A program of more than 30 feature films explores one of cinema’s most beloved crime subgenres — the heist — at the Australian Cinémathèque, Gallery of Modern Art (GOMA) from 29 April to 26 June 2022 — a journey across diverse cinematic styles from caper, action and film noir to martial arts and comedy. With a seductive mix of gangster cool and cerebral ingenuity, ‘The Art of the Heist’ celebrates films that feature a crafty ensemble of players, a high stakes plan and the lure of the ultimate reward.

The Art of the Heist Tickets now on sale

Art heist and art forgery in films

The film program has some classic crime stories unfolding, and what better way to delve into the program with some juicy heist scandals set in art museums with How to Steal a Million 1966 and Bande à Part (Band of Outsiders) 1964 both set in Paris; and Topkapi 1964 located in Istanbul, Turkey.

DELVE DEEPER: Museums in heist films

Production still from How to Steal a Million 1966 / Director: William Wyler / Image courtesy: Park Circus

Production still from How to Steal a Million 1966 / Director: William Wyler / Image courtesy: Park Circus / View full image

‘The Mystery of the Eiffel Tower’ 1928

Le Mystère de la Tour Eiffel (The Mystery of the Eiffel Tower) 1928 is a newly digitally restored film from a sole surviving nitrate film print, the thrilling caper presented with live musical accompaniment from David Bailey on the Gallery’s 1929 Wurlitzer organ on Saturday 4 June at 10.30AM. Tickets on sale now.

DELVE DEEPER: Wurlitzer brings ‘The Mystery of the Eiffel Tower’ back to life

Production still from Le Mystère de la Tour Eiffel (The Mystery of the Eiffel Tower) 1928 / Director: Julien Duvivier / Image courtesy: Lobster Films

Production still from Le Mystère de la Tour Eiffel (The Mystery of the Eiffel Tower) 1928 / Director: Julien Duvivier / Image courtesy: Lobster Films / View full image

‘The Art of the Heist’ program’s line-up includes two genre touchstones: Jules Dassin’s twist-filled masterpiece Rififi 1955, about four criminals plotting one last job; and Stanley Kubrick’s 1956 noir classic The Killing, a suspenseful tale of a meticulously planned race-track robbery. Cinema goers will be enthralled with iconic films as The Asphalt Jungle 1950 directed by John Huston, Le Cercle Rouge (The Red Circle) 1970 by French director Jean-Pierre Melville, Quentin Tarantino’s Reservoir Dogs 1992 and Steve McQueen’s women-led caper Widows 2018.

Production still from Widows 2018 / Director: Steve McQueen / Image courtesy: The Walt Disney Company (Australia)

Production still from Widows 2018 / Director: Steve McQueen / Image courtesy: The Walt Disney Company (Australia) / View full image

Production still from To Catch a Thief 1955 / Director: Alfred Hitchcock / Image courtesy: Paramount Pictures

Production still from To Catch a Thief 1955 / Director: Alfred Hitchcock / Image courtesy: Paramount Pictures / View full image

Bande à part (1964) / Director: Jean-Luc Godard

Bande à part (1964) / Director: Jean-Luc Godard / View full image

Style played a leading role in heist films such as Alfred Hitchcock’s To Catch a Thief 1955 starring Grace Kelly and Cary Grant; William Wyler’s elegant How to Steal a Million 1966 featuring Audrey Hepburn; and French New Wave director Jean-Luc Godard’s joyously thrilling gangster film Bande à part (Band of Outsiders) 1964, set in the streets of Paris.

Production still from The Italian Job 1969 / Director: Peter Collinson / Image courtesy: Paramount Pictures

Production still from The Italian Job 1969 / Director: Peter Collinson / Image courtesy: Paramount Pictures / View full image

Watch the superbly funny British caper The Italian Job 1969 starring Michael Caine; The Thomas Crown Affair 1968, a dazzling game of cat-and-mouse intrigue with Steve McQueen and Faye Dunaway; and Joseph Shaw’s electrifying New York subway stick-up The Taking of Pelham One Two Three 1974.

