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Pollice da scasso

Titolo originale: The Brink's Job
  • 1978
  • T
  • 1h 44min
VALUTAZIONE IMDb
6,5/10
3750
LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
Pollice da scasso (1978)
A fictional retelling of the infamous Brink's Company robbery in Boston, which took place on January 17th, 1950, with a score of $2.700.000, and cost the American taxpayers $29.000.000 to apprehend the culprits with only $58.000 recovered.
Riproduci trailer3:06
1 video
33 foto
CapperoCommediaCrimineDrammaStoriaVero crimine

Segui la famigerata rapina di 2,7 milioni di dollari americani alla Boston Brink's Company il 17 gennaio 1950, che costò ai contribuenti americani 29 milioni di dollari per arrestare i colpe... Leggi tuttoSegui la famigerata rapina di 2,7 milioni di dollari americani alla Boston Brink's Company il 17 gennaio 1950, che costò ai contribuenti americani 29 milioni di dollari per arrestare i colpevoli con solo 58.000 mila dollari recuperati.Segui la famigerata rapina di 2,7 milioni di dollari americani alla Boston Brink's Company il 17 gennaio 1950, che costò ai contribuenti americani 29 milioni di dollari per arrestare i colpevoli con solo 58.000 mila dollari recuperati.

  • Regia
    • William Friedkin
  • Sceneggiatura
    • Walon Green
    • Noel Behn
  • Star
    • Peter Falk
    • Peter Boyle
    • Allen Garfield
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
  • VALUTAZIONE IMDb
    6,5/10
    3750
    LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
    • Regia
      • William Friedkin
    • Sceneggiatura
      • Walon Green
      • Noel Behn
    • Star
      • Peter Falk
      • Peter Boyle
      • Allen Garfield
    • 27Recensioni degli utenti
    • 25Recensioni della critica
    • 60Metascore
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
    • Candidato a 1 Oscar
      • 1 candidatura in totale

    Video1

    Trailer
    Trailer 3:06
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    Foto33

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    Interpreti principali21

    Modifica
    Peter Falk
    Peter Falk
    • Tony Pino
    Peter Boyle
    Peter Boyle
    • Joe McGinnis
    Allen Garfield
    Allen Garfield
    • Vinnie Costa
    • (as Allen Goorwitz)
    Warren Oates
    Warren Oates
    • Specs O'Keefe
    Gena Rowlands
    Gena Rowlands
    • Mary Pino
    Paul Sorvino
    Paul Sorvino
    • Jazz Maffie
    Sheldon Leonard
    Sheldon Leonard
    • J. Edgar Hoover
    Gerard Murphy
    • Sandy Richardson
    Kevin O'Connor
    • Stanley Gusciora
    Claudia Peluso
    • Gladys
    Patrick Hines
    • H. H. Rightmire
    Malachy McCourt
    Malachy McCourt
    • Mutt Murphy
    Walter Klavun
    • Daniels
    Randy Jurgensen
    Randy Jurgensen
    • F.B.I. Agent
    John Brandon
    John Brandon
    • F.B.I. Agent
    Earl Hindman
    Earl Hindman
    • F.B.I. Agent
    John Farrell
    • F.B.I. Agent
    Leon Collins
    • Tap dancer
    • (non citato nei titoli originali)
    • Regia
      • William Friedkin
    • Sceneggiatura
      • Walon Green
      • Noel Behn
    • Tutti gli interpreti e le troupe
    • Produzione, botteghino e altro su IMDbPro

    Recensioni degli utenti27

    6,53.7K
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    Recensioni in evidenza

    7Brucey_D

    "....you are perpetrating a gross miscarriage of injustice..."

    A group of small-time crooks in Boston successfully rob millions of dollars from an inept and complacent security firm, only to get their collars felt.

    This film's script is based on real-life events in 1950 and many hundreds of hours of interviews with surviving members of the gang. The film is played part action, part for laughs.

    The FBI were convinced that this was the work of organised crime and/or communists, spent a fortune trying to crack the case, and only ever retrieved a small fraction of the loot. Some of the local population treated the crooks as folk heroes, which the authorities were not at all keen on.

    The film is basically not at all bad but it is slightly unevenly paced and of course rather slow by modern standards, being (for a movie) fairly realistic. Also whilst Falk is a pretty good actor rather than a one-trick pony , it is difficult to look past Lt Columbo and see him as a small time crook here.

    So overall with caveats (I.e. bearing in mind what the film is about and how it is made), I give this 7/10.
    10bkoganbing

    "To Brink's Tony"

    Words almost fail me in talking about how much I love this film, this very funny, very stylish portrayal of what was considered the robbery of the last century.

    First of all it could never have been done earlier. J. Edgar Hoover was not a figure to be satirized before May of 1972 when he breathed his last. Sheldon Leonard who plays him here and has him get it all wrong about who pulled the Brink's Armored Car Robbery, would not have taken the role, neither would any other actor. No one wanted to be on that man's bad side. Hoover was not quite the figure you see Leonard play here, though Leonard is fine in the part. Books and films subsequent to his death still really haven't got it quite right about him.

