Thieves Like Us Movie Review
Thieves Like Us Review
"Thieves Like Us" Overview

Rating: R
1974
Cast and Crew
Director : Robert AltmanProducer : Jerry Bick,George Litto
Screenwiter : Calder Willingham,Joan Tewkesbury,Robert Altman
Starring : Keith Carradine,Shelley Duvall,John Schuck,Bert Remsen,Tom Skerritt
Those watching Robert Altman's 1974 Depression-era robbers-on-the-run film
Thieves Like Us and looking for a Bonnie and Clyde-style antiheroic odyssey --
charismatic young lovers, blaze of glory, the whole deal -- will come away
severely disappointed. Altman, fortunately, has other things on his mind than
building up legends and stoking the coals of nostalgia. His robbers aren't
savage animals, but they're far from dashing; opportunistic, venal, and unable
to plan their lives more than five minutes into the future is a more apt
description.
A languorous single take opens the film, sweeping across verdant Mississippi
countryside being traversed by a railcar carrying a chain gang and armed
guards, before spying a couple of other prisoners rowing their way across a
pond, chatting about things inconsequential. A third accomplice shows up with a
car and some civilian clothes. The car breaks down, they take off on foot.
Eventually the trio -- a couple of hard cases, T-Dub (Bert Remsen) and
Chickamaw (John Schuck), and one fresh-faced young Ozark farmboy, Bowie (Keith
Carradine) previously serving life for a murder committed at 16 -- wind up at a
relative's place, where they hide out and plan their first robbery. Because the
three, who continually refer to themselves as "thieves," never seem to consider
even for a moment to do anything but just keeping on robbing and running. And
so they do.
Created in the full blaze of Altman's 1970s creative powers, Thieves Like Us
showcases most of the filmmaker's strengths and few of his weaknesses. Unlike
some of Altman's work, whose stories and pacing can trend to the arbitrary,
here the episodic and ambling nature feels more like a wandering journey,
employed strictly as a means of detailing character, which it does beautifully.
The script (adapted from Edward Anderson's novel by Calder Willingham, Altman,
and his Nashville writer Joan Tewkesbury) layers each of its characters
delicately, particularly Bowie. Carradine first seems to be playing a
simple-minded and callow kid, with little knowledge of what he's done or why.
But scene by scene, he grows before our eyes, morphing steadily into a career
gangster, flashy car, moll at his side and all.
The moll is a gangly girl named Keechie, who could likely only have been played
by Shelley Duvall. Seduced by this newly confident fugitive, Keechie's soon
lost so far inside her own fog of dreamy-voiced puppy love that you wonder how
she could ever find her way back out again -- Duvall rivals Sissy Spacek's turn
in Badlands for portraying this kind of graceful blankness. Given that a good
section of the film simply follows the two of them falling headlong in love
(nary a bank is robbed), if Duvall hadn't been phenomenal the result would have
been deadly.
The dialogue in Thieves Like Us, not just between Keechie and Bowie, but
everywhere, is a daffy mix of purposefully bad jokes and often aimless
ponderings. Between this and his often uneventful story, Altman could have
ended up with great stretches of film that seemed to be going nowhere. However,
he wisely stitches a great deal of the film together with a wonderful and
well-chosen sonic background of vintage radio broadcasts, mostly crime thriller
serials. Besides providing sonic distraction and fleshing out the period
detail, the broadcasts also key us in to the overheated tabloid crime
narratives that were so much a part of news and entertainment at the time.
Similarly, we tend to find out about the trio's crimes not by seeing them (with
one key exception, Altman is more likely to park his camera outside the bank
and catch up with the guys later) but by hearing about it on the radio, or
listening to them read newspaper accounts out-loud. The men are almost more
besotted with the media coverage of them as dangerous and dastardly outlaws
than anything else, complaining bitterly when the details are wrong. These are
men so limited by their ideas of themselves ("thieves like us") and obsessed
with how they are presented to the world, that they're trapped, almost more so
than the workaday, law-abiding types so interested in following their every
move.
The long-awaited DVD release contains a fresh-looking transfer of the film, and
an audio commentary by the late Altman himself.
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Review by Chris Barsanti
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