The Brink's Job

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The Brink's Job
The Brink's Job.jpg
Theatrical release poster
Directed byWilliam Friedkin
Screenplay byWalon Green
Based onBig Stick-Up at Brinks
by Noel Behn
Produced byRalph Serpe
StarringPeter Falk
Peter Boyle
Allen Garfield
Warren Oates
Gena Rowlands
Paul Sorvino
CinematographyNorman Leigh
Edited byRobert K. Lambert
Bud S. Smith
Music byRichard Rodney Bennett
Distributed byUniversal Pictures
Release date
  • December 8, 1978 (1978-12-08)
Running time
104 minutes
LanguageEnglish
Budget$16.4 million[1]
Box office$14.5 million[1]

The Brink's Job is a 1978 American crime comedy drama film directed by William Friedkin and starring Peter Falk, Peter Boyle, Allen Garfield, Warren Oates, Gena Rowlands, and Paul Sorvino. It is based on the Brink's robbery of 1950 in Boston, where almost 3 million dollars was stolen.

The film was nominated for an Oscar for Best Art Direction (Dean Tavoularis, Angelo P. Graham, Bruce Kay and George R. Nelson).

Plot[]

Small-time Boston crook Tony Pino (Peter Falk) tries to make a name for himself. He and his five associates pull off a robbery whenever they can. Tony stumbles across the fact that the Brink's security procedures are incredibly lax. He and his gang easily rob over $100,000 in cash from an unlocked, parked Brink's armoured car. To find out more, Tony disguises himself as a spark plug salesman to get an inside look at Brink's large and so-called "impregnable fortress" headquarters in the city's North End. The company had been thought to have unbreachable security as a private "bank" throughout the East Coast.

Once inside, Tony realizes that Brink's is anything but a fortress and that employees treat the money "like garbage." Still wary of Brink's public image, Tony breaks in one night after casing the building. He finds that only two doors in the building are locked, and one is easily bypassed by leaping a gate. The only thing locked in the building is the vault.

Tony also realizes that despite what Brink's claims, there is only a 10-cent alarm in the vault room itself, almost impossible to set off. It appears that Brink's had relied so much on its reputation that it had not even bothered locking the doors. Pino begins to plan a robbery, using the rooftop of a neighboring building as a watch tower.

Tony and his dim brother-in-law Vinnie (Allen Garfield) put together a motley gang of thieves. They include the debonair Jazz Maffie (Paul Sorvino) and an Iwo Jima veteran, Specs O'Keefe (Warren Oates), who is taken aboard before they realize how unbalanced he is. Over the crew's objections, Pino also invites the arrogant fence Joe McGinnis (Peter Boyle) to be in on the job.

The robbers on the night of Jan. 17th, 1950 make off with more than a million dollars in cash, along with another million-plus in securities and checks. Brink's, a company that prides itself in the safekeeping of money, is nationally embarrassed by what the press is calling "the crime of the century." Even FBI director J. Edgar Hoover (Sheldon Leonard) takes a personal interest in finding the culprits, even so much as creating a makeshift FBI office in Boston.

Law enforcement agents begin rounding up suspects. They come to the home of Tony and Mary Pino, as they often do for crimes in the area. Mary (Gena Rowlands) is so familiar with them by now, she makes the cops dinner. Tony is brought in for questioning, but reacts with indignation at being accused.

The crooks begin to crack, however. McGinnis infuriates them by destroying a large sum of the hold-up money, claiming the bills could be traced. He also hangs onto the rest, defying threats by Pino and his cohorts to hand over their shares.

Specs and another of the gang, Stanley Gusciora, go on the road to meet his "sugar doughnut" in Pittsburgh. They are picked up by Pennsylvania State Police on a burglary charge en route at Bradford, Pennsylvania and are each handed a long jail sentence, Gusciora at the Western Penitentiary-Pittsburgh. Specs grows more and more disturbed behind bars, demanding that money from his cut be sent to his ill sister. In interrogation, Specs and Stanley are pressured more each day to reveal whatever they might know about the Brink's job. Specs ultimately confesses.

One by one, the rest of the gang is apprehended, mainly by the Boston Police Department. Tony is on his way to jail in Boston and so is Vinnie, but they unexpectedly find themselves hailed as heroes by people on the street for having pulled off one of the great crimes of all time. One teen remarks to a clearly pleased Pino, "You're the greatest thief who ever lived! Nobody will ever do what you did, Tony!"