    For all of J. Edgar's fulminations about the great Communist conspiracy at work in the Brink's job, the whole point of The Brink's Job is who actually did it. Six very ordinary street criminals, none of them violent felons in any way and one fence who declared himself in on the job.

    The group is headed by Peter Falk who should have been Oscar nominated for his portrayal of Tony Pino, the group's leader and planner. You see The Brink's Job, Peter Falk will remain with you forever. A man without complications and hangups, he's a thief because it's his profession. He does have pride in how good he is though.

    Some of Falk's best scenes are with his wife Gena Rowlands. She too is a woman who stands by her man. No doubt they came from the same hardscrabble background in Boston's Italian North End and she's completely supportive of him and his work. In particular I love the scene where she's bidding him off to work just like any other wife who's husband had a night job. Don't forget your screwdriver, here's a sandwich in case you get hungry, the scene is priceless.

    I also love the scene in the restaurant where he takes her after a nice score. Falk is at the height of his considerable talents as he tells Rowlands of his plans for the Brink's Armored Car Company.

    What everyone will love when they see this film is how comparatively easy it was for these knockabout guys from Boston to accomplish stealing over 4 million dollars. This score was so big, it HAD to be the work of a master criminal mind. The thing is it was, the mind was just not in a body where you would expect it to be found.

    The others in the mob are Paul Sorvino, Kevin O'Connor, Warren Oates, Gerard Murphy and Peter Boyle who plays the fence. But my favorite in the mob and in the film is Allen Garfield who plays Falk's brother-in-law and sidekick who Falk keeps around for laughs. They have an Abbott&Costello like relationship with everything Garfield touches turning to waste product. My favorite scene in the whole film is when they decide to rob a gum factory payroll. Poor Garfield accidentally presses the wrong switch and he's awash in gumballs. Falk's and Sorvino's differing reactions are priceless.

    A lot of the film was shot in Boston which in many ways is a city that tries more than most to keep it's traditional look. I haven't been in that city in about five years, but I daresay you could remake The Brink's Job today in the same area.

    But if you did it wouldn't be as good, that isn't possible.
    8Jakealope

    A Classic Caper Movie

    Compared to the hyped up, over violent fare that passes for crime movies, this movie is no contender. But it's a warm, funny, well paced caper flick about some North Boston Italians who stumbled on to the fact that the great Brink's was a paper tiger.
    7dan-1315

    A piece of infamous Boston history - I mean the movIe!

    Dino DeLaurentis' "The Brinks Job" actually holds an infamous place in Boston's cinematic history. In an attempt to distance itself from a cheap TV movie quickie (made to capitalize on the announcement of the big-budget film) director William Friedkin decided to shoot his version in Boston at the actual site of the crime -- the Brink's building -- long since converted into a neighborhood parking garage and available to rent out.

    There had been a few movies shooting mostly exteriors in Boston in the 70s including the still locally remembered "The Friends of Eddie Coyle" in 1973. But "Brinks" was the largest production ever mounted with Friedkin completely shooting it in the Boston area. And because of what happened during the production, Hollywood avoided shooting anything of this size in Boston for 20 years!

    When the movie trucks rolled in, the privateers descended. Suddenly, anything the movie company needed to buy was more expensive and the crew had to conceal who they were when purchasing goods and services. But the worst was what the Teamsters did.

    The production wanted the key people of the film to be picked up by limos in the morning and brought back to their hotels in the evening. But the local Teamsters insisted that their drivers be paid to be standing by 24-hours a day, seven days a week which added $1 million to the film's budget. Two Teamster leaders were found guilty of racketeering and mail fraud and sentenced to jail time because of this shake-down. It was learned the Teamsters had been doing this to films shot in Boston for the previous 10 years.

    Additionally, the film's Boston production office was held up by armed gunmen who made off with 15 reels of film which were held for $600,000 in ransom. The thieves later lowered their demand to $500,000, but were told over the phone by Friedkin that the footage was duplicates and they could keep them.

    Word filtered back to Hollywood to avoid Boston and for nearly 20 years major productions skipped the city and used other places like Philadelphia to stand in for Boston. "A Civil Action" in 1997 represented a turning point and since then the city and the state of Massachusetts cleaned up their act and even sought out film productions by offering an unlimited 25% tax incentive.

    Today, Boston and Massachusetts are bustling with more than 30 productions a year with three sound stage facilities and more planned for the area. But in the '80s and most of the '90s, the city was a no-man's land for movies as it paid the price for profiteering off "The Brinks Job."
    6Bunuel1976

    THE BRINK’S JOB (William Friedkin, 1978) **1/2

    After the dismal box office and critical reception of SORCERER (1977), William Friedkin went for a change of pace with this light-hearted piece which, however, proved that his previous misstep with was no fluke: in fact, his career never really picked up after that costly bit of self-indulgence (even so, I’ve only just acquired the director’s fair update of his own THE FRENCH CONNECTION [1971], namely TO LIVE AND DIE IN L.A. [1985])!

