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.
- A remporté 1 oscar
- 2 victoires et 5 nominations au total
Histoire
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesWriter 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.
- GaffesThe 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.
- ConnexionsEdited into Il était une fois Michel Legrand (2024)
- Bandes originalesThe Windmills of your Mind
Music by Michel Legrand
Lyrics by Alan Bergman and Marilyn Bergman
Performed by Noel Harrison
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
- JamesHitchcock
- 29 août 2005
- Lien permanent
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Détails
- Date de sortie
- Pays d’origine
- Langue
- Aussi connu sous le nom de
- The Thomas Crown Affair
- Lieux de tournage
- 85 Mt. Vernon Street, Beacon Hill, Boston, Massachusetts, États-Unis(Thomas Crown's residence)
- sociétés de production
- Consultez plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro
Box-office
- Budget
- 4 300 000 $ US (estimation)
- Brut – à l'échelle mondiale
- 43 050 $ US
- Durée1 heure 42 minutes
- Couleur