Blueprint for Robbery

1961 "BIGGEST HEIST IN HISTORY!"
6.2| 1h27m| NR| en| More Info
Released: 01 February 1961 Released
Producted By: Paramount
Country:
Budget: 0
Revenue: 0
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A gang of career criminals plots the robbery of an armored car company's headquarters. Although the robbery itself goes off as planned, it's not long before the gang members are fighting among themselves over everybody's share of the loot and trying to avoid capture by the police, who are pouring all their resources into capturing the robbers. Based on a real-life 1950 Brinks Armored Car Co. robbery in Boston.

Genre

Action, Thriller

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Director

Jerry Hopper

Production Companies

Paramount

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Blueprint for Robbery Audience Reviews

Inadvands Boring, over-political, tech fuzed mess
Seraherrera The movie is wonderful and true, an act of love in all its contradictions and complexity
Lollivan It's the kind of movie you'll want to see a second time with someone who hasn't seen it yet, to remember what it was like to watch it for the first time.
Payno I think this is a new genre that they're all sort of working their way through it and haven't got all the kinks worked out yet but it's a genre that works for me.
JohnHowardReid No director but Jerry Hopper could make a film as dull as this one out of such promising material. The screenplay by Irwin Winehouse and A. Sanford Wolf is based on the famous robbery of Brinks' express office at Boston in 1950 in which eleven masked bandits escaped with nearly three million dollars. However, anyone expecting an American "Rififi" will be badly disappointed by this effort. Not only is the film's central character, as delineated by J. O'Malley, an uninteresting bore (we would like to have seen more of Chips McGann, so effectively played by Robert Gist who later became a director (e.g. "An American Dream"), but no such luck. As I said above, right to the very end, Jerry Hopper's direction contrives to be dull, dull, dull all the way. And he spins it out for 87 minutes too!
Tom Willett (yonhope) I watched some of the scenes being filmed for this movie in 1960 when I worked at Barker Brothers warehouse. That is in Los Angeles, not Boston. The building at 530 Molina at the intersection of Palmetto Street in the Warehouse District East of Alameda Street was the location for the Brink's building. Barker Brothers warehouse is across the street from there. The scenes looking out the hotel window at the building being robbed were filmed from a furniture warehouse. You can Google the 530 address and see that the building is still there and Barker Brothers old closed warehouse which was supposed to be the hotel ground floor entrance is also still there. The building North of there was also used as the hotel exterior. The movie rings true throughout. It has good characters and many familiar character actors appearing in this fast paced black and white film. The production is not cheap but it is primitive compared to today's explosion circus atmosphere norm. I highly recommend this if you like the old Cagney/Bogart/Raft movies. Look for great old cars that were new at the time the movie was being made.
GUENOT PHILIPPE I am a great lover of caper - heist - movies. And this one is a very good as rare too. It is based on a true story, the Brink's robbery that took place in Boston in 1950. William Friedkin and Marvin Chomsky already made films about this affair.It tells with many details how the hoods proceed to steal the bullion. There is not really a leading character in this story, not great actors either. And it makes it more interesting.It is however a grade B movie, shot with a tiny budget. Do not expect car chases and gunfights.I am surprised that no other IMDb user has commented it yet.I recommend it for those who can catch it on a TV broadcast these days.