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Rififi (1955, Fr.) (aka Du Rififi
Chez les Hommes)
In blacklisted director Jules Dassin's quintessential,
noirish, crime-caper heist film about the ingenious robbery of an
exclusive Parisian jewelry shop by a foursome of gangsters, netting
240 million francs:
- in the opening scene - a backroom
poker game, the introduction of aging, down-on-his-luck,
sad-looking, unhealthy underworld gangster Tony "Le
Stéphanois" (Jean
Servais), sickly and exhausted with tuberculosis; Tony was just released
after a five-year prison stint for a jewel heist [Note:
Tony took the rap for his younger pal Jo, and had just finished
serving five years]
- in a cafe Tony met with his
Swedish friend Jo "Le
Suédois" (Carl
Möhner) and their mutual friend Mario Ferrati
(Robert Manuel) who proposed a smash-and-grab of three diamonds ("rocks")
in broad daylight (in the early afternoon) from the front show-window
of a nearby Parisian jewelry store (Mappin & Webb,
Ltd), but Tony declined ("The place has more alarms than a firehouse...Sorry,
guys, I don't run so fast anymore")
- the sequence of Tony's discovery that his former
girlfriend/lover Mado (Marie Sabouret) was
working at a Montmartre nightclub known as L'Âge
d'Or; the establishment was owned by Pierre
Grutter (Marcel Lupovici), the leader of a rival gang, who had
taken singer Mado as one of his many mistresses during his absence:
("She's
shacked up with the boss"), and Grutter himself had become "too
friendly with the cops"; Tony confronted
Mado in the club - noting how she had been plied with expensive
jewelry (ring, bracelet, necklace and earrings) and a fur coat
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Nightclub L'Age D'Or
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Unfaithful Ex-Girlfriend Mado (Marie Sabouret)
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Tony's Brutal Confrontation and Beating of Mado
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- the scene of Tony's vicious and jealous humiliation
of the unfaithful and well-kept Mado, when he returned with her to
his run-down apartment, forced her to strip off all her jewels and
clothing, and then (off-screen) beat her across her bare back with
a belt in the bedroom, causing serious injuries; afterwards, he threw
her out, phoned Jo, and said he had changed his mind about the heist
("The job interests me after all. A man's gotta live")
- Tony detailed the conditons he proposed to his compatriots,
including no weapons: ("None of these. It's too risky. Get caught
with a rod and it's the slammer for life"); he suggested a
more extensive, ambitious and profitable plan to rob the jewelry
store's safe: ("For me, the rocks in the window are chicken
feed. We gotta go for the real thing. The jackpot. The safe!"),
and the hiring of an expert safe-cracker ("Knocking out their
alarms, and, most of all, getting a safecracker"); Mario knew
of Italian Cesar's "Le Milanais" (Jules Dassin, the film's
director) reputation as a womanizer: "There's not a safe that
can resist Cesar, and not a woman that Cesar can resist"
- the musical scene of nightclub chanteuse Viviane's
(Magali Noël) evocative and stylish performance of the
title song during her nightclub act: (excerpt of lyrics) "You look like you don't have a clue,
Like no one ever spoke to you, 'Bout 'Rififi,' It's not a word that
people use, Among the swells, the Who's Who's, 'Rififi,' It's the
lingo of the streetwise, The battle cry of real tough guys, 'Rififi,'
So don't fry your brain and grumble, All it means is 'rough n'tumble'
- 'Rififi' "
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Viviane's Nightclub Performance of Title Song: "Rififi"
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- the development and plotting of the crime -
by four low-life ex-con hoods: (1) Tony, (2) Jo, (3) Mario, and
(4) César; in a rented apartment across from the jewelry shop,
the crooks cased the store to learn the precise timing of neighboring
events; they also surveyed, tested, and learned how to deactivate
or break into crucial items inside (the sensitive alarm box
and the locked safe itself); their plans for the robbery were very
elaborate and intricately detailed - it would take two hours to cut
a hole in the ceiling to gain entry, and it would take three hours
inside the store to commit the heist, and they hoped to exit by 5 am;
during a dress-rehearsal, the thieves discovered that they could
cancel out the sound of the alarm-bell in the box with anti-flame
retardant foam squirted into it from a fire extinguisher and then disconnect
it
- the elaborate and tense 28-minute silent heist late