    Anyway, this concerns – in a somewhat uneasy comedic vein – the famous January 1950 robbery from the Boston branch of the titular depository of payrolls destined to various key firms; incidentally, the same events had previously been depicted in the 1976 TV-movie BRINKS: THE GREAT ROBBERY. Its coup is in the meticulous period reconstruction (which earned production designer Dean Tavoularis, already responsible for BONNIE AND CLYDE [1967] and “The Godfather” films among others, an Oscar nod) – Friedkin himself had earlier demonstrated his prowess in this area with another comedy about an equally notorious incident i.e THE NIGHT THEY RAIDED MINSKY’S (1968).

    Interestingly, too, the cast of daring crooks here comprises several reliable character actors of the era – Peter Falk, Peter Boyle, Allen Garfield, Paul Sorvino and Warren Oates; 1940s Hollywood veteran Sheldon Leonard turns up towards the end as J. Edgar Hoover(!), but Gena Rowlands is wasted in the role of Falk’s wife. The comedy revolves around Falk and Garfield’s bumbling duo – the former is the mastermind and the other his often resentful relative/underling. After a number of ‘jobs’ go wrong (with Falk even doing a 6-year stretch in jail) or the ‘funds’ don’t last (one amusing sequence has them following a payroll van around and lifting a handful of money bags with every stop it makes – since the officer left to ostensibly guard them is apparently in continuous slumber!), they set their mind on robbing the Brink’s warehouse.

    After studying the place from the outside (such as time of arrival and departure of the various employees, and their toilet habits!), Falk manages to get inside the building to get an idea of how it’s set-up; with the place left unguarded during the night, he’s able to break in with relative ease to look for possible alarm systems and determine the model of the safe – the former is an ancient device, but the latter is up-to-date and unassailable. Oates, a war veteran, proposes to dent its surface with a bazooka fired from the roof of the opposite building(!) – however, saner heads prevail and they organize a good old-fashioned stick-up (complete with the gang putting on grotesque masks). Eventually, the sum they make off with is over $1.5 million – which, at the inflation rate of the day, was considered the biggest haul in U.S. history…thus bringing the F.B.I. in on the case.

    I’m not familiar with the facts of the real case but, here, the denouement is rather unexciting as Oates is brought to justice for another (minor) theft and, since he has a very sick sister and can’t possibly make the whole jail-term, he spills the beans on The Brink’s Job! Still, the gang apparently had the last laugh as, in spite of Hoover’s promises, a very small percentage of the money was retrieved over the years (as per the postscript) – and, following the lapse of their individual sentences, one assumes each picked up where they had left off… Ultimately, the film is O.K. (though curiously undistinguished among the spate of heist pictures made during this cynical era) – and especially disappointing given the intriguing subject matter and the welter of talent involved (including a script by THE WILD BUNCH [1969]’s Walon Green).

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    Trama

    Modifica

    Lo sapevi?

    Modifica
    • Quiz
      During production, a Boston resident was paid to remove the air conditioner from his window so they could film on that particular street for a shot. The next day when they arrived to continue filming, every window on the street had an air conditioner.
    • Blooper
      A guard's uniform is visible in the diner basement during Pino's and McGinnis' talk long before they decided to rob the trucks.
    • Citazioni

      Stanley Gusciora: Your Honor, I can't do no 20 years.

      Judge: Well do as much as you can, son.

      [bangs gavel]

    • Curiosità sui crediti
      The film opens with Universal's early 1940's logo and closes with the 1970's logo.
    • Connessioni
      Featured in Sneak Previews: The Brink's Job/Hardcore/The Warriors/Quintet/The Great Train Robbery (1979)
    • Colonne sonore
      Accentuate the Positive
      Written by Harold Arlen and Johnny Mercer (uncredited)

      Sung by Bing Crosby and The Andrews Sisters

      Courtesy of MCA Records, Inc.

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    Dettagli

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    • Data di uscita
      • 3 gennaio 1980 (Italia)
    • Paese di origine
      • Stati Uniti
    • Lingue
      • Inglese
      • Italiano
    • Celebre anche come
      • The Brink's Job
    • Luoghi delle riprese
      • Doyle's Pub - 3484 Washington Street, Jamaica Plain, Boston, Massachusetts, Stati Uniti
    • Azienda produttrice
      • Dino De Laurentiis Company
    • Vedi altri crediti dell’azienda su IMDbPro

    Botteghino

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    • Budget
      • 15.500.000 USD (previsto)
    • Lordo Stati Uniti e Canada
      • 7.909.950 USD
    • Lordo in tutto il mondo
      • 7.909.950 USD
    Vedi le informazioni dettagliate del botteghino su IMDbPro

    Specifiche tecniche

    Modifica
    • Tempo di esecuzione
      • 1h 44min(104 min)
    • Colore
      • Color
    • Mix di suoni
      • Mono
    • Proporzioni
      • 1.85 : 1

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