|

Not a member? Sign up

Please wait...

Rififi - Criterion Collection Reviews

Embed This Video

Copy this code to your website or blog:

Close
Copy Embed Code

Share This Video

Close

Similar Videos

    Replay
    Close
    00:00 / 00:00
    00:00
    Leo S.

    Leo S.

    from MI

    Rififi: Noir French Film

    Reviewed on 09/17/07
    Plays: 73
    Ambition rated this product 5 out of 5 stars

    I really liked this 1955 French film about a bank heist.

    0 out of 0 people found this video helpful.

    Was this video helpful to you? Yes No

    Have a Question About This Product?

    Ask owners of this product for their opinions.

    Ask a Question


    These members earned rewards for their unbiased Movie DVD reviews. Learn More

    0 Comment

    Compare Prices

    Rififi (The Criterion Collection) Rififi (The Criterion Collection)

    After an elaborate jewelry heist, a rival gangster attempts to get the loot through murder, kidnapping, and torture.Genre: Foreign Film -...

    Amazon is rated 3.43 out of 5
    1786 Store Reviews
    Buy
    Rififi (The Criterion Collection) Rififi (The Criterion Collection)

    After an elaborate jewelry heist, a rival gangster attempts to get the loot through murder, kidnapping, and torture.Genre: Foreign Film -...

    Amazon Marketplace is rated 2.75 out of 5
    226 Store Reviews
    Buy
    Rififi - Criterion Collection

    Average Rating:

    5 stars

    based on 1 video review

    Hollywood's loss was Europe's gain when Jules Dassin fled America because of the House Un-American Activities Committee blacklist at the end of the 1940s. His films helped bring the moral ambiguity of the postwar American thriller to Europe, inspiring a new generation of critics and filmmakers....

    Compare Prices
    Summary
    Hollywood's loss was Europe's gain when Jules Dassin fled America because of the House Un-American Activities Committee blacklist at the end of the 1940s. His films helped bring the moral ambiguity of the postwar American thriller to Europe, inspiring a new generation of critics and filmmakers. Writing several years before he made The 400 Blows , François Truffaut praised Dassin for the way his films "combin[ed] the documentary approach with lyricism," a method that would inform many of the new wave films of the '60s. Rififi , shot on the rainy streets of Paris, is imbued with the same gritty realism that marked Dassin's earlier work in New York ( The Naked City ) and London ( Night and the City ). Jean Servais plays Tony le Stéphanois, an aging crook whose thin lips and tired, seen-it-all eyes give him a look somewhere between Humphrey Bogart and Harry Dean Stanton. Out of jail after a five-year stretch, he joins up with a couple of pals to pull one last heist: a jewel robbery that is portrayed in such detail (including tips on how to silence an alarm using a fire extinguisher) that the film was banned in several countries. The robbery sequence alone, which lasts for 30 minutes and is played entirely without dialogue, would be enough to ensure Rififi 's classic status, but there's a lot more to enjoy, including terrific performances from Marie Sabouret as Tony's world-weary ex-girlfriend, and from Dassin himself as a dandified Italian safecracker with an eye for the ladies. After the thrill of the heist, in the film's final scenes when, with the inevitability of the best films noirs everything falls apart, Dassin achieves the lyricism that Truffaut admired so much. By combining the conventions of a caper movie with his own brand of bleak nihilism, he made Rififi into a film that deserves to be counted among the best ever made. --Simon Leake
    Details

    Related Movie DVDs Boards

    Read Related Movie DVDs Discussions
    LATEST THREADS

    Bronson (1 post)

    THE FIRM MOVIE (2 posts)

    Dead Tone (2 posts)

    Go to Consumer Message Boards

    Qualify for Free Products
    Get Rewards
    Membership is FREE!

    Join Now

    Already a member? Log In