Ein hübscher Juwelendieb wird verhaftet und muss, um dem Gefängnis zu entgehen, in die schwer bewachte deutsche Botschaft einbrechen, um Millionen von Edelsteinen zu stehlen.Ein hübscher Juwelendieb wird verhaftet und muss, um dem Gefängnis zu entgehen, in die schwer bewachte deutsche Botschaft einbrechen, um Millionen von Edelsteinen zu stehlen.Ein hübscher Juwelendieb wird verhaftet und muss, um dem Gefängnis zu entgehen, in die schwer bewachte deutsche Botschaft einbrechen, um Millionen von Edelsteinen zu stehlen.
- Sweeny
- (as Morgan Sheppard)
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What made the film for me were the performances. Selleck is fitting in the main role as Lassiter; suave, but dogged. Who really stood out though were the ladies; Jane Seymour and especially Lauren Hutton. A hypnotic Seymour brought a sweet innocence to her role as Lassiter's dancer girlfriend, while the very seductively edgy Hutton was the opposite in her kinky femme fatal part. In support there were solid character actors; Joe Regalbuto, Bob Hoskins, Ed Lauter and a burly Warren Clarke as a German bodyguard. Watching how the breezy story unfolds is predictable (although clever in its schemes and throwbacks), but the engrossing script (Whom playing whom), character interactions and planned-out scenarios (numerous instances of caught between a rock and a hard place) are enjoyably digestible and humorously sharp. The direction is trim, but fashionably tailored with good locations and period details. Catchy theme song during the end credits too.
Lassiter is basically an attempt to cash in on Tom Selleck's fame on Magnum PI, and his loss of the role of Indiana Jones. The film is set in the same time period as Raiders of the Lost Ark, with the same villains, the Nazis. Instead of a swashbuckling archaeologist, Selleck is a slick jewel thief, Nick Lassiter. Instead of being recruited by the government to recover a treasure, he is blackmailed. However, this is no ode to the Republic serials; no, this is an ode to the caper films of yesterday, with a little To Catch a Thief thrown in for good measure.
Selleck's Nick Lassiter is an American jewel thief, living and operating in London. When not stealing from high society, he enjoys the good life. Selleck looks good in his period costumes, like he belongs. He brings charm and humor to the role, the perfect blend for a gentleman thief.
Jane Seymour is his love interest, a dancer. Seymour is beautiful as always and makes the most of a limited role.
Lauren Hutton gets the juicier role of the Nazi courier and kinky assassin. Hutton plays this decadent role to the hilt, if a bit over the top.
Finally, Bob Hoskins is a London cop who concocts the frame-up that forces Lassiter to attempt to steal Nazi diamonds. This is one of Hoskins earlier film roles and he easily steals the movie. He's not a likable character, but he keeps your interest.
The rest of the cast is filled primarily with tv actors, like Joe Regalbuto and Ed Lauter. They are fine actors, but don't bring the same level to their character roles that the better film actors do. Their appearance has more to do with budget than talent.
The film was co-financed by Raymond Chow, of Golden Harvest, which explains the low budget. Had this been a bigger studio picture, with stronger supporting characters, it could have been a great hit. Instead, it is an entertaining minor film, which appears to steal from James Bond and Indiana Jones. It looks like it was made for tv, and works better on the small screen. The music is of the period, and makes a welcome change from more modern music. The end credits feature a song from Taco. For those not acquainted with 80's New Wave, Taco was an odd performer who mixed New Wave sounds with Cole Porter and other Jazz Age songs. He had the perfect voice for those songs, but the end result was more amusing than memorable.
This is a fine film to watch on a rainy Saturday afternoon, or when sick in bed. It brings a smile to your face, as long as your expectations aren't too high.
Set in pre WWII London, this story is based on the reputation of an established American cat burglar caught in a police frame to steal Nazi diamonds. Lassiter's solution is brilliant and, for me, completely unpredicted. Marvelous! Watch and enjoy. See if you can figure out what's REALLY going on!
But he's got one confirmed enemy in Scotland Yard's Inspector Bob Hoskins. You can see how pained he is when British Intelligence and our own FBI in the person of Joe Regalbuto want him for his services in burglarizing the German Embassy in that year or so when Neville Chamberlain declared peace in our time and World War II actually began.
Selleck is a lot less unflappable than he is as Magnum. That's because Hoskins is just itching to nail him if something goes wrong. There are two prominent female parts, Jane Seymour as the good girl and Lauren Hutton doing her best Marlene Dietrich imitation as full time Nazi seductress and a real man killer literally.
Jewels is his game and a fortune in gems the Germans are known to keep in their embassy is what the British want. They say the sale of the swag will finance all kinds of subversion. Selleck might have alternate uses in mind.
Playing a small but very key role is fellow expatriate Ed Lauter who used to be a bootlegger in the States along with Selleck but left for the United Kingdom where the cops don't carry guns and therefore not likely to shoot you. Lauter is a wheel man and that fact plus the fact that their police don't carry weapons is key to how Selleck pulls the caper off.
Lassiter is a lighthearted caper film and a caper pulled against the most evil of villains is something always the audience will like.
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- WissenswertesLassiter is the only movie where Jane Seymour is seen nude. She is seen from the rear and side.
- Zitate
Nick Lassiter: That information can only come from one source; you got a man inside!
Inspector John Becker: We 'ad a man inside.
Nick Lassiter: They killed him, right?
Inspector John Becker: If it was going to be easy, I'd get my missus to do it.
- SoundtracksLassiter's Theme: Beware of the Winners
Written by Ken Thorne / John David Parker-Tanja / Werner Lang / Taco Ockerse
Performed by Taco Ockerse' (as Taco)
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Details
Box Office
- Bruttoertrag in den USA und Kanada
- 17.513.452 $
- Eröffnungswochenende in den USA und in Kanada
- 5.027.583 $
- 20. Feb. 1984
- Weltweiter Bruttoertrag
- 17.513.452 $
- Laufzeit1 Stunde 40 Minuten
- Sound-Mix
- Seitenverhältnis
- 1.78 : 1