Sunday evening sequence (the centerpiece of the entire film - taking
about a quarter of the film's running time), without dialogue or
background music (and only natural sounds), by tying
up, blindfolding and gagging the upstairs apartment residents, the
Webbs); then the group chiseled or hammered their way
through wood flooring and a cement ceiling (with cushioned instruments)
to create an entrance into the jewelry store below;
they muffled and deactivated the alarm-bell system and then drilled
into the back of the safe; although the theft was successful, it
took longer than expected, and there were a few nerve-wracking moments
when two gendarmes discovered their stolen car parked outside (Tony
knocked out one officer and drove away to pick up the others)
The Film's Centerpiece - The Theft Sequence
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The Start of the Heist - The Four Crooks Walking
to the Store
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Tying Up, Blindfolding and Gagging Upstairs Apartment
Residents
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Breaking Through Apartment Flooring and Into the Cement
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Chiseling Hole in Cement Ceiling
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Looking Down Through Hole in Ceiling
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Entering Through Ceiling Into Parisian Jewelry Store
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Tony Spraying Foam into Store's Alarm Box
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Cesar Drilling into the Back of the Safe
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Cesar Setting Pins to Create Structure to Cut Hole
in Back of Safe
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- after the successful theft, the thieves sat around
a table in Mario's apartment and expectantly and apprehensively gazed
at the pouch of diamonds - after it was opened by mastermind Tony,
there were close-ups of each of their faces before the loot was revealed;
the jubilant thieves had made plans to have Jo immediately fence
their loot (an estimated worth of over 200 million francs) with London
contact Teddy Levantin (Teddy Bilis); each fantasized about what
they would do with their share of the money; Mario exclaimed how
he would live the good life with his busty wife Ida Ferrati (Claude
Sylvain): "Now Ida and me can try out beds in all the chic hotels";
Jo thought about his kid Tonio and Cesar about his four sisters,
but Tony answered with a very tentative: "Dunno...We're not out of
the woods yet"; the stash was hidden in a heavy lamp base in Mario's
apartment
- the next day, newspapers were hawked on the street:
"Read all about it! 240 million! Biggest take since the Sabine women!"; a
Police Inspector offered Grutter a 10 million francs reward for a
"lead on the jewelry job"
- soon, everything would unravel
when the infatuated Cesar offered a valuable diamond ring from the
store heist (that he had secretly taken for himself) to his naked lover
Viviane (the chanteuse at Grutter's nightclub) in bed with him after
sex
- meanwhile, in Mado's dressing room, Grutter noticed
the belt-whipping marks on her bare back and suspected Tony; she
broke up with him: ("I can't stay with you. You can't hold me");
then, Grutter supplied many packets of white powder to his own drug-addicted junkie
brother Remy (Robert Hossein) and then urged him to vengefully eliminate
Tony: ("I want you to take out the Stephanois. He's in my way")
The Evil Gangster and Nightclub Owner Pierre Grutter
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Grutter's Notice of Belt-Whipping Marks on Mado's
Bare Back
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Grutter Supplying His Brother Remy with Drugs - in
Exchange for Killing Tony
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Grutter's Discovery of Viviane's Valuable Ring Gift
From Cesar
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- in addition, after Grutter spotted Viviane's diamond
ring - he knew it was related to the jewel heist and was quite valuable;
he confronted Cesar at gunpoint and forced the
jewel thief to confess; rather than take the 10 million francs reward
offered by police, Grutter set in motion a plan to steal the jewels
(worth 240 million) from his adversary Tony's gang members
- in a brutal scene, Grutter and his drug-hooked brother
Remy and second brother Louis (Pierre Grasset) confronted Mario (and
his wife Ida) in their apartment; when they declined to cooperate or
reveal the stolen loot's location (hidden in the couple's lamp in their apartment), they
