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L'Affaire Thomas Crown

Titre original : The Thomas Crown Affair
  • 1968
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 42min
NOTE IMDb
6,9/10
30 k
MA NOTE
POPULARITÉ
4 783
689
Steve McQueen and Faye Dunaway in L'Affaire Thomas Crown (1968)
Regarder Trailer[OV]
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1 Video
99+ photos
CriminalitéDrameRomanceThrillerCâpre

Un banquier débonnaire et aventurier pense qu'il a réussi le casse parfait de plusieurs millions de dollars, mais c'est sans compter sur la perspicacité de l'enquêtrice sexy d'une compagnie ... Tout lireUn banquier débonnaire et aventurier pense qu'il a réussi le casse parfait de plusieurs millions de dollars, mais c'est sans compter sur la perspicacité de l'enquêtrice sexy d'une compagnie d'assurance prête à tout pour attraper son homme.Un banquier débonnaire et aventurier pense qu'il a réussi le casse parfait de plusieurs millions de dollars, mais c'est sans compter sur la perspicacité de l'enquêtrice sexy d'une compagnie d'assurance prête à tout pour attraper son homme.

  • Réalisation
    • Norman Jewison
  • Scénario
    • Alan Trustman
  • Casting principal
    • Steve McQueen
    • Faye Dunaway
    • Paul Burke
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • NOTE IMDb
    6,9/10
    30 k
    MA NOTE
    POPULARITÉ
    4 783
    689
    • Réalisation
      • Norman Jewison
    • Scénario
      • Alan Trustman
    • Casting principal
      • Steve McQueen
      • Faye Dunaway
      • Paul Burke
    • 199avis d'utilisateurs
    • 85avis des critiques
    • 66Métascore
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
    • Récompensé par 1 Oscar
      • 2 victoires et 5 nominations au total

    Vidéos1

    Trailer[OV]
    Trailer 2:00
    Trailer[OV]

    Photos206

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    Rôles principaux37

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    Steve McQueen
    Steve McQueen
    • Thomas Crown
    Faye Dunaway
    Faye Dunaway
    • Vicki Anderson
    Paul Burke
    Paul Burke
    • Eddy Malone
    Jack Weston
    Jack Weston
    • Erwin
    Biff McGuire
    Biff McGuire
    • Sandy
    Addison Powell
    Addison Powell
    • Abe
    Astrid Heeren
    Astrid Heeren
    • Gwen
    Gordon Pinsent
    Gordon Pinsent
    • Jamie
    Yaphet Kotto
    Yaphet Kotto
    • Carl
    Sidney Armus
    • Arnie
    Richard Bull
    Richard Bull
    • Booth Guard
    Peg Shirley
    • Honey
    Patrick Horgan
    Patrick Horgan
    • Danny
    Carol Corbett
    • Miss Sullivan
    Tom Rosqui
    Tom Rosqui
    • Pvt. Detective
    Michael Shillo
    • Swiss Banker
    Nora Marlowe
    Nora Marlowe
    • Marcie
    Sam Melville
    Sam Melville
    • Dave
    • Réalisation
      • Norman Jewison
    • Scénario
      • Alan Trustman
    • Toute la distribution et toute l’équipe technique
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Avis des utilisateurs199

    6,930.4K
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    Avis à la une

    7bkoganbing

    Stealing With Style

    Thomas Crown is a mysterious gazillionaire who is frankly bored with his life. What to do when you're a thirty something and have all the resources available. For a lark, plan the perfect crime.

    So in The Thomas Crown Affair, Steve McQueen does just that. He recruits four people at random for the crime, none of whom know each other and pull off a really neat bank robbery.

    It seems like Paul Burke and the Boston PD aren't getting the job done so the bank brings in Faye Dunaway as an insurance investigator. She does this for a 10% finders fee, not for a policeman's salary. She also doesn't have to follow the rules the way the cops do.

    Dunaway is smart and she does figure out it's McQueen who's the mastermind. She baits him in some of the same way that Inspector Slimane baits Pepe LeMoko. Of course she really gets up close and personal in a way that Slimane couldn't. All this really does get to Paul Burke, whose performance is unfortunately overlooked in talking about The Thomas Crown Affair.

