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To Catch
A Thief (1955)
In Alfred Hitchcock's lightweight, suspenseful and
polished romantic comedy/thriller and mystery-heist film (with a
European flair and racy dialogue) - the leisurely-paced film was
set on the colorful French Riviera, where a nighttime jewel-thief
(a "Cat" burglar) was creating panic amongst the visitors
and residents. The relaxed plot lacked some of the profound psychological
depth and complexity of the director's other works, although its
main theme was to observe the morality of the act of "theft" from
many different points of view.
The stylish film's screenplay, by John Michael Hayes
(in his second project with Hitchcock), was based on the novel of
the same name by David Dodge. Hitchcock's film was nominated for
three Academy Awards: Best Color Art Direction-Set Decoration, Best
Color Costume Design (Edith Head), and its sole winning category
- Best Color Cinematography (Robert Burks).
The
sexy caper was filmed in VistaVision and Technicolor, and partially
on-location. There were exotic settings (i.e., The
Hotel Carlton on the Riviera) and fashions, snatches of French, witty
(but risque and naughty) double-entendres-laden dialogue, and an
elegantly-orchestrated romance. The film's title, To Catch a Thief,
was based upon the ancient proverb: "Set a thief to catch a
thief," with double meanings regarding a double-chase. The
romantic-thriller was much imitated at the time, e.g., Charade
(1963) and Arabesque (1966).
Cary Grant's portrayal of the lead character - an American
expatriate hero (a falsely-accused former cat burglar) had to catch
the real cat burglar (a 'she-cat') during a rash of robberies before
he was caught himself, while the heroine Grace Kelly was on a quest
to 'catch' him - first as the burglar, and then as a husband. The
infamous MacGuffin in this Hitchcock film was the identity of the
real thief. It was Cary Grant's third (of four) film for Hitchcock
(after Suspicion (1941) and Notorious (1946)),
and Kelly's third and final film for the famous director (after Dial
M For Murder (1954) and Rear Window
(1954)), soon before she left her film career forever and
married Prince Rainier of Monaco.
- the opening view was a close-up of a poster in a
travel service window that advertised: "If you love life,
you'll love France" - it was immediately followed by another
close-up view of a distressed female (with her face
smeared with cold-cream) on vacation in Nice, France; she was screaming "My
jewels! I've been robbed. Someone stole my jewels. Help, police!" after
she noticed her empty jewelry case in her French Riviera hotel
room; she finished her outrage from her balcony overlooking a
beautiful of an idyllic vacation spot
- the film emphasized the motif of a stealthy, prowling jewel thief
(cat burglar) that had committed the crime; a montage presented
a view of an actual black cat crossing a slatted, tiled rooftop at
night, and entering another room to remove a pile of valuable
jewels with a black-gloved hand, before exiting the same roof;
there was a rash of similar crimes being committed on wealthy
victims in Cannes
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John Robie (Cary Grant) - "The Cat" - A Reformed
and Retired Ex-Burglar
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- in a cliffside Cote d'Azur villa near Cannes, a
black cat lounged on a sofa next to an excerpt from a Herald
Tribune newspaper article titled EUROPE'S LIGHTER SIDE by Art Buchwald, "The Cat
Prowls Again?"; it speculated that a possible suspect for the authorities was a reformed and
retired ex-burglar (for 15 years) and "hero of the French Resistance
Army" - American-born bachelor John Robie (Cary Grant), known
as "The Cat"; the thief was either Robie
or someone who was imitating his modus operandi; out tending his
outdoor garden, Robie (wearing a dark blue and white horizontally-striped
shirt and a red kerchief (resembling a cat collar) watched as a black
car sped up to his residence and parked in his driveway; head detective
and Police Commissioner Lepic (Rene Blancard) and other officers emerged
from the car to question Robie
- after speaking to the officials for a few moments,
Robie returned to his upstairs bedroom to change his clothes and
a shotgun blast rang out; he fled to the rooftop where he watched
as the police chased after a car as it sped off from the villa;
the pursuit was photographed from the air and ultimately was revealed to be a diversion - his maid
Germaine (Georgette Anys) was eventually apprehended in the getaway car
- to successfully escape, Robie boarded a bus to Monte
