmed at a time when hats were no longer being worn except by old men. It was out of style by then. I hear that the remake was also quite good but over-sexed. Unfortunately, Hollywood likes to remake good movies more than remaking bad movies and making them better.

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utgard14
1968/07/03

Not what I expected. I expected a movie centered around Steve McQueen pulling off a heist. But actually it's a movie where the (brief) heist occurs early and the rest of the movie is about an insurance investigator played by Faye Dunaway trying to snare McQueen. The leaps of logic that allow Dunaway to get on McQueen's trail strain credulity even more than the implausible heist. The plot leaks like a sieve but the flashy direction and charismatic performances by the leads keeps you interested. McQueen and Dunaway definitely had chemistry. Hard to believe that terrible theme song won an Oscar. It's a good film so give it a shot, especially if you're a fan of "the king of cool" Steve McQueen.

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