The Great Riviera Bank Robbery (1979), also known as Dirty Money, is a motion picture written and directed by Francis Megahy. Main actors Ian McShane, Warren Clarke, Stephen Greif, and Christopher Malcolm.
Synopsis
1959 - The Great St. Louis Bank Robbery - STEVE MCQUEEN - Charles Guggenheim | FULL MOVIE - Steve McQueen plays a college dropout hired to be the getaway driver in a bank robbery based upon a heist attempt of Southwest Bank in St. Louis in 1953.
The Great Riviera Bank Robbery is based on a real-life event in 1976. A group of professional criminals team up with a fascist terrorist group known as "The Chain" to steal 15 million dollars' worth of tourist money from a bank in a French resort town.
Miscellanea
The French version, made by Jose Giovanni, (Les Egouts du Paradis = Sewers of Paradise) kept the hero's real name but is rather listless. The "hero" becomes a nice guy, some kind of Arsene Lupin, who visits the old ladies in the hospital.
The English version, which features a better lead (Ian McShane billed as "Brain") and a more honest approach. The characters are fascists (anti communist) and their paramilitary activities are not passed over in silence—in the French attempt, all they show is weapons in the thieves' den in the country. When they left the vault, a parting message was written on the wall, which said; "we came with no malice; but went in peace".
References
- ^ "The Great Riviera Bank Robbery > Overview". allmovie.com. Rovi Corporation. Retrieved December 28, 2010.Â
- The Great Riviera Bank Robbery at the Internet Movie Database
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