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The Best Laid Plans: Interrogating the Heist Film
The Best Laid Plans: Interrogating the Heist Film
The Best Laid Plans: Interrogating the Heist Film
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The Best Laid Plans: Interrogating the Heist Film

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The heist—a carefully organized robbery of a financial institution or other lucrative business—has been a persistent and popular mainstay of the crime film. The Best Laid Plans: Interrogating the Heist Film asks the question: why has the heist film proved so appealing to audiences over many years and in diverse cultural contexts? The twelve essays in this volume, edited by Jim Leach and Jeannette Sloniowski, explore the significance of the heist film in different national cinemas, as well as its aesthetic principles and ideological issues such as representation of gender, race, and class.

The essays are organized in three parts dealing with the heist film's international presence, the subgenre's social and cultural implications, and some theoretical ways of approaching it. For example, contributor Tim Palmer challenges traditional notions of French film history that emphasize critically acclaimed art films by pointing to the rich achievements of critically defamed and neglected, but extremely popular, crime films; Gaylyn Studlar surveys heist films in light of feminist theories that illuminate stereotypical characterizations of both men and women in the heist; and Hamilton Carroll compares James Marsh’s documentary Man on a Wire—which draws on heist conventions to depict Philippe Petit’s unauthorized tightrope walk in 1974 between the two towers of the World Trade Center—to Spike Lee’s New York–set heist film Inside Man.

The Best Laid Plans includes an accessible group of essays that will meet the needs of students and scholars in film and media studies by offering new insights into an important and neglected area in genre criticism.
LanguageEnglish
Release dateDec 4, 2017
ISBN9780814342251
The Best Laid Plans: Interrogating the Heist Film

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    Introduction

    . . . of Heists and Men

    Jeannette Sloniowski and Jim Leach

    The heist—a carefully organized robbery of a bank, jewelry store, casino, or other commercial institution—has been a persistent and popular mainstay of popular cinema. The central question addressed by our contributors in this collection is why films about heists have proved so appealing to audiences over many years and in diverse cultural contexts.

    In terms of genre theory, there is much uncertainty as to how to designate the heist film. Some critics have treated it as a genre, others as a subgenre of the gangster film or as a subgenre of the crime film more generally. Rick Altman, rather surprisingly, calls it a failed genre because it never developed a stable syntax (225) that could organize the semantic building blocks (219) into a coherent structure. This is odd because, in Altman’s terms, the heist film has a very well defined syntax derived from the planning, execution, and aftermath of a major robbery, as well as a distinctive number of narrative variations such as the revenge, the comedy/parody, or the social issue narrative. Since this is the case, and because it shares many of its semantic features and much of its iconography with the gangster film and other crime films, such as the police procedural and the semidocumentary film noir, to say nothing of Westerns and war films concerned with crime, we think it most productive to see the heist film as a subgenre of the crime film, although, given the heist film’s highly recognizable syntactic elements, it is not surprising that others, including some of our contributors, will continue to regard it as a fully fledged genre. This issue of generic definition is complicated in no small part due to what John Scaggs calls the bewildering variety of different ‘versions’ of the crime thriller (108). As we shall see, the heist subgenre is filled with hybrids of differing narrative structures and cross-generic conventions.

    We have no wish to offer a prescriptive theory of the heist film, but it is useful to outline the normal features of the subgenre, acknowledging that individual films will deviate from these norms. All genre films are combinations of convention and invention but if the deviations become too great, the film may slip into a different generic territory: a film depicting a professional gang carrying out multiple robberies is best seen as a gangster or a bandit-gangster film. The most clearly definable heist films usually focus on one carefully planned major robbery; the gang usually consists of men who have been recruited for this one job and who may not have a criminal record; and the narrative is usually divided into three more or less distinct stages: recruiting and planning, execution, and aftermath. The amount of attention given to each of these stages can vary considerably, as in those films that concentrate mainly, after the heist is carried out, on the difficulties in getting away with the crime, the double-cross, or the revenge of the target of the heist (often the Mob).

