There's a large cast, made easy to follow because of typecasting and the familiar faces of many supporting players. In the few days before the heist, Johnny makes the rounds of his team members. The plot jumps around like a chess player's mind: "If he does this, and I do that, and then he." The rest of his narration serves only to confirm what we can see for ourselves, that the events on screen are not happening in chronological order. m., the starting time of a $100,000 high stakes horse race. He places great emphasis on precise dates and times of day, although really only one day and time are crucial-4 p. The movie is narrated in an exact, passionless voice by the uncredited Art Gilmore, a veteran radio announcer. If a piece shifts, everything changes, a possibility Johnny should have given more thought to. Johnny Clay has devised a strategy seemingly as flawless as Bobby Fischer's "Perfect Games," but it depends on all the players making the required moves on schedule. The shifting of one piece can result in a radically different game. The game of chess involves holding in your mind several alternate possibilities. He just knows his role and his payoff, and knows Johnny enough to trust him. Like all the members of Johnny's team, he has no idea of the overall plot. Maurice is big and strong and is needed to start a fight at the race track bar to divert attention during the heist. His gang leader Johnny Clay ( Sterling Hayden) goes there to meet a professional wrestler named Maurice, played by a professional wrestler named Kola Kwariani. Perhaps a motif can be found in the movie's storefront chess club which, I learn, Kubrick frequented as a kid. His narrative approach seems blunt, but the narrative itself is so labyrinthine we abandon any hope of trying to piece it together and just abandon ourselves to letting it happen. Kubrick's plan here for a race track robbery involves two of those plot aspects not so much the acrobatics. In " Rififi," a theft involves a plan of almost unnecessary acrobatic ingenuity. In David Mamet's " Heist," the characters are involved in interlocking levels of cons being pulled on each other. In " Bonnie and Clyde," the gang parks in front of a bank, walks in with guns, and walks out (in theory) with the loot. The durable form inspires directors to create plots that are baffling in their complexity or bold in their simplicity. Like horror films, heists are a genre that make stars not so necessary.
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