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Le grand coup

Original title: The Big Caper
  • 1957
  • Approved
  • 1h 24m
IMDb RATING
6.5/10
1K
YOUR RATING
Rory Calhoun and Mary Costa in Le grand coup (1957)
Film NoirCrimeDramaThriller

A "confidence couple" pose as husband and wife while attempting a bank heist.A "confidence couple" pose as husband and wife while attempting a bank heist.A "confidence couple" pose as husband and wife while attempting a bank heist.

  • Director
    • Robert Stevens
  • Writers
    • Martin Berkeley
    • Lionel White
  • Stars
    • Rory Calhoun
    • Mary Costa
    • James Gregory
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.5/10
    1K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Robert Stevens
    • Writers
      • Martin Berkeley
      • Lionel White
    • Stars
      • Rory Calhoun
      • Mary Costa
      • James Gregory
    • 27User reviews
    • 11Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos14

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    Top cast20

    Edit
    Rory Calhoun
    Rory Calhoun
    • Frank Harper
    Mary Costa
    Mary Costa
    • Kay
    James Gregory
    James Gregory
    • Flood
    Robert H. Harris
    Robert H. Harris
    • Zimmer
    • (as Robert Harris)
    Roxanne Arlen
    Roxanne Arlen
    • Doll
    Corey Allen
    Corey Allen
    • Roy
    Paul Picerni
    Paul Picerni
    • Harry
    Patrick McVey
    • Sam Loxley
    Florenz Ames
    Florenz Ames
    • Dutch Paulmeyer
    • (uncredited)
    Louise Arthur
    Louise Arthur
    • Alice Loxley
    • (uncredited)
    Roscoe Ates
    Roscoe Ates
    • Falkenburg
    • (uncredited)
    Valentin de Vargas
    Valentin de Vargas
    • Gas Station Attendant
    • (uncredited)
    Melody Gale
    • Bitsy
    • (uncredited)
    Terry Kelman
    • Bennie Loxley
    • (uncredited)
    James Nolan
    James Nolan
    • Police Sgt. Waldo Harris
    • (uncredited)
    Voltaire Perkins
    • Flood's Attorney
    • (uncredited)
    Jack Shea
    • Joe Stancil
    • (uncredited)
    Ray Teal
    Ray Teal
    • Real Estate Broker
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Robert Stevens
    • Writers
      • Martin Berkeley
      • Lionel White
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews27

    6.51K
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    Featured reviews

    lor_

    Engaging crime movie

    Rory Calhoun stars in a different sort of role for the handsome hero -caught up in a crime caper that -guess what- goes awry. The United Artists picture may lack the style of "Rififi" or the big-budget Clooney films, but its interesting characters make for an entertaining ride.

    Rory has a great get-rich-quick heist in mind - grab the weekly payroll sent for an army base that is kept at a small local bank. He goes to an old colleague, cool (but slippery) James Gregory to put together the team to pull off the caper, and the guys he hires are a colorful lot.

    Chief scene stealer is Robert H. Harris, a guy who looks crooked at first glance, constantly getting drunk on gin yet oddly in charge of explosives! Throw in the fact that he's a pyromaniac and you have just the right guy to mess up a mission. (Harris was a frequent actor in the live TV series "Suspense", piloted by this movie's director Robert Stevens.) A young Corey Allen (later to become a top TV director) has an even showier role, a little hard to pigeon hole, but basically Gregory's all-purpose helper. These two roles bring in a certain sleaze factor, familiar from low-budget movies but definitely down market for a major studio (UA) release.

    The pitfalls of crime are well-demonstrated, and a central motif of Rory and Gregory's girl (my in-joke reference for the day) Mary Costa posing for months as man and wife anticipates some classic movies using that shtick, like the Inger Stevens TV movie "The Borgia Stick".

    Recommended for many reasons, but I'm seriously tired of every crime film (it seems) being tagged a "film noir" for marketing purposes. This is not a noir at all, and despite the false advertising, there's no femme fatale in the cast.
    6AlsExGal

    Not exactly The Asphalt Jungle

    Frank Harper (Rory Calhoun) is tapped out due to bad bets at the track, so he comes to big operator Flood (James Gregory) with the idea of stealing the payroll for Camp Pendleton when it sits in the bank at San Felipe overnight. Flood reluctantly agrees to stake and organize the caper, mainly because of the size of the payroll - one million dollars.