    As examples of the possibilities offered by these structural variations, we might compare Dead Presidents (The Hughes Brothers, 1995), in which the elaborate and bloody heist occurs only after long sections dealing with the coming-of-age of the protagonist and his experiences in the Vietnam War, with Reservoir Dogs (Quentin Tarantino, 1992), which omits the planning and the heist completely and deals only with the bloody aftermath. We might also distinguish between those heist films whose narratives are entirely from the criminals’ point of view and those, like Robbery (Peter Yates, 1967) and Heat (Michael Mann, 1995), in which their actions are intercut with the police investigation. Martin Rubin calls Heat a hybrid of heist film and police thriller (34).

    Tone is also a key factor, ranging from films that explore the social issues surrounding the thieves, including issues of race, capitalist exploitation, and consumer culture, to comedies where the ineptness of the gang clearly parodies the emphasis in the heist proper on competence, precision, and perfect timing. As Rubin suggests, what links the serious and comic films is the presence of irony, with the protagonists defeated more often by twists of fate than by the forces of justice (122). Taking his cue from the ending of The Killing (Stanley Kubrick, 1956), in which a small dog thwarts the getaway, Mark Bould refers to the quirk that brings the best laid plans to disaster as the yappy little dog (89). Most, but not all, heist films feature a yappy dog, and the variations in tone that this device makes possible contribute to the uncertainty about how to name the subgenre.

    So far we have referred to the films in question as heist films, but many critics (including Altman) have followed Stuart Kaminsky and defined them as big caper films (79). According to the Online Etymology Dictionary, caper originally meant playful leap or jump, then came to mean prank, and was first associated with crime in 1926. The word heist, used as a noun since 1930, originated in American slang and is probably a dialectal alteration of hoist, meaning to lift in its slang sense of shoplift. While the playful connotations of caper do capture the spirit of certain heist films, especially from the 1960s on, the term does not suit the many dark crime films to which it has often been applied. In these films, criminals often speak of the job as a caper, as Doc does in The Asphalt Jungle (John Huston, 1950), but this is before the catastrophic series of events that ensue when the heist goes wrong. In High Sierra (Raoul Walsh, 1941), the gang similarly refer to the job as a caper, but, during the robbery, Roy (Humphrey Bogart) tells a security guard to raise his arms, Heist ’em, buddy, and then calls the job a heist as he flees from the police.

    Neither caper nor heist necessarily refers to a crime committed by a gang, but both terms are usually used to describe films depicting such crimes, and they are often used interchangeably. However, caper also has been applied to quite different crimes, such as those involving confidence tricks (The Sting [George Roy Hill, 1973] is often so described), and refers less to the crime than to the spirit in which it is committed. Heist refers precisely to the crime and can even encompass those caper films that include heists. For these reasons, we prefer to speak of the heist film as a single subgenre and, adapting the distinction suggested by Steve Chibnall in his discussion of recent British gangster films between Gangster Heavy, films that strive for unvarnished authenticity, and Gangster Light, films that cheerfully peddle myth (Travels in Ladland 376–77), we prefer to think in terms of Heist Light and Heist Heavy.

    What is clear in many heist films is a ludic aspect where beating the Man is seen as a game created by the heist planner. Often this planner takes great pleasure in the creation of a seemingly brilliant plan that dupes authorities of all kinds. This pleasurable aspect, we argue, is passed on to the audience, which presumably enjoys the game, the planning, and what seems likely to be the absolute perfection of a brilliantly executed attack on mainstream institutions. The brilliance of the plan, and the demonstration of masculine competence and bravery, are perhaps a reflection of the war film. War films demonstrated the ability of the male group to impose their will on the enemy. While this works only in part for the heist, since the brilliant plan fails on most occasions, part of the pleasure of heist films is watching the creation of the great plan. In 5 Against the House (Phil Karlson, 1955), for example, the rich boy heist planner Ronnie (Kerwin Matthews) plans a heist using three of his Korean War buddies. Ronnie is obsessed with time and precision, but is interested in the heist only because I wanted to see it work, to know if I was able to do it. The attraction of the heist is largely the pleasure of the challenge and an adventure to fight off boredom. He has no interest at all in the score. The heist fails primarily because one of the gang suffered a serious head injury during the war and cannot keep himself together emotionally while executing the heist.