Production still from Topkapi 1964 / Director: Jules Dassin / Image courtesy: Park Circus

Production still from Topkapi 1964 / Director: Jules Dassin / Image courtesy: Park Circus / View full image

Unexpected gems showcasing a unique take on a heist include Jules Dassin’s cheeky European romp Topkapi 1964 with the indomitable Melina Mercouri; an all-woman crew staging a strip club heist in Lorene Scafia’s Hustlers 2019; Taiwanese director King Hu’s complex monastery-set robbery Raining in the Mountain 1979; and the high octane, one-take German film Victoria 2015.

The program closes with the charming Australian comedy Malcolm 1986, a tale of a newly unemployed, chronically shy mechanical genius whose way of relating to the world is through a love of self-built inventions, who unexpectedly teams up to rob a bank, starring Colin Friels.

RELATED: 5 film suggestions

Production still from Malcolm 1986 / Director: Nadia Tass / Image courtesy: Roadshow Entertainment

Production still from Malcolm 1986 / Director: Nadia Tass / Image courtesy: Roadshow Entertainment / View full image

The Art of the Heist

‘The Art of the Heist’ is a ticketed film program screening from 29 April to 26 June at the Australian Cinémathèque, GOMA. Visit the website to purchase tickets.

1950s
The Asphalt Jungle 1950 / Dir: John Huston
Armoured Car Robbery 1950 / Dir: Richard Fleisher
The Lavender Hill Mob 1951 / Dir: Charles Crichton
Rififi 1955 / Dir: Jules Dassin
To Catch a Thief 1955 / Dir: Alfred Hitchcock
Bob le Flambeur 1956 / Dir: Jean-Pierre Melville
The Killing 1956 / Dir: Stanley Kubrick
1960s
Bande à part (Band of Outsiders) 1964 / Dir: Jean-Luc Godard
Topkapi 1964 / Dir: Jules Dassin
Cruel Gun Story 1964 / Dir: Takumi Furukawa
How to Steal a Million 1966 / Dir: William Wyler
The Thomas Crown Affair 1968 / Dir: Norman Jewison
The Italian Job 1969 / Dir: Peter Collinson
1970s
Le Cercle Rouge (The Red Circle) 1970 / Dir: Jean-Pierre Melville
The Sting 1973 / Dir: George Roy Hill
The Friends of Eddie Coyle 1973 / Dir: Peter Yates
The Taking of Pelham One Two Three 1974 / Dir: Joseph Sargent
Dog Day Afternoon 1975 / Dir: Sidney Lumet
Raining in the Mountain 1979 / Dir: King Hu
1980s
Thief 1981 / Dir: Michael Mann
Malcolm 1986 / Dir: Nadia Tass
1990s
Reservoir Dogs 1992 / Dir: Quentin Tarantino
Heat 1994 / Dir: Michael Mann
Mission: Impossible 1996 / Dir: Brian De Palma
Bottle Rocket 1996 / Dir: Wes Anderson
2000s
Sexy Beast 2000 / Dir: Jonathan Glazer
Oceans 11 2001 / Dir: Steven Soderbergh
The Hard Word 2002 / Dir: Scott Roberts
2010s
Fast Five 2011 / Dir: Justin Lin
Drive 2011 / Dir: Nicolas Winding Refn
Victoria 2015 / Dir: Sebastian Schipper
Logan Lucky 2017 / Dir: Steven Soderbergh
Widows 2018 / Dir: Steve McQueen
Hustlers 2019 / Dir: Lorene Scafaria
2020s
Kajillionaire 2020 / Dir: Miranda July

Dip into our Cinema blogs / View the ongoing Australian Cinémathèque program

QAGOMA acknowledges the generous assistance of the National Film and Sound Archive, Canberra; and the Taiwan Film and Audiovisual Institute, Taipei in providing materials for this program.