Carlo in Monaco, and sat in the rear seat, while he watched through
the back window as detectives returned to his villa; he was squeezed
on the bench seat between a cage containing two fluttering birds
(enticing to a cat) and a portly passenger (director Hitchcock's
cameo)
- once Robie reached Monte Carlo on the French Riviera,
and before the police trailed and arrested him; he met with his
old ex-con colleagues in a coastal restaurant -
including restauranteur owner and head waiter Bertani (Charles
Vanel), wine steward Foussard (Jean Martinelli) and numerous kitchen
employees; they had all been imprisoned together during WWII, but
escaped and then served in the underground Resistance movement
against the Germans; after the war, Robie was paroled and rehabilitated,
but had for a time gained notoriety as a jewel thief, although
he now claimed he hadn't "stolen a piece of jewelry in 15 years";
however, they all feared that Robie's reputation would be discrediting
to them
Wine Steward Foussard (Jean Martinelli)
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Restauranteur Owner and Head Waiter Bertani (Charles Vanel)
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Danielle Foussard (Brigitte Auber)
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- Robie's goal was to clear his name by investigating the crime wave on his
own, and find the real thief who was copy-catting and imitating his
crime methods; he would use his burglary experience to ultimately
unmask the real culprit; he asked himself: "What
I can't understand is how this thief can imitate me so perfectly";
Robie was alerted that the police had trailed him to the restaurant
- he was helped to escape via a speedy motor-boat by wine steward Foussard's
smitten young, blonde daughter Danielle Foussard (Brigitte Auber);
he had known her since her childhood when he taught her English;
during their boatride, even though she suspected he was the recent
cat-burglar, she playfully propositioned him to marry her and go
to South America to escape the police [Note: Spoiler Clue: she
was wearing a similar, look-alike shirt - with red and white horizontal
stripes]; as a police flew overhead, he was taken by a speedboat
("Maquis Mouse") to a nearby, luxury beach club at a Cannes hotel where he
was to await Bertani's phone call
- Robie had changed into red-plaid
swim trunks on the boat, and while lounging on the hotel's
beach, Robie (and the audience) had their first view of beautiful,
lanky and cool blonde Frances Stevens (Grace Kelly) in a yellow
turban and sunglasses who was applying sun-tan lotion
- after being contacted by Bertani, Robie pursued
his own investigation of the recent string of 'cat' burglaries
by meeting at a flower market in Nice with H. H. Hughson (John
Williams) - an insurance adjuster of Lloyds of London (with a subsidiary
company known as Bellason & Co.) that was losing money after the
rash of thefts; although it was a risky request, Robie asked for
a detailed list of names of those on the Riviera who were heavily-insured
clients with expensive jewels (supposedly, they would be the Cat's
next victims); before receiving the list, Robie was detained by the
police and then returned to his home on parole
for 10 days, where he sat on his villa's veranda with Hughson; as
Robie cheerfully acknowledged his past crimes, he was able to successfully
bargain with the reluctant Hughson to assent to giving him a list
of rich clients so that he could investigate, catch the real burglar,
and prove his innocence (in other words, employ a thief to catch
a thief); the police had been informed about their plan
- one of the names on the insured list
was affluent, nouveau riche American widow - an oil millionairess named Mrs. Jessie
Stevens (Jessie Royce Landis), who was traveling with her daughter
Frances and staying at the Carlton Hotel; the Stevens' had principal
pieces of jewelry insured for and valued at $280,000.00; after playing
at the roulette wheel table, Robie was able to maneuver drinks with Mrs. Stevens and her spoiled yet
refined and quiet daughter (who had attended "finishing school"),
by posing as a wealthy Oregon lumber magnate named Conrad Burns;
while half-drunk, Mrs. Stevens spoke about how the unexpected death
of her "swindler" husband and the discovery of oil on his property
made her a millionaire overnight; she was husband-hunting for her
pretty, virginal socialite daughter Frances and was pushing for Burns as a prospective suitor
- afterwards, Robie escorted both women to their separate hotel suites; as he guided Frances
to her room, to his complete surprise, the seemingly-modest Frances