    The parallel with the war film was noted by Kaminsky in the first extensive critical discussion of the heist film, in which he argued that the big caper film is a sub-genre of the adventure-process film . . . in which any small group of individuals of diverse ability . . . comes together to confront a massive establishment, be it prison, army, or secret installation (74–75). Following Kaminsky’s lead, several others, including Frank Krutnik and Kirsten Moana Thompson, have attempted to define the subgenre from various perspectives. Daryl Lee, however, is the author of the only book-length study of the heist film. Taking note of both the heist’s utility and pleasure, he argues that heists must be given a flexible conceptual definition (3) because of their hybrid nature, and that they must be studied historically to understand how their conventions have evolved over time. For example, the plight of returned veterans in the fifties can be compared to the plight of men today who cannot earn enough money to fund health care for their children or the down payment on a small business—and thus they steal. Different contexts, some changes in style, but at the core failed men still chasing their cultural dreams.

    As with other kinds of crime fiction and film, Lee argues that there is pleasure in heist films because they afford a powerful screen identification with criminals breaking the law, which satisfies a desire to elude the oppressive aspects or limitations of contemporary mass society (5). This pleasure in the ability to transgress is as clear in 2016’s Hell or High Water (David Mackenzie) as it was in The Asphalt Jungle. Mackenzie’s film is actually a hybrid of heist film and Western, and, as Fran Mason argues in Hollywood’s Detectives, it has always been a purposeful strategy in the Hollywood genre film to mix various genres together to attract larger audiences, but also to prevent the audience from tiring of fairly rigid conventions that grow stale over time—hence the many variations in the heists that our authors have studied. These mixtures of generic conventions in many heist films not only demonstrate the flexibility of genre filmmaking but make extraordinary films and make them extraordinarily difficult to define.

    Our authors offer a variety of approaches to the heist film, and the films have been chosen from a variety of national cinemas, from American and British to Italian, French, Japanese, and Canadian. We had originally envisioned this anthology to cover heist films in a broader international context. However, as with much popular cinema study, this work has yet to be done. It is our hope that this volume, along with Daryl Lee’s book on the heist, will spur other researchers into looking at the heist film more internationally—Bollywood, for example, has a considerable number of heist films, and we believe that there is much to be learned about many cultures through the study not only of popular cinema but particularly of the heist film and how ordinary men, as opposed to important gangster characters, cope with lack of economic opportunity and the failure of their differing cultural aspirations.

    The essays are organized in three parts, dealing with the heist film’s international presence, the subgenre’s social and cultural implications, and some theoretical ways of approaching it. Part One, The International Heist Film, explores the subgenre in the context of four different national cinemas. Inevitably, given the worldwide popularity of the heist film, the choice of national cinemas is somewhat arbitrary, and it is to be hoped, as suggested above, that our authors’ essays will inspire work on films from other countries.

    Jeannette Sloniowski discusses the fifties heist film in America. Her essay concerns Hollywood films made during the Cold War and the McCarthy-era witch hunts. These American heist films, often made by directors and actors under scrutiny by the House Un-American Activities Committee, are gloomy and violent with little of the caper about them. The thieves bring to the heist complex plans and skills perhaps developed from their experiences in World War II or their previous participation in criminal activities. But no matter how well planned, fate or internal discord and betrayal cause the robberies to fail, and often fail badly, in films like The Asphalt Jungle (perhaps the first fully developed American heist) and Plunder Road (Hubert Cornfield, 1957), among others.

    Jim Leach analyzes British heist films from the 1950s, arguing that the period of disillusionment following the elation of victory in the so-called People’s War led to violent and gloomy heist films that end very badly in most cases. The complexity of fifties culture, particularly with respect to economic discontent and the aftermath of the war, followed by the emergence of consumer culture in the 1960s, produced some remarkably dark films in Britain, as in America and France.

    Tim Palmer explores this darkness in postwar popular French cinema with his wide-ranging examination of the heist film in the context of French popular cinema. Palmer challenges traditional notions of French film history that emphasize critically acclaimed art films by pointing to the rich achievements of critically maligned and neglected, but extremely popular, crime films.

    Scott Henderson takes on the Canadian heist film, produced in a culture that is not well known for genre films. He examines the few heist films produced in the English-Canadian and Quebec film industries, tracing the development from films of the 1970s and 1980s that depict the failed heroes also found in other Canadian films of these eras, to a more populist approach early in the first decade of the twenty-first century, to a more recent example that illustrates the impact of a more globalized film industry in which national boundaries have perhaps become more porous.

    Part Two, Gender, Race, and Class in the Heist Film, examines the ways in which filmmakers have used the subgenre to address major issues in modern society.