QAGOMA’s Australian Cinémathèque presents curated programs, genre showcases and director retrospectives covering the world of film from crowd-pleasing fan favourites and cult classics to hard-to-find international cinema, rare 35mm prints and silent films with live musical accompaniment on the Gallery’s Wurlitzer organ originally installed in Brisbane’s Regent Theatre in November 1929.

Featured image: Production still from The Thomas Crown Affair 1968 / Dir: Norman Jewison / Image courtesy: Park Circus

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    Museums in heist films

    ‘The Art of the Heist’ film program has begun, and some classic crime stories are unfolding. What better way to delve into the program with some juicy heist scandals set in art museums? RELATED: The heist: Cinema’s most beloved crime subgenre In How to Steal a Million, the interior of the fictitious Musée Kléber-Lafayette was constructed in a studio, however scenes on the street outside the museum were shot in front of the Musée Jacquemart-André, a private museum in Paris. The museum was created in the home of Édouard André and Nélie Jacquemart to display the art they collected during their lives. A key scene in Bande à Part (Band of Outsiders) is a dizzying dash to break the world record for running through the Louvre Museum, Paris. The narrator informs viewers that their time was 9 minutes and 43 seconds, which broke the record set by Jimmy Johnson of San Francisco at 9 minutes and 45 seconds. Topkapi is set on location in the grounds of Topkapı Palace, now a museum in Istanbul, Turkey, with the interior recreated in a studio. From the 15th century the palace served as the main residence and administrative headquarters of the Ottoman sultans. How to Steal a Million How to Steal a Million 1966 stars Peter O’Toole and the ever stylish and elegant Audrey Hepburn is Nicole Bonnet the daughter of famed art collector Charles Bonnet. Bonnet’s prized sculpture the Cellini Venus is about to be displayed in a prestigious art museum. The only hitch: it’s a fake. Bonnet senior has a dark secret – for all his wealth and outstanding collection of bonafide artworks – he loves to dabble in forgery himself. It would mean terrible embarrassment and jail time if the art world found out the real story and Hepburn decides the only way to protect her father is to ‘steal’ the sculpture from the high security museum. Hepburn finds herself hiding in a broom cupboard of the Parisian museum with cat burglar Peter O’Toole in a madcap plan to retrieve the illicit artwork. The film is full of charm and great fashion by Givenchy. Bande à Part (Band of Outsiders) The French New Wave master Jean Luc Godard’s 1964 film Bande à Part (Band of Outsiders) is a super stylish and free-wheeling robbery set in Paris. Anna Karina stars as Odile, a young woman who meets two restless and magnetic young men who propose a robbery in Karina’s own home. It’s just the daring she’s looking for as an antidote to her sheltered and stuffy life. A romantic, melancholic and bold re-imagining of the gangster film. Topkapi Topkapi 1964 deserves to be better known than it is. A fabulously entertaining heist, the film is directed by Jules Dassin who made another iconic heist Rififi 1955. The object of desire in this film is a bejewelled dagger. The leader of the gang of crooks is Elizabeth Lipp played by the indomitable Melina Mercouri oozing Euro-chic. Keep your eye out for the suspenseful and gravity defying scene in the museum that will be very familiar to anyone who has seen Tom Cruise suspended by a wire in Mission: Impossible 1996. Ah…they don’t make trailers like this anymore (more’s the pity). You have to take a look at this 1960s marvel. Only the divine Mercouri has the poise to so deftly pull this off. The Art of the Heist ‘The Art of the Heist’ is a ticketed film program screening from 29 April to 26 June at the Australian Cinémathèque, GOMA. Visit the website to purchase tickets. 1950s The Asphalt Jungle 1950 / Dir: John Huston Armoured Car Robbery 1950 / Dir: Richard Fleisher The Lavender Hill Mob 1951 / Dir: Charles Crichton Rififi 1955 / Dir: Jules Dassin To Catch a Thief 1955 / Dir: Alfred Hitchcock Bob le Flambeur 1956 / Dir: Jean-Pierre Melville The Killing 1956 / Dir: Stanley Kubrick 1960s Bande à part (Band of Outsiders) 1964 / Dir: Jean-Luc Godard Topkapi 1964 / Dir: Jules Dassin Cruel Gun Story 1964 / Dir: Takumi Furukawa How to Steal a Million 1966 / Dir: William Wyler The Thomas Crown Affair 1968 / Dir: Norman Jewison The Italian Job 1969 / Dir: Peter Collinson 1970s Le Cercle Rouge (The Red Circle) 1970 / Dir: Jean-Pierre Melville The Sting 1973 / Dir: George Roy Hill The Friends of Eddie Coyle 1973 / Dir: Peter Yates The Taking of Pelham One Two Three 1974 / Dir: Joseph Sargent Dog Day Afternoon 1975 / Dir: Sidney Lumet Raining in the Mountain 1979 / Dir: King Hu 1980s Thief 1981 / Dir: Michael Mann Malcolm 1986 / Dir: Nadia Tass 1990s Reservoir Dogs 1992 / Dir: Quentin Tarantino Heat 1994 / Dir: Michael Mann Mission: Impossible 1996 / Dir: Brian De Palma Bottle Rocket 1996 / Dir: Wes Anderson 2000s Sexy Beast 2000 / Dir: Jonathan Glazer Oceans 11 2001 / Dir: Steven Soderbergh The Hard Word 2002 / Dir: Scott Roberts 2010s Fast Five 2011 / Dir: Justin Lin Drive 2011 / Dir: Nicolas Winding Refn Victoria 2015 / Dir: Sebastian Schipper Logan Lucky 2017 / Dir: Steven Soderbergh Widows 2018 / Dir: Steve McQueen Hustlers 2019 / Dir: Lorene Scafaria 2020s Kajillionaire 2020 / Dir: Miranda July Rosie Hays is Associate Curator, Australian Cinémathèque. Dip into our Cinema blogs / View the ongoing Australian Cinémathèque program QAGOMA acknowledges the generous assistance of the National Film and Sound Archive, Canberra; and the Taiwan Film and Audiovisual Institute, Taipei in providing materials for this program. QAGOMA’s Australian Cinémathèque presents curated programs, genre showcases and director retrospectives covering the world of film from crowd-pleasing fan favourites and cult classics to hard-to-find international cinema, rare 35mm prints and silent films with live musical accompaniment on the Gallery’s Wurlitzer organ originally installed in Brisbane’s Regent Theatre in November 1929. Featured image: Production still from How to Steal a...
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    Film In Conversation/ Tsai Ming-liang