    But then Flood makes this whole thing much harder than it needs to be. He insists that his mistress Kay (Mary Costa) and Frank pose as man and wife in San Felipe for three months to get the lay of the land with Frank using Flood's front money to buy a gas station and run it. I never actually SEE them doing ANY reconnaissance. Kay seems to spend the day washing dishes and being a childless June Cleaver and Frank is busy all day fixing cars. All this does is set up a situation where the two gradually fall in love and begin to think that maybe going straight would be a good idea. But Flood is not a guy to be trifled with complications ensue. On top of that, Flood has hired more than a few psychos as accomplices. Given that you could see the trouble these guys causing from a mile away had me doubting Flood's "Mr. Big" Bonafide's.

    Why couldn't Frank have bought the gas station as a single guy and done the recon by himself? I know it was the 50s, but I doubt every able-bodied single guy over 20 was immediately suspect by the middle class. And the married middle class of San Felipe are so creepy. They are like the Stepford Wives AND Husbands AND kids for that matter. Why this environment and these people would make you want to go straight and join their ranks I have no idea.

    Economically shot by the producer team of William H. Pine and William C. Thomas, known as "the dollar bills" because none of their films ever lost money, the film works until the end when it ends abruptly with several bad guys still on the loose and possibly being a problem for the protagonists, who thus have an uncertain future. Not exactly its much bigger brother, the heist film The Asphalt Jungle, its spartanly shot late noir vibe made it worth sitting through in spite of the plot holes and lapses in logic.
    7LeonLouisRicci

    Lively Gang-Driven Late Film-Noir...Very Dark "Mob" in Very Bright Suburbs

    By the Mid-Late-50's Film-Noir was often Seen in 2-Story Suburban Homes, as Opposed to the Streets of an Inner-City.

    A Certain Aesthetic of Style is Surely Missing from the Genre that was Birthed Mostly on the "Mean-Streets" of Urban-America, Down Dark Alleys, Neon-Lit Bars, and Desperate Men and Woman Trying to Survive Among the Corruption and Decadence.

    Morphing Early on, About 1950, Film-Noir Quickly Became a More Living-Room, TV-Fixated Genre Called "Police-Procedural" and were Cranked Out Steadily Over-Shadowing True-Film-Noir that Faded Fast,

    By the Mid-50's and into the Early 60's, Crime Films and Heavily Dramatic Psychological Films were Often Brightly-Lit (antithesis to Noir) Sets and Sprawling Open Suburban Landscapes, and Carpeted Homes with Barb-B-Q Back-Yards.

    That's where "The Big Caper" is Set.

    But the Hoodlums and Gang Members are Film-Noir "Friendly".

    Psychos, Nymphos, Homosexuals, Alcoholics, Pyromaniacs, Cold Blooded Killers...are Lurking About the Bright-Sun and in 2nd Bedrooms, Reeking Havoc while Waiting for the Heist to be Planned and Executed.

    Rory Calhoun Leads an Eclectic Cast, but is the Only Sane Member of these Misfits, Misanthropes, and Con-Men.

    He Hooks Up with the Gang-Leader's (James Gregory) Gal (Mary Costa) as a Faux Married Couple as to Not Arouse Suspicion.

    There's a Bleach-Blonde-Body-Builder, who probably is Gay, that Likes to Show Off His Muscles, Switch-Blade Dogs, and Strangle any "Doll" who Might Cause Trouble.

    There's an Elderly Fire-Starter that is Drowning Himself in Gin and is Ready to Blow-Up a High-School with Kids Rehearsing as a Diversion.

    There's the Safe-Cracker whose All Business, who Probably Has a Ph.d ("Pass me the soup, I make my own, and step back") and is Worried about Getting to the Bus Station and getting Out of Town Fast.

    Other Assorted Gunsels and Thugs are Imported in, and Before You Know it the Bank-Heist is Over and so is the Movie.

    One of the Most Abrupt Endings Ever.