unlocked her hotel room door, turned - and then after a warm glance
into his eyes, she seductively placed her arm around his shoulder
and passionately kissed him (the kiss was initiated by her); without
a word, she then backed away, and shut her door; he slowly turned
toward the camera with a satisfied smile on his lip-stick stained
lips
At Her Hotel Door, An Unexpected Goodnight Kiss
from Frances for Robie
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- the next morning, it was learned that the cat burglar
had again struck and stolen more gems worth $35,000 from another
client, Mme. LaRue; during the breakfast scene, in one of the most
memorable and vulgar images on screen, an exasperated Mrs. Stevens
extinguished or stubbed out her lighted cigarette (a phallic symbol)
in the yolk of a fried egg, while being warned about keeping her
jewelry in her safe by Hughson
Mrs. Stevens Extinguishing Her Cigarette in An Egg Yolk
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Frances in the Carlton Hotel Foyer with Robie
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Warning Note to Robie
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Danielle and Frances "Cat-Fighting" For Robie's Attention at the Carlton Hotel
Floating Raft
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- Frances attracted attention in the hotel's foyer with
Robie as she joined him for a swim - she was fashionably decked
out in a high-necked, black bathing suit, oversized white sunhat,
and white coverup; at the concierge's desk, Robie was passed a hand-written
note: "Robie - You've already used up 8 of your 9 lives. Don't gamble
your last one"
- while Robie was reclining on a beach chair with
Frances, cute teenaged brunette Danielle caught Robie's attention in
her bathing suit as she swam out to the hotel's floating raft and
reclined suggestively; Robie followed Danielle, who suspected
that he was probably setting up another jewelry victim ("an
American beauty" with money), after the previous night's robbery; she also informed
him that the recent theft by his ex-convict Resistance friends at the
restaurant and in the kitchen led them to hate him and threaten to
kill him (they were worried about suspicions being cast onto them)
- Frances swam out and joined them at the hotel's floating
raft, where the two bitchy and competitive females engaged in a verbal
'cat'-fight over the bemused Robie as they tread water
on either side and flirtatiously quarreled over him; after the threesome's
discussion, Robie went to his dressing room where he found that Hughson's
list of clients was marked with a wet thumbprint; when Robie returned
to the hotel from the beach, Frances confronted him at the
hotel's front entrance; rather than join him
for cocktails at six that evening, she wished for Robie to immediately
join her for a picnic basket lunch; she offered to chauffeur
him (with no tipping at a "wholesale rate") in her open convertible
sports car to visit prospective villas for rent: ("I
have my car and a basket lunch with chicken and beer"); he agreed:
"I must say your terms are generous, too generous to refuse"; as
they drove off from the front of the hotel, they were pursued by a
car with two detectives
- at first, she briefly explained
her abrupt good-night kiss the night before: "Well, I'm a great believer
of getting down to essentials"; their first stop was at the Sanford
villa, where they walked in the outdoor gardens as he surveyed the
roof and gutter pipes for access; Frances revealed that she was
slightly jealous of Danielle - the teenaged French girl; Robie called
Frances out for being a rich, insecure pampered young woman who was
husband-hunting (but unsure whether men wanted her money
or her appeal)
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A Tense and Swervy Car Ride
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- their drive continued, and evolved into a tense
and swervy car ride to evade the pursuit car of detectives, as she
calmly gripped the wheel with dainty white gloves; after the chase
car crashed into a stone wall, the pursuit ended; she
excitedly revealed that she knew he wasn't Mr. Burns, and suspected
that he was the jewel thief John Robie (she was thrilled by his masquerade
that made him more attractive to her)
- Frances parked at a "lonely and secluded"
picnic spot that she had picked out, overlooking a seaside town on
the Cote d'Azur, and thought out-loud: "And all those roofs
you could climb over"; they shared the contents of her picnic
basket placed on the front seat (he sat on the floorboard with
his legs out the open passenger door); their conversation turned