    As part of Asia Pacific Triennial Cinema, Taiwan-based Malaysian filmmaker Tsai Ming-liang joined us for an Australian-exclusive in-person In Conversation event. Celebrated as one of the greatest living directors and a key figure in the second wave of Taiwan New Cinema, Tsai has re-shaped understandings of the artform through his feature films (including the Golden Lion-winning 'Vive L’Amour' 1994 and the ghostly masterpiece 'Goodbye, Dragon Inn' 2003), his innovative video works and his mesmerising 'Walker' series. Tsai Ming-liang discusses his acclaimed career, his long-standing creative partnership with Lee Kang-sheng and his singular vision of cinema. Recorded at the Australian Cinémathèque, Gallery of Modern Art Sun 1 Dec 2024 Moderated by Robert Hughes, Associate Curator, Australian Cinémathèque Presenting Partner: Crumpler 11th Asia Pacific Triennial of Contemporary Art 30 Nov 2024 – 27 Apr 2025 Queensland Art Gallery & Gallery of Modern Art (QAGOMA) Thumbnail Tsai Ming-liang Photograph by Chang Jhong-Yuan Courtesy: Homegreen Films Production still from 'Goodbye, Dragon Inn' 2003 Director: Tsai Ming-liang Courtesy: Homegreen Films © Tsai Ming-liang Cinema that takes you places Australian Cinémathèque Queensland Art Gallery | Gallery of Modern Art, Brisbane, Australia © Queensland Art Gallery Board of Trustees, 2024 https://www.qagoma.qld.gov.au #qagoma
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