    Bizarre, Fast-Paced, and Lurid.
    6blanche-2

    A planned big heist has a few glitches

    I was interested in this film not only because it is a noir, but because it costars opera star Mary Costa.

    Conman Frank (Rory Calhoun) approaches a wealthy colleague (James Gregory) with an idea he has to rob a bank. It's in a town that houses the military base payments on certain days. Frank thinks this would be a cinch, but he needs backing.

    Flood has an interesting idea. He sets Frank up with a gas station and arranges for Frank and his girlfriend Kay (Costa) to live in the town and establish themselves as good citizens who fit in.

    It turns out that not only do Frank and Kay get along better than expected, but the gas station is turning a profit. They also are making friends. Kay confesses she envies her sister's life as a wife and mother and realizes she's been losing out. She wants to break with Flood, but Frank warns her to wait until after the robbery.

    The next problem is the unsavory and unreliable people who are supposed to help on the job. One is the alcoholic pyromaniac (Robert Harris), posing as Frank's uncle, who is supposed to distract the police and firefighters by setting some fires. He can barely get around and is constantly asking for booze.

    Corey Allen plays Roy, a dumb as a box of rocks muscle man who gets beaten by Flood for showing his muscles off to Kay. Paul Picerni as Harry arrives to the job with a bimbo girlfriend (Roxanne Arlen) in tow, who tries to hold up Flood for a cut of the take.

    How anyone expected this group to pull off anything, and how Flood could just send Kay off to live with Rory Calhoun - well, it all seems pretty preposterous. Still, it does hold some interest, and the end is exciting.

    Mary Costa was the singing Aurora in Sleeping Beauty for Disney, and had a wonderful career as an opera star. Costa and Anna Moffo set a new high bar for beautiful women in opera. After Costa retired, she worked with children in ChildHelp, and as of this writing, is still alive at 91.
    5bkoganbing

    Ward and June plan a caper

    The Big Caper has enough interesting characters to make it worth watching. But this 50s noir caper film could have used a lot of improvement in the characters and their motives.

    Rory Calhoun is a conman associate of big time crook James Gregory and Calhoun has blown the proceeds of the last score on slow horses at Del Mar. He wants to work again and has bank job lined up, a small town bank where the money for the pay of the US Marines stationed at Camp Pendleton is located.

    Gregory cooks up a scheme and it's a dilly. Part of it involved Calhoun and Gregory's girl friend buying a filling station and a home and living in the town for a few months as Ward and June Cleaver clones. Mary Costa the girlfriend gets to like the lifestyle, Calhoun isn't crazy about it at all.

    I can't really believe that Gregory sends Costa off to live with Calhoun and pretend to be man and wife. Is there something wrong with that picture?

    The scheme however is something else. And Gregory collects around him some set of helpers. Robert Harris is an explosives guy who gets his jollies from his work and has a real drinking problem. There's muscle bound Corey Allen who has issues and is crushing out on Gregory as a father figure. Paul Picerni brings along the ultimate bimbo Roxanne Arlen and tells her just enough about the score to have to have her taken care of.

    These people, especially Arlen really make The Big Caper worth looking at. The plot and the redemption of our protagonists is not especially well dramatized.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      The radio announcement during the BBQ dinner scene was made through a Zenith Trans-Oceanic 600 Series Portable Radio. These radios were known for their heavy-duty, high-quality construction and their performance as shortwave receivers.
    • Goofs
      When Frank Harper (Rory Calhoun) is driving in the opening scenes, camera views of him from in front of the car through the windshield show the car to have no rearview mirror. Later, the scene shifts showing the driver from the rear, and the rearview mirror has appeared with Calhoun's face clearly visible in it.

      Removing the rear-view mirror is a filming technique; it is not considered a Goof.

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    FAQ13

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • November 1, 1957 (Ireland)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Official sites
      • Streaming on "Full Moon Matinee" YouTube Channel
      • Streaming on "Rob W" YouTube Channel
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • The Big Caper
    • Filming locations
      • 1400 North Hayworth Avenue, West Hollywood, California, USA(Hollywood Rivera Apartments where Kay meets Flood, Roy, Harry and Doll)
    • Production company
      • Pine-Thomas Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 24 minutes
    • Color
      • Black and White

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