    Gaylyn Studlar surveys heist films in light of feminist theories that illuminate stereotypical characterizations of both men and women in the heist, calling the films male obsessed and about recovering ideal masculinity. Acknowledging that male gangs are central to the iconography of the heist film, she argues that women play more important roles than previous critics have suggested, finally concluding that in the neo-retro heist film of our time, tough masculinity, although it has a lengthy history in the heist, is somewhat less important than it was in earlier films.

    Jonathan Rayner’s essay also focuses on masculinity, in this case in the heist films of Michael Mann, adopting an auteurist approach to the subgenre and relating these films to the vision developed in Mann’s other crime films. He argues that Mann depicts a morally ambivalent world in which the activities of criminals and police distance them from the values that they are intended to sustain.

    Jonathan Munby contributes an innovative survey of race in heist films, beginning with Odds Against Tomorrow (Robert Wise, 1959) and analyzing several films that have not been seriously examined before. Delving into issues of racism, racial profiling, and colonialism, Munby demonstrates the importance of heist films in raising and demystifying issues of race since 1959 in American films. As in several essays in our book, the heist is used to clarify a remarkable and important range of social issues.

    Fran Mason writes about social class in a variety of heists featuring underclass crooks who come to represent the struggle experienced by the dispossessed in capitalism. He argues that disempowerment is a feature of the heist film across cultures for men who see the heist as a way of escaping from their marginalized condition. Ascribing a lack of professionalism to the small-time heister, Mason identifies two kinds of criminal in heist films: the professional heister in the classic heist film and the amateur in the small-time heist movie, often with a comedic sensibility.

    Part Three, The Aesthetics and Ideology of the Heist Film, presents a series of more theoretical essays that make use of heist films to address aspects of the cultural, social, and political contexts in which they were made.

    Homer Pettey’s essay offers a comparative study of two films from different cultural and cinematic traditions, Stanley Kubrick’s The Killing and Takumi Furukawa’s Cruel Gun Story (1964). Using economic and gambling theory, he argues that these films are allegories of modern capitalism in which the criminals’ plans mirror modern economic theory in an attempt to achieve financial security. Like many of the authors in our anthology, Pettey sees the heist, which fails despite elaborate planning and often competent execution, as a hopeless gamble to defeat the odds.

    Andrew Clay’s essay draws on phenomenological theory to examine possible audience responses to heist films, using five British films from the period 1970 to 2000 as test cases. He examines the heist film as an aesthetic experience in which the camera eye situates the viewer in relation to the depicted crimes. His essay seeks to establish how the films make us feel about them, particularly in terms of their address to a masculine subjectivity.

    Daryl Lee extends his treatment of the aesthetic dimensions of the heist in his book to develop an argument about the heist film’s relations to modernist traditions in the arts. Concentrating on Soderbergh’s Ocean’s trilogy (2001–2007), Lee explores the relationship between art and criminality through a detailed examination of the allusions to modern art in these films.

    In the concluding essay Hamilton Carroll compares James Marsh’s documentary Man on a Wire (2008), which draws on heist conventions to depict Philippe Petit’s unauthorized tightrope walk in 1974 between the two towers of the World Trade Center, to Spike Lee’s New York–set heist film Inside Man (2006). He argues that both films are responses to the 9/11 terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center, and both try to work through the pain and suffering of that horrific event using the conventions of the heist genre. Here again an author examines the use of the generic conventions of the heist to open a conversation about a significant cultural moment.

    What is clear from all of our authors is that the heist has been used for a remarkable number of purposes. These purposes include entertainment, of course, but also depicting the struggles of poor men in a world increasingly dominated by big business, and the failure of the American Dream, or indeed any dream, in many different cultures. We need only to look at a few heists of 2014 to 2016 to see that social issues are still at the heart of the heist film. American Heist (Sarik Andreasyan, 2014) concerns the attempts of two down-and-out brothers to get on their feet. One brother tries to go straight and starts his own business, but his efforts are undercut by a banking system that has no interest in small businesses, only in high finance. In Heist (Scott Mann, 2015), a man plans (and gets away with) a heist in order to pay for medical treatment for his seriously ill child. To Steal from a Thief (Daniel Calparsoro, 2016) deals with a worldwide issue: heisting secret government documents to reveal government corruption, and it evokes this not uncommon activity for audiences who have seen this form of robbery even during the recent US presidential elections. The heist is uniquely positioned to draw attention to the trials endured by ordinary men and sometimes women.

