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.
- Candidato a 1 Oscar
- 1 candidatura in totale
- Vinnie Costa
- (as Allen Goorwitz)
- Tap dancer
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Recensioni in evidenza
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.
I thoroughly enjoyed this film, a great cast with a young Peter Falk leading the way. Peter Boyle was realistic in his portrayal of the money launderer. Used VHS tapes are out there and although this robbery occurred in the 50's there is enough suspense and a ton of surprises for you. Sometimes a true story beats the best fiction a writer can come up with.
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."
Lo sapevi?
- QuizDuring 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.
- BlooperA 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 creditiThe film opens with Universal's early 1940's logo and closes with the 1970's logo.
- Colonne sonoreAccentuate 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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- The Brink's Job
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Botteghino
- Budget
- 15.500.000 USD (previsto)
- Lordo Stati Uniti e Canada
- 7.909.950 USD
- Lordo in tutto il mondo
- 7.909.950 USD