were murdered (off-screen) (Mario's throat was slit by Remy's straight-edged
razor, and Ida was struck on the head)
- soon after, Tony sought Grutter,
but instead found the captive Cesar (who had betrayed him and squealed)
who was tied to a pillar in the deserted nightclub; after Cesar offered
a sincere apology for messing up and causing Mario's death: ("Forgive
me...I was afraid"), Tony told him: "It
was you. You ratted on him... I
liked you. I really liked you, Macaroni. But, you know the rules";
Cesar nodded in agreement ("the rules"), and Tony killed him with
three gunshots
- afterwards, Tony and Jo (passing in a distant taxi)
paid their respects during Mario's and Ida's funeral procession
- to further force Tony's hand, Grutter's gang members
(Grutter's brothers Remy and Louis) kidnapped Jo's 5 year-old son
Tonio (Dominique Maurin) off the street, and threatened Jo's wife Louise
(Janine Darcey): "Tell Jo, the kid or the gems, and to wait for our
call. And not a word to the cops"
- at the same time, Tony and Jo exchanged the diamonds
(retrieved earlier by Tony)
for the entire payoff of 120 million francs in a suitcase delivered by
the London fence Trevantin to Jo's apartment
- the dramatic scene of Jo's wife Louise asking him
about why he turned into a hood: "There are kids - Millions of kids
who've grown up poor. Like you. How did it happen - What difference
was there between them and you, that you became a hood, a tough guy,
and not them? Know what I think, Jo? They're the tough guys, not
you"
- by questioning
bartenders, hookers, tough guys and other underworld acquaintances,
the determined and doting Tony began tracking
down the young boy (his godson) and discovered from Mado that he
was being held at Grutter's under-construction country villa outside
Paris; Tony was in a race against the clock to prevent Jo from
complying with Gutter and turning over the 120 million francs in
the suitcase in exchange for his son; via public transportation,
Tony followed a drug dealer (supplying drugs to Remy) to the villa,
where he brutally knocked out Remy's brother Louis and shot Remy
three times dead before rescuing the boy
- meanwhile, Jo agreed to meet with
Grutter at the villa to give him the suitcase of money, and left
his apartment to drive there;
at the same time, Tony learned Jo's whereabouts after phoning his
apartment, and sped back to the villa; Tony
was too late - when he arrived, Jo had already been shot dead (off-screen)
by Grutter; during another shootout, Tony was mortally wounded and
bleeding, but was able to shoot and kill Grutter from behind as
he fled outside with the suitcase; Tony ducked back into the villa
and sadly found Jo's dead body on the stairs
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Tony Murdering Remy in Country Villa
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Grutter Confronting Jo in the Villa Before Murdering
Him
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Grutter Killed by Tony As He Fled With Suitcase
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- in the concluding sequence, the manic and dying Tony
frantically and recklessly sped back to Paris, careening through
city streets, to deliver young Tonio (who ironically was playing
with a toy gun) home safely to his newly-widowed mother; there, surrounded
by police and bystanders, Tony crashed the car in front of Louise's
apartment, and collapsed and died on the steering wheel
as Louise pulled Tonio from the car - the suitcase was stashed in
the backseat with the 120 million francs; as the camera slowly pulled
back, the police officers opened the suitcase - and the film ended
with "FIN"
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Tony (Jean Servais)
Jo (Carl Möhner)
Threesome (Tony, Mario, Jo) Planning a "Smash-and-Grab" of Jewelry Store
Jewelry Store: Mappin & Webb, Ltd
Mario with Wife Ida
Mario's Hiring of Italian Safecracker Cesar as Fourth Member
(l to r): Nightclub Owner Grutter and Junkie Brother Remy
Dress Rehearsal: Cesar and the Other Crooks Figuring Out
How to Silence the Alarm System - With Fire Extinguisher Foam
The Pouch of Stolen Diamonds
The Loot
Newspaper Headlines
Fatal Flaw: Cesar's Gift of Stolen Diamond Ring to Viviane
Mario's Throat-Slitting Death by Remy
Cesar Tied to a Pillar in Grutter's Nightclub
Ferratti's Funeral - Jo and Tony Paying Respects From Taxi
Exchange of Stolen Diamonds for 120 Million in Cash (in Suitcase)
Louise's Dramatic Questioning of 'Tough Guy' Husband Jo
Tony's Discovery of Jo's Dead Body in the Villa
The Dying Tony's Frantic Drive Back to Paris with Tonio (with toy gun)
Tony's Death After Crashing The Car
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