The Looters (1967) Poster

(1967)

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6/10
Very average Euro spy B-movie: Could be worse, could be better
VanheesBenoit29 July 2007
Frederick Stafford plays the role of a notorious safe cracker. He has been involved in the biggest bank robberies across the world. Since he never got caught, he's not slowly but surely rotting away in La Santé or Wandsworth, but enjoying his 'retirement' in the Caribbean. But well, with such a reputation as his, it's difficult to remain incognito. So, one day he gets involuntarily dragged into a plot by a local rebel group, to overthrow a ruthless dictator.

The plan is simple: steal all the gold contained in the treasury department of the fictitious island. The execution is a little bit more complex: the rebels will have to neutralize the praetorian guard of the little Hitler, but they also need Stafford to crack the state of the art safe. Flatly refusing doesn't seem to be an option, so he very reluctantly agrees to help them. However, after having met the daughter of one of the rebel leaders (Jean Seberg), he's getting a little bit more enthusiastic.

The principal actors are quite good. The presence of French singer/composer Serge Gainsbourg in this movie though is absolutely NOT a nice bonus: he's playing a very irritating, chimp-like character. The 'Caribbean' locations are of course very nice, but the plot is relatively bleak, uninteresting, and at no time nail-biting. The weakest part are the dialogs, which are poor, wooden, humorless... So this movie really is miles away from Bond, and light years away from 'The spy who came in from the cold' !
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4/10
Dated sixties caper movie
Leofwine_draca23 July 2016
Warning: Spoilers
This tired B-movie is a French attempt to make an exciting caper flick, something along the lines of a Bond movie, but it fails from the outset with terrible production values and a stilted script that never works. The twist here is that every character is a villain, more or less. The rugged, Roger Moore-type hero is a safe cracker, the love interest is a gangster's daughter, there are guerrillas lurking in the woods and the rest of the characters are either criminals or corrupt governmental officials. It makes it hard to find somebody to root for, and as the hero, wooden Stafford just doesn't cut the mustard. Really, there isn't anybody interesting in this film, unless you include singer Serge Gainsbourg in a small role, and he's only fun because he's so embarrassed to be here.

The plot is the usual nonsense about a daring robbery, although it's so long-winded and slow-moving that you'll have lost interest long before it finally happens in the last twenty minutes. Until then, we get endless scenes of small-talk, some silly romance, some nice cars and one decent fist fight in the streets of an unknown city. The film is devoid of imagination, and indeed talent. The "big" action scenes at the film's climax are poorly-handled with some of the worst choreography I've seen, with soldiers supposedly being machine-gunned and just dropping down when the gun isn't even pointed near them.

Elsewhere, there are silly factual errors – people throwing gold bars to each other, lifting them on ropes, and finally using a pulley system to transport a massive tray of them onto a boat – I think the mast would have snapped with the weight, somehow – and a new type of explosive that reminded me of the one in DIE HARD WITH A VENGEANCE. In all it's totally listless and without merit, real bottom of the barrel stuff, and I only awarded it an extra star for the cheesy jazz lounge music that definitely dates it as a sixties flick.
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A lovely reminder of the sixties.
Cranstonman9 June 2002
A fun filled caper movie where the bad guys are the good guys. Its pure sixties hokum, and it is truly fine. Frederick Stafford with his classic James Bond type good looks is the main man, assisted by Jean Seberg and a quite bemused Serge Gainsbourg. This is a film that is a total joy from start to finish, and afterwards you will be baying for more of the same. I love it, take me back to the sixties now.
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