Cast[]

Production[]

The film was developed by director John Frankenheimer who then lost interest in it. Dino De Laurentiis then offered the project to William Friedkin who was looking for something to do after a proposed adaptation of Born on the Fourth of July with Al Pacino had been unable to secure finance. A script had been written but Friedkin insisted on rewriting it with Walon Green, who had just written Sorcerer for the director.[2]

During the production, a number of conflicts and concerns with Teamsters Union members occurred, ultimately resulting in four indictments and two convictions of Teamsters for attempts to solicit non-existent jobs.[3]

Filming locations[]

The movie was filmed primarily on location in Boston. Locations included:

  • The parking garage on Prince Street in the North End and the former Brinks Headquarters, where the Brink's robbery actually took place;
  • The old Boston Police Headquarters on Berkeley Street (since renovated as the Loews Boston Hotel);
  • Copp's Hill Terrace in the North End.
  • An alley in the opening sequence reveals the Pilgrim Theatre (since demolished) in what was then Boston's Combat Zone, an infamous Red-light district
  • Gumball factory 'Colley Confectionery Co'-exterior scenes on 150 Orleans and Gove Street, East Boston, MA. (Now renovated into residences) The rail lines in the film that were behind the building are gone, now the Greenway.
  • Another shot in that sequence shows the faded sign painted on the side of the Combat Zone's Gaiety Theatre (also demolished).
  • Tony and Joe fight in Roxbury's Dudley Square station (partially demolished since).
  • The New England Mutual Life Insurance Company building on Boylston Street in the Back Bay was used as the Boston Courthouse.
  • The Old North Church is visible in several shots.
  • The Custom House Tower in Downtown Boston is seen one of the rooftop scenes, and its base was used as the Suffolk County Courthouse in the film's final indictment sequence.
  • The Traffic Box scene where Spec's O'Keefe drives through Towanda, PA was filmed in Stoneham, Massachusetts
  • Doyle's Cafe - Jamaica Plain

Reception[]

Reviewing the film in the Chicago Sun-Times, Roger Ebert wrote, "The movie was directed by William Friedkin, best known for the violence and shock of The Exorcist, The French Connection, and Sorcerer. What he exhibits here, though, is a light touch, an ability to orchestrate rich human humor with a bunch of characters who look like they were born to stand in a police lineup. Falk, playing Pino, has never been better in a movie. He gives the guy a nice, offbeat edge; Pino is a natural hustler looking for the angle in everything. [...] Friedkin has great control of tone. He gives us characters who are comic and yet seem realistic enough that we share their feelings, and he gives us a movie that's funny and yet functions smoothly as a thriller. This sort of craft is sometimes hard to appreciate - The Brink's Job is so well put together that it doesn't draw attention to its direction. [...] And the acting is great to savor. The characters are richly detailed, complicated, given dialog that's written with almost musical cadences."[4]

The movie was nominated for the Best Art Direction Academy Award (Dean Tavoularis, Angelo P. Graham, George R. Nelson, and Bruce Kay).[5]

Friedkin later said the film "has some nice moments, despite thinly drawn characters, but it left no footprint. There's little intensity or suspense and the humour is an acquired taste. The film doesn't shout, it doesn't sing - it barely whispers".[6] He considers The Brink's Job to be one of his movies that ended up the "farthest" from what he had envisioned.[7]

Heist[]

In August 1978, 15 unedited reels of the film were stolen at gunpoint. While the robbers demanded a $1 million ransom,[8] the money was never paid because the robbers, showing a distinct lack of filmmaking knowledge, had hijacked outtakes and dailies. Positive prints of negatives were being held by Technicolor in New York City, so the material was replaced with no significant delay. The robbers, however, made a ransom call, which triggered an investigation by the FBI. During the ransom call, Friedkin told the robbers to "get a projector and enjoy the film; it was all theirs."[9]

References[]

  1. ^ a b De Laurentiis PRODUCER'S PICTURE DARKENS: KNOEDELSEDER, WILLIAM K, Jr. Los Angeles Times 30 Aug 1987: 1.
  2. ^ Friedkin p 349
  3. ^ "State sees a drop in reality filming after Teamsters 'Top Chef' protests". 14 August 2017.
  4. ^ Roger Ebert, "The Brink's Job" Review, Mar. 12, 1979 http://www.rogerebert.com/reviews/the-brinks-job-1979
  5. ^ "NY Times: The Brink's Job". Movies & TV Dept. The New York Times. 2010. Archived from the original on 2010-09-08. Retrieved 2008-12-31.
  6. ^ Friedkin p 354
  7. ^ "Director William Friedkin on Rising and Falling and Rising in the Film Industry".
  8. ^ Friedkin pp 353–354
  9. ^ Book title: Reader's Digest - How In The World? (pg. 68) Publisher: Reader's Digest. Pleasantville, NY, 1990.
  • Friedkin, William, The Friedkin Connection, Harper Collins 2013

External links[]

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