Once Again-Go Where The
Money Is-Robert Redford’s “The Old Man And The Gun” (2018)- Film Review
By Lance Lawrence
The Old Man and the Gun,
Robert Redford, Sissy Spacek, Danny Glover, Tom Waits, 2018
Around our neighborhood,
our growing up neighborhood in Riverdale west of Boston, in the late 1950s we
had our fair share of heroes. Mostly guys who had made the coppers cry for one
reason or another or who had pulled some fast one on some high roller. Best of
all were the guys who pulled armed robberies, stick-ups. Part of that lure was
that the infamous Trigger Burke had set the tone having taken part in the
famous Brink’s armored truck robbery of the early 1950s. Part of it was from my
our household, and that of a few others when my late oldest brother, Prescott,
started his long criminal career robbing the local Esso gas station at gunpoint
at the age of seventeen (he got about thirty dollars, got caught and was given
“the choice” by the judge-go in the military or go to jail for a long while-he
took the military but I remember him saying after the service, he got a bad
conduct discharge for some reason I can’t remember, but you can figure it out
that he had made the wrong decision.) Something like he could have learned more
important career skills in the slammer.
All of this to lead up
to two things. First one of the key anthems of the neighborhood toughs when
figuring out how to get money was to think about what the famous bank robber
Willie Sutton said when, presumably captured after a heist, why he did it. And
came back with the classic (and by his lights rational reason)- “that’s where
the money is.” Fair enough. But as a recently watched film produced and starring
ancient Robert Redford The Old Man and
The Gun suggests that is only part of the motivation for a guy like the
famous “gentleman” bank robber Forrest Tucker when he held sway back in the
days. Maybe it was the excitement, the planning, the cunning or just liking the
“life” but the actual money was just something shiny to pursue. All of these ideas
got connected through my brother Prescott who actually did time with Forrest
back in the early 1960s and so rather than the abstract Sutton that we were not
that familiar with the big-time bank robber we knew about was Tucker. Probably
if the film had not been made I would have thought nothing about it but since
it was made the plot brought back memories of Prescott and his always having
what we called his “wanting habits,” his almost constant scheming up some job, some
robbery, or some con usually of women to get front money for a job. (Prescott
was particularly attractive to women, and not just whores and bar girls there
were always college girls around him, even one lawyer, looking for kicks before
going off to the suburbs and that kind of good life not on the wild side.)
The way the story line
played out Redford was trying to pitch to the idea that to some guys the “life”
is in their DNA, to live to figure out the next scheme. Maybe if Bertolt Brecht
was right in his play The Three Penny
Opera the line as to personality types between criminal and businessman is
not so far apart. The telling detail of this thought came graphically through
at the end of the film when after a big bank robbery spree (which you probably
can’t do anymore with the way banks are set up now and where, probably easier
to rob ATMs I don’t know) he is finally caught, again, does some time and then
is released to his lady friend, played by previously clueless Sissy Spacek who
wants him to stay put-with her on her ranch. But it does not take much
intuition to know that every look, every move Tucker makes is calling him back
to the “life” as old and he was. Just one more spree. And that would be the
last spree since he died in prison.
Let’s give few
highlights of the film, points about his professional skills (including many escapes
from prison and many dodging the coppers) though because Forrest was very
clever and smart about the way he worked his grift. As mentioned above his act involved
his acting the “gentleman” robber, sometimes on his own and others with a couple
of ex-cons dubbed by the media the Over the Hill Gang played by Danny Glover
and Tom Waits). Here’s the beauty of his scheme-mild-mannered old guy, an
average harmless depositor Forrest walks up to a teller or a manager and indicated
he had a gun aimed right at them. That will usually loosen up those parties to
give him what he wants-the dough and then he just as casually walks out the
door and all hell breaks loose once the coppers are notified. But see he has a police
scanner, extra well-placed automobiles and a route away from danger-usually. Of
course the many escapes from prison us that he wasn’t always successful and so perhaps
one had better think about a more rational occupation for his energies. Still although
it was a close thing, very close in my case as a kid it seemed pretty exciting
to live on the edge like that.
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