    PART ONE

    The International Heist Film

    All for Naught

    The American Heist Film in the Fifties

    Jeannette Sloniowski

    The heist film is a hybrid form born in America in the 1940s. Along with the contemporaneous bandit gangster subgenre, it exhibits conventions drawn from older genres to create a formidable, desperate, and sometimes left-wing depiction of postwar American culture. Both subgenres show the influence not only of film noir and semidocumentary noir on the larger gangster and crime genres generally but also of the strongly held left-wing political views of some of their notable, sometimes persecuted, creators, among others: Abraham Polonsky, Bob Roberts, John Garfield, John Huston, Robert Ryan, Harry Belafonte, Burt Lancaster, Sterling Hayden, and even lesser-known character actor Marc Lawrence from The Asphalt Jungle (John Huston, 1950), who tried to get out from under by telling the House Un-American Activities Committee (HUAC) that he joined the Communist Party only because I heard it was a good place to meet broads (Server 47). It is virtually impossible to look at the cast lists, directors, and writers of these downbeat and often angry films without becoming aware that several of them were blacklisted, were hauled in front of HUAC, and had serious questions about American culture of their time. It is believed that John Garfield’s untimely death at thirty-nine can in part be attributed to the emotional trauma of being investigated and consequently unable to find inspiring work as an actor. My essay will be a brief survey of some important fifties heists and will address a few others at greater length. This will be done from the point of view of their left-wing politics and social critique, but will also take note of the varying narrative positions and uses of the heist itself in a number of fifties films. I will also argue that the films depict the unreality of the American Dream and that the effects of the postwar consumer culture give many of the fifties heist films their particular power.

    The Origins and Conventions of the Fifties Heist

    Much of the history of the American crime film in this era is documented in the detailed and important work of Paul Buhle and Dave Wagner in books such as Radical Hollywood and A Very Dangerous Citizen: Abraham Lincoln Polonsky and the Hollywood Left. Jonathan Munby and Fran Mason have also authored important reassessments of the gangster film with historical, ideological, and close cultural readings of the more consequential films of various periods in the genre, including the fifties. These analyses provide breadth and detail to other recent analyses of the influence of left-wingers in Hollywood, despite the blacklist, to create a more factual, industry-driven critique of the crime genre and film noir historically, including the many politically motivated censorship battles that surround the crime film in its various forms. Because crime fiction and films are concerned with crime and justice, however defined, they have expressed controversial ideas in many time periods. The anthology Un-American Hollywood: Politics and Film in the Blacklist Era, edited by Frank Krutnik, Steve Neale, Brian Neve, and Peter Stanfield, also adds detailed analyses of the Cold War era and of the semidocumentary noir in particular, so central to heists of the fifties. Will Straw’s and Thom Andersen’s essays in that anthology are remarkably detailed analyses of the aesthetic and ideological issues surrounding the reappraisal of the politics of noir, film gris, and the semidocumentary.

    In Red Hollywood and Afterword Thom Andersen defines a small group of films as films gris. He refers to film gris as a genre but it might also be seen as a small subgenre of film noir. The essence of his definition is that film gris is a noir film that concentrates very concretely in a leftist way on important social issues. In Red Hollywood he names only thirteen films as films gris, but in Afterword he expands the list considerably and argues that we probably do not yet know all of the films that might be included in the genre. He defines them as films that have a greater psychological and social realism (Red Hollywood 257) than noir, that are related to the thirties social problem film (259), that implicate the entire system of capitalism in their criticism (259), and finally, in which the unreality of the American Dream is a constant theme (260).

    Film noir and particularly the noir-influenced gangster film are also an important and potentially radical departure from other kinds of films of their time and are a crucial part of the heist hybrid. This is a complicated inheritance, since both film noir and film gris have complex origins ranging from German expressionism to French existentialism to hard-boiled fiction and social issue films of the thirties. The semidocumentaries, in something of a turn away from noir, are often made as dark law-and-order police procedurals, such as He Walked by Night (Alfred L. Werker, 1948), a film that in large part paid tribute to modern, seemingly corruption-free, scientific policing. Gone are the hunches of the private eye film and earlier procedurals and even the genius of the Sherlock Holmes–style investigator, replaced by ballistics, fingerprints, modern surveillance technology, and computers, all signifying scientific policing, supposedly error and bias free, unlike the more corrupt cops of film noir.

