Great movie, with one of the best robbery sequences, no dialogue, well in the movie they speak little, they don't need it
The original title of the film is Du Rififi chez les Hommes.
Meticulousness, Fine-drawn characterisation and Inspiration all scripted in such a way that it feels real, yet also drawn in such a 'cinema' format, that you can't help but admire what you are watching. A sensational screenplay, constructed in three parts (more or less). A set up; it's great but nothing mammoth enough to squash you, the heist (I will get to you, don't you worry) and the final third, which pulls a trigger and blasts chaos onto us with fully automatic fire. My favourite part is the heist, a 32-minute scene about four men performing a heist. Basic, right? Well, it has absolutely no dialogue or music, yet is completely engaging and dramatic. It sure has been an inspiration for many heist scenes to follow in the world of cinema, and it might just take the cake as my favourite robbery scene of all time, but there's even more to this part of the film. The scene, with no dialogue whatsoever, has the largest unload of character development in the run time, and the way it is given to the audience is refreshingly subtle; one thing these four characters have in common is greed, and the half-hour heist scene showcases this desire and downfall perfectly.
Rififi is just excellent all the way through though, and is a picture I recommend to anyone and everyone.
Rififi.
"It's the lingo of the streetwise, the battle cry of real tough guys."
A must see. Simply the best heist movie of all time.
Shout by Dr BrakeVIP 4BlockedParentSpoilers2020-09-20T01:05:42Z
The poster completely misrepresents this movie. If you think "jewel heist" with that poster you might think "The Hot Rock", "Raffles", "The Thief Who Came to Dinner..." Comedy dramas? Well there's no doubt this is a stone cold classic, with a good (but not IMHO fantastic) 32-minute silent robbery sequence. But what raised it to a classic in my view is its jet-black film noir sensibility. The central character may be a "man of honour" but he's also a brutal thug. The film's emotional weight comes as you watch a malign fate stalk and destroy the gang. And for me the best scene is not the robbery, but the her's final journey to the end credits...