    It's a battle of hubris between McQueen and Dunaway and the film does keep you in some suspense as to who will win out.

    The Thomas Crown Affair garnered won Academy Award for Michel LeGrand's song, The Windmills of Your Mind. It's a stylishly done caper film and I guarantee you won't be able to anticipate the outcome.
    9thinker1691

    The Perfect Crime

    The Thomas Crown affair begs the question. What do the rich think of when they are bored? Norman Jewison decided to answer that question with a subtle, but over the top version of cops and robbers. Thomas Crown (suprisingly, but adroitly played by Steve McQueen) is a bored, millionaire who asks, "Who do I want to be tomorrow?" To that end, he decides on 'kicks.' In what seems like an absentminded challenge to himself, Crown designs and implements a down to the minute bank robbery. The plan is fantastic. He selects and hires five total strangers at random, instructs them on their part of the Bank robbery, then sets them in motion. What follows is perhaps the finest cat and mouse crime game between two intelligent and sophisticated players. Faye Dunaway plays Vicki Anderson, a top notch insurance investigator who for ten percent of recovered loot promises the capture of her agile quarry. Standing by to arrest the elusive Crown is Paul Burke, who plays Lt. Edward 'Eddy' Malone. Jack Weston portrays Erwin Weaver the get-a-way driver who could jeopardize Crowns Perfect crime. With the famous, "Windmills of your Mind" theme song, the viewer is hauntingly allowed into the mind of a sympathetic man and one cannot help but root for the thief. This film was McQueen's favorite. *****
    7JamesHitchcock

    A Triumph of Style over Substance- but with style like this, who's complaining?

    Thomas Crown is a Boston financier who organises a daring bank robbery. This crime is not committed because he needs the money- he has made a large fortune from entirely lawful activities- but because he is bored with life and needs excitement. The police are in the dark as to who might have been responsible, but the bank's insurers are determined to recover their money and appoint Vicki Anderson, a tough female investigator, to look into the affair. Vicki soon comes to suspect Crown, but cannot prove his involvement, and so a game of cat and mouse begins between them. Vicki makes contact with Crown, hoping that he will give himself away, but he is well aware of her suspicions and is too clever to betray himself. They find themselves attracted to one another and eventually begin a love affair, leaving Vicki torn between her feelings for Crown and the job she has been assigned to do (in which she also has a financial interest, as she has been promised a percentage of any money she recovers).

    The above scenario is, of course, implausible, but this is not a realistic film. It is a glossy colour supplement of a film that one watches not for realism or for its plot but for an atmosphere that has been described as the epitome of sixties cool. The trappings of Crown's millionaire lifestyle are much on display- his expensive cars, his luxuriously furnished penthouse apartment, his Cape Cod beach-house, his private glider, his games of golf and polo. (His surname is significantly derived from a symbol of wealth and power). The two leading actors, both iconic figures of the sixties, are perfectly cast. Steve McQueen was known not only as the Cooler King (his role in "The Great Escape") but also as the King of Cool. He was normally cast in "tough guy" roles, but here he broadens his range by taking on the role of a suave, wealthy playboy (although still with a hint of toughness), the sort of man every man wants to be and every woman wants for herself. Faye Dunaway was perhaps not a classical beauty in the style of some other sixties icons such as Raquel Welch or Julie Christie, but few actresses were better than she at conveying elegant, sophisticated glamour.

    Everyone who sees this film seems to remember it for the same three things. First, there is director Norman Jewison's use of the "split screen" technique during the robbery and in the scenes of the polo match. This has been criticised as a gimmick, but I found that it did help to give these sequences a greater sense of urgency and rapid movement, a sense also heightened by Michel Legrand's driving musical score. (Legrand also provided a similar score for the British film "The Go-Between"). Second, there is the famous scene, full of sexual symbolism and suggestion but without any overt sexual content, where Vicki seduces Crown- or perhaps it would be more accurate to say they seduce one another- over a game of chess. (Faye Dunaway was at her best here). Third is the well-known theme song "The Windmills of Your Mind". The song's rather enigmatic lyrics do not have any direct reference to the plot of the film, but it fits the general mood perfectly, particularly as the plot itself is often enigmatic.