    Nonetheless, film noir itself contributes to the heist generally, in that fifties heists never succeed. Painful experience from the Depression, the war, and the Holocaust (to say nothing of the blacklist) taught Americans that humans’ best laid plans can easily fall victim to cruel fate, to hatred, and to incompetence. The last great film gris heist of the fifties was Robert Wise’s Odds Against Tomorrow (1959). It is a heist that goes horrifically wrong because of the racism of the white muscle of the heist, played chillingly by Robert Ryan. Harry Belafonte, who was central to getting this film made, plays the first African American heister—a brilliant blues musician but what is known in gangster circles as a degenerate gambler who steals to support his habit but also his estranged wife and daughter. The heist fails as the Ryan character, snarling all the time about Belafonte’s false, racially attributed incompetence, refuses to allow him to carry the car keys. Unfortunately, the man who is carrying the keys is killed and this deprives the remaining two of their means of escape. The film ends, rather didactically, with Ryan and Belafonte shooting at each other in a chase through the grubby suburban streets of small-town New York State and dying in a huge gas tank explosion, an apparent reference to White Heat (Raoul Walsh, 1949) where it was a last defiant gesture by a larger than life, mad bandit gangster. Ironically and in a heavy handed manner, in the Wise film the police claim that they cannot identify the bodies because they are burned beyond recognition. Now the robbers are merely two dead men, their race indecipherable, the stupidity of racism debunked.

    Fran Mason, in American Gangster Cinema, argues that the gangster genre, having exhausted the classical form, fragmented into a number of subgenres, including the death of the big shot (51) in High Sierra (Raoul Walsh, 1941) and Dillinger (Max Nosseck, 1945), among others. Another offshoot is the bandit film that Garner Simmons refers to as the Bandit-Gangster Film (67), including the male-female bandit couple, as in Gun Crazy (Joseph H. Lewis, 1950) or They Live by Night (Nicholas Ray, 1948), that also shares a strong connection to the Western, as do some heist films. The fifties heist is filled with failure, brutality, and death. Not a single one of the approximately twenty-five films features a successful heist, in that even if the robbers get off with the money or the jewels, most of them die nasty deaths during or after the robbery, commit suicide, or end up in jail for life. In fact, a successful heist produces little other than dealings with dishonest fences, violent double crosses, and more death. Dave Purvis in Armored Car Robbery (Richard Fleischer, 1950) runs into the propeller of his escape plane, no doubt ending up in various pieces on the tarmac. The ending of The Killing (Stanley Kubrick, 1956) in an airport is particularly black and ironic, as the cash, for which many people have died, blows away in the wind as a small dog knocks the suitcase filled with money onto the runway.

    Gone in these films are the high-flying gangsters of the classical period—violent, aggressive, ambitious, and dressed like dandies. Gangsters were covetous of territory, marshaling armies of thugs to patrol their borders. The heister is a small-time guy with no territory—in fact, part of the failure of his life is his homelessness as he drifts from place to place, spending much of his time in seedy lodgings. He has no fancy wardrobes or palatial residences, and for company only a few ex-cons who perform the technical work of the job. He has little charm and less bravado than the gangster, often an evil temper, and he would not seem to be the hero that audiences pull for as he rises up in the world of crime, although the audiences may well like to see the precisely planned and executed robbery succeed, having no great love of big banks, jewelry stores, or casinos, all institutions that serve the rich. Rather than dying in a blaze of glory in the street like most gangsters of the period, he generally meets an inglorious and miserable end, like the heister in Plunder Road (Hubert Cornfield, 1957), who tries to escape by jumping off an overpass onto the top of a fast-moving transport truck. He fails. Badly. Why audiences like these films is only slightly puzzling, since they can, perhaps, identify with these struggling, working-class everymen, living in dumpy cabins or shabby motels, eating greasy take-out food, and only in the money between heists. They move from crummy place to crummy place, in rural or suburban areas, always short of cash but dreaming of the big score that will take them to glamorous places or allow them to reclaim the family farm. Perhaps they are not that different than many in the audience, dreaming of better times and the ready cash that greater consumer power could provide.

    One of the key heavily loaded phrases used in High Sierra (and elsewhere

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