particularly saucy and was filled with witty double entendres and
sexy innuendo; when she passed him a beer, he asked: "You
got an opener?";
in a famous provocatively-teasing line, Francie made an offer to
Robie, referring to the fried chicken (and more) that she had brought
on the picnic, causing him to do a double-take: Frances: "Do
you want a leg or a breast?" Robie: "You make the choice"
- Frances made some seductive suggestions to Robie,
including joining him for his next heist ("job") of either
her mother or wealthy Lady Kenton - and provocatively asked: "The
cat has a new kitten. When do we start?"; he tightly gripped
her arm and pulled her down on top of the picnic basket to 'steal'
a kiss from her and make her part of the lunch feast; she pressured
him to join her for cocktails at 8 and dinner at 8:30 "all
in my suite" - so they could watch the casino's fireworks show together
- later that evening in Frances' hotel suite,
'sexual' fireworks burst within the room between them - she had invitingly
turned out the lights: "If you really want to see the fireworks,
it's better with the lights out. I have a feeling that tonight, you're
going to see one of the Riviera's most fascinating sights. I was
talking about the fireworks....The way you looked at my necklace,
I didn't know"; real fireworks exploded
through the open doors in the background (over the water in the night
sky); she stood in the dark shadows as she described a thwarted theft
attempt - and then tempted him with the offer of herself and her valuable
necklace: "The thrill is right there in front of you, but you can't quite
get it - and the gems glistening on the other side of the window, and
someone asleep, breathing heavily"; she fondled and stroked her own
necklace and tantalizingly discussed the diamonds she was wearing: ("Blue-white with
just hairlike touches of platinum")
- then, she begged Robie to make
her his accomplice at the next weekend's annual gala - a costume ball
held at the Sanford's villa that he had cased that afternoon: ("There
will be thousands upon thousands of dollars' worth of the world's
most elegant jewelry...We'll get all the information, and we'll do
it together. What do you say?"; acting
as an exploitative predator, she enticed him by sitting on the couch
and displaying her white strapless gown and his main weakness - her
sparkling, glistening diamond necklace as the ultimate prize (the
word 'diamonds' referred to her necklace and her bare decolletage
and breasts); she encouraged him to look and see their beauty: "Give
up, John. Admit who you are. Even in this light, I can tell where
your eyes are looking. (He sat down) Look, John. Hold them. Diamonds.
The only thing in the world you can't resist. Then tell me
you don't know what I'm talking about. (She kissed his fingers, one
by one, and then put her necklace in the palm of his hand.) Ever
had a better offer in your whole life? One with everything?"; he
responded: "I've never had a crazier one." She
purred: "Just as long as you're satisfied." He remarked
about her fake diamond necklace: "You know as well as I do.
This necklace is imitation," to which she replied:
"Well, I'm not." (They kissed)
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the scene climaxed with the white-hot, orgasmic peak
of the colorful fireworks exhibition bursting in a vibrant closeup
in the night sky, illuminating the intensity of their kiss in the
dark - and the imminent loss of her virginity - before a fade to
black; the scene was one of filmdom's most blatantly-sexual images
- later that evening, Frances
abruptly opened Robie's lower floor hotel room door, and was shown
in a dark silhouette while casting light onto him, she accused him
of being responsible for the loss (theft) of her mother's jewels
(and her own sexual loss of virginity) by distracting her earlier
that evening: "Give them back to me...Mother's jewels!"; she searched
in his room while he went to search in her mother's room; there, when
Mrs. Stevens wondered why Frances had suspected him, he
confessed to her that he was "The Cat": ("My real name is John Robie.
I used to be a jewel thief several years ago") - she was both
stunned and thrilled; he then denied stealing her jewels that evening,
although Frances arrived and accused him of committing the theft and
told them that she had already summoned the police; by the time the
police arrived, Robie had slipped out unseen to the roof and escaped;
the next morning, Mrs. Stevens pointedly and cryptically asked why
Frances was so upset about the theft or her mother's jewels (she also
sensed that her daughter had just lost her virginity):
"Just what did he steal from you?"