    The sixties were the golden age of the heist movie with films such as "Topkapi", "The Biggest Bundle of them All" and "The Italian Job", all of which featured daring robberies carried out by a glamorous cast, often in an exotic setting. This genre has been criticised- and there is justice in the criticism- for glamorising crime and dishonesty, and "The Thomas Crown Affair", although it concentrates as much on the aftermath of the crime as on the robbery itself, falls within this tradition and must therefore bear some of the criticism. It is, however, unlikely that it ever persuaded anyone to take up a career as a millionaire playboy criminal mastermind. It is too obviously a fantasy for that- with its visual tricks, its highly stylised acting (especially from Miss Dunaway) and a general atmosphere that seems unreal, at times even dreamlike, it has about as much to do with real crime as the James Bond films have to do with the everyday work of the British Secret Service. Moreover, unlike some of the other heist movies, such as "The Italian Job" or "The Biggest Bundle", which have artificially moralistic endings, "The Thomas Crown Affair" at least has the courage of its own amorality. Its ending may be ambiguous, but it does not try to drive home a "crime does not pay" message.

    I prefer this film to the recent Pierce Brosnan remake which, although it has its good points, lacks the distinctive style of the original film. The original has, in fact, been criticised for being a triumph of style over substance. Well yes, it is- but with style like this, who's complaining? 7/10
    6utgard14

    Keep the Car

    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.
    eschwartzkopf

    Favored over the remake

    The large number of reviews tossing this in the trash bin as an overwrought 1960s period piece, or inferior when compared to the Pierce Brosnan/Rene Russo remake caused me to find the DVD and take another look.

    The problem with the 1967 film is that, unlike most films made today (including the remake), viewers need to think and connect the dots; and, there isn't always a "right" ending with all details neat and tidy. This is still a classic of the caper films, with McQueen giving the definitive performance of his absolute-cool image, and Dunaway as the Joan Crawford of the Virginia Slims generation.

    The then-innovative parts of the film, including the multiple split screens and the repetition of the theme song with Noel Harrison look dated (and the split-screen is only effective on the big, big screens of the 1960s-era theaters), but the chess game is still the most-seductive bit of film where all the clothes stay on and nobody talks.

    Listening to director Norman Jewison's commentary on the DVD is enlightening. The split screens were indeed a timely gimmick (Jewison and the producer saw the technique at Expo '67 in Montreal), and his explanation of the last scene in the cemetery gives a good insight as to how he aimed the film in general.

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    Histoire

    Modifier

    Le saviez-vous

    Modifier
    • Anecdotes
      Writer Alan Trustman got the idea for the film when he was working in a bank and spent his more idle moments imagining how to rob it.
    • Gaffes
      The PA system at the polo game announced the "end of the first period". The divisions of a polo match are called "chukkers".
    • Citations

      Thomas Crown: Left early. Please come with the money... or, you keep the Rolls. All my love, Tommy.

    • Connexions
      Edited into Il était une fois Michel Legrand (2024)
    • Bandes originales
      The Windmills of your Mind
      Music by Michel Legrand

      Lyrics by Alan Bergman and Marilyn Bergman

      Performed by Noel Harrison

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    FAQ

    • How long is The Thomas Crown Affair?
      Alimenté par Alexa
    • What is 'The Thomas Crown Affair' about?
    • Is "The Thomas Crown Affair" based on a book?
    • Who is Thomas Crown?

    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 11 octobre 1968 (France)
    • Pays d’origine
      • États-Unis
    • Langue
      • Anglais
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • Sociedad para el crimen
    • Lieux de tournage
      • 85 Mt. Vernon Street, Beacon Hill, Boston, Massachusetts, États-Unis(Thomas Crown's residence)
    • Sociétés de production
      • The Mirisch Corporation
      • Simkoe
      • Solar Productions
    • Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Box-office

    Modifier
    • Budget
      • 4 300 000 $US (estimé)
    • Montant brut mondial
      • 43 050 $US
    Voir les infos détaillées du box-office sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

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    • Durée
      1 heure 42 minutes
    • Couleur
      • Color

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