Blueprint for Robbery (1961) Poster

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7/10
Not at all bad, but could have been "sharper"
Marlburian18 October 2020
I nearly turned off after the first few minutes because the characters in the opening scenes seemed so bland. But I'm glad that I stuck with it because it turned out reasonably well, though as has been mentioned in other reviews the direction could have been sharper. And some of the acting wasn't great.

The only name that I recognised on the cast list was Robert J Wilke in a small role as a police captain; it's the only time I've seen him on the side of the law - usually he's a bad guy.

I laughed when it proved so easy to gain access to the building through an outside door, especially when there were so many security devices inside. And the hoodlums didn't hesitate before entrusting their loot to just one man for more than two years. "That's going to add very badly," I thought.
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6/10
The 31 Year Old Marion Ross
richardchatten10 October 2020
A quickie heist movie set in Boston following in the footsteps of 'Rififi' and 'The Killing' (with a bit of machinegunning thrown in as a nod to 'The Untouchables') directed by and populated largely by TV professionals.

As usual women barely feature in this world, but it does boast a quirky cameo as a prison visitor with a guilty conscience by Marion Ross, still nearly fifteen years away from the role that made her name as Marion Cunningham in 'Happy Days'; who never had anything to hide.
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5/10
Some tension, but the dialogue lacks spark
Leofwine_draca14 October 2020
Warning: Spoilers
A low budget heist flick that just about works by focusing on the tension throughout, although the character work is less impressive and the cast is undistinguished. This one follows in previous footsteps by paying homage to the likes of RIFIFI and THE KILLING alongside the likes of TV's DRAGNET, with hard-boiled cops and determined criminals. The set-pieces are entertaining enough although the dialogue lacks spark.
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A very good caper movie
searchanddestroy-121 March 2008
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.
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6/10
The Brink's Job
bkoganbing4 March 2021
One of my favorite films of the 70s is William Friedkin's The Brink's Job. It is a great comedy loaded with a lot of familiar character players and it's jus great fun. This fil Blueprint For Robbery takes the same story with a far different and more serious treatment.

If you've seen The Brink's Job you'll recognize quite a bit from the plot and some of the characters. The cast here isn't as well known as the other, but Bill Friedkin had quite a bit more budget to work with.

As in the other a gang is assembled all with a different skill set. The details of the caper itself follow closely with the Friedkin film. And two of the gang is looking to double cross the others.

J. Pat O'Malley who played a lot of winsome Irish character plays an old time safecracker. Robert Wilkie who played mostly villains in his career is the detective who solves the crime. A young Marion Ross has a marvelous bit as a woman seeking advice from Jay Barney who is one of the gang disguised as a priest visiting O'Malley in prison.

Blueprint For Robbery is a B picture from Paramount playing the bottom half of double bills in1961. If yo saw this with whatever feature Paramount was showing you got your money's worth.
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8/10
Great story, good acting, holds up well
yonhope24 October 2011
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.
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4/10
Robert Gist shines, but the film disappoints
JohnHowardReid25 October 2013
Warning: Spoilers
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!
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9/10
Unheralded, mostly unknown but excellent value
barkiswilling29 August 2021
This surprisingly good and taut thriller took me completely by surprise; I had no prior knowledge of either the film itself or most of the actors involved. It moves along at pace with a crisp dialogue and characters we can warm to and empathise with; I had not even heard of Jay Barney before but he is a.real presence here - tough, charismatic and at the same time loyal and principled. His close son/father relationship with "Pop" underpins the whole movie and the ultimate dilemma faced in the final act is touching.

A shame that the producers at the time didn't allow a little more budget to flesh out some plot developments and narrative as it leaps forward but overall a most satisfying example of that much-loved genre, the "Caper movie "
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9/10
The cars and O'Malley Rocks!
PlasticActor17 October 2021
... a hard working actor and no Father Murphy in the whole of Boston, (lol)... they all fork out extra here with a high standard. Directing, camera angles and great suspense for the heist. Production is good FOR the limited budget. I don't know Boston but I suspected it was L. A.

Glad somebody mentioned the cars... love 60s cars!
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