- shortly later in the film, Robie proposed that Hughson
set a trap for the real cat-burglar by staking
out the villa of the Silvas - a South American couple who were insured
and on Hughson's list; Robie would also be there, knowing that others
in the group (including Foussard and Bertani and the police) were lying
in wait to seize him; the trap backfired - Robie was jumped
from behind in the dark on a high wall by an unknown assailant and
a wrench was raised high in the air; one man fell to his death from
the top of a wall into the rocky beach water, and Robie escaped
- the next day, Nice newspapers reported:
"Le Chat Est Mort" - the victim was identified as Danielle's
father Foussard (the restaurant's
wine-steward); police mistakenly thought he was The Cat, and everyone
was relieved, until Robie informed the Police Commissioner and Hughson
that it was impossible for peg-legged Foussard (with a prosthetic leg)
to climb rooftops during robberies; however, the public still believed
that Foussard was the 'Cat Burglar'
- during Foussard's funeral, Danielle
angrily yelled French epithets at Robie and publically accused him
of murdering her father; indignant, he slapped her across the face
and then pushed his way through the crowd to leave [Note:
Similarly, the police suspected that the Cat burglar - or Robie - was
Foussard's murderer. It was later revealed, however, that the murderer
was Bertani.]
- outside the cemetery, Frances apologized
for accusing Robie of being the thief - she also confessed that she
loved him: ("I'm in love with you") and would help him to
find the real cat burglar; he asked for her to obtain an invitation
to the weekend's major costume gala at the Sanford's Cote d'Azur villa;
he would accompany Francie and her mother to the estate's fancy event,
wearing Louis XV outfits; Robie promised that she would "see
a real live burglary in action"
During Foussard's Funeral Ceremony, Frances Apologized and Confessed to Robie: "I'm
in love with you"
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Danielle (as French Maid) Catering Costume Ball Event with Bertani
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The Costume Ball Parade - Frances (in a Gold Gown) and Robie (as a Masked Nubian Slave)
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- they both attended the estate's fancy event (filmed
with many closeups of the sparkling bejeweled necklaces worn by the
ladies during a costume parade), being catered by Bertani and his
restaurant staff, with Danielle (in a black and white French maid's
outfit) assisting; Frances wore a glittering Louis XV-era gold-gown,
while Robie wore a black Moorish nubian slave outfit with a mask
- he was clearly identified to the police that he was behind the
disguise; during the costume ball, however, Robie
had arranged to switch places with Hughson, allowing him to freely
conduct surveillance on the estate's green-tiled rooftop and track
the real Cat during the entire costume ball; once the event ended,
exhausted guests returned to their rooms to retire for the night
- removing their expensive jewelry and depositing it on nightstands and dressers
- in the film's conclusion,
a close-up in one of the guest rooms revealed black-gloved hands
scooping up jewelry into a black bag; in hiding, Robie noticed
a black-clad figure exiting a window (after major jewel thefts) and traversing the
rooftop - he froze, spied the figure, and then chased after it;
Robie caught up to the masked thief - grabbed the individual - and unmasked DANIELLE
Robie on the Rooftop All Night to Capture the
Real Cat Burglar - Danielle
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- a light was directed
toward the rooftop and caught Robie in the spotlight, and shots were
fired at him, but he proved his innocence and was able to reveal
the real masked copycat thief - young blonde Danielle Foussard;
as she tried to escape and jump to a nearby tree, she tripped and
slid down to the roof's gutter; she was hanging there precariously
by one hand; to be saved, as Robie held onto her wrist and dangled
her in mid-air, she dropped a bag full of jewels to the ground far
below, and then was forced to loudly confess that her father Foussard
and restauranteur Bertani had planned all of the robberies: ("I
was working for my father...Bertani was behind it")
- in the final short scene set at Robie's Cote d'Azur
villa, Frances (still wearing her gold gown from the costume ball)
had pursued him there in a police car and approached him on his
veranda; she urged and pressured Robie into admitting that he was
in love with her; he obliged her by repeating what she had dictated
to him: "Without you, I couldn't have done it. I needed the help of a woman. I guess
I'm not the lone wolf I thought I was, Francie"
- as they were about to say goodbye with a handshake,
he pulled her arm toward him for an embrace and kiss; Frances had
finally nabbed the slightly-dismayed Robie - as she triumphantly
noted in the last line that she was domesticating him: "So this
is where you live. Oh, Mother will love it up here!"
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French Riviera Hotel Room Visitor's Scream: "My
jewels! I've been robbed"
The View of an Actual Black Cat on a Rooftop - a Symbol
of a 'Cat Burglar'
A Diversionary Car Pursuit From Robie's