The heist film is noir at its most formally satisfying: a world reduced to the precision of a plan, the specificity of expertise, and the certainty that something will go wrong. These films celebrate the criminal specialist with the same unironic admiration that other genres reserve for the detective, because the heist is ultimately a test of professional mastery against the randomness of the world. The satisfactions of the heist film – its clockwork structure, its specialist characters, its procedural precision – coexist with noir’s inevitable pessimism: the plan always fails, and the failure always reveals something true about the people involved.
The definitive heist film, in which a master criminal assembles a team of specialists for a jewel robbery, and each member’s individual human weakness contributes to the collective catastrophe. John Huston’s deep sympathy for his criminal protagonists gives the film a tragic grandeur unusual in the genre.
A racetrack robbery is planned with military precision and told in a fractured chronology that Kubrick uses to demonstrate how the narrative of a perfect crime is never the same as its reality. Sterling Hayden leads an ensemble of brilliant losers through the most formally sophisticated heist film ever made.
The 30-minute silent jewelry store robbery sequence at this film’s center is the most carefully observed and sustained heist in cinema history, conducted without music or dialogue and with total procedural accuracy. Jules Dassin made this French masterpiece while in exile from Hollywood.
An armored car driver allows himself to be used in a heist by his ex-wife’s gangster husband in a plan that was never designed to let him survive the aftermath. The heist itself is almost secondary to the psychological study of a man engineering his own destruction.
A couple’s bank-robbing spree is captured in a continuous in-car tracking shot that anticipates the cinema verite of the French New Wave by a decade. Lewis’s film understands the bank robbery as an erotic act – desire and violence fused in the moment of transgression.
A masked mastermind plans a bank robbery using criminals who do not know each other’s identities, creating a perfect crime that is also a trap for its own participants. The film’s clever structural premise gives it an unusual twist on the heist formula.
An upstate New York bank robbery is planned by three desperately incompatible men whose racial tensions threaten to destroy the job before it begins. Harry Belafonte produced and stars in this unusually socially conscious final statement of the classic noir cycle.
Five men steal gold bullion from a federal train and attempt to move it across country in a methodical, near-wordless film that is the purest procedural in the heist genre. The film’s ending, in which the gold becomes the instrument of its owners’ destruction, is one of noir’s most ironic conclusions.
A gang’s carefully planned armored car robbery goes violently wrong from the moment a cop spots something suspicious. Charles McGraw’s relentless detective is the necessary counterpart to every heist film – the force that holds the genre’s moral accounting.
College friends plan what they believe to be a victimless casino robbery to prove it can be done, not realizing that one of their group’s war trauma will turn the intellectual exercise lethal. The film understands the heist as a test of character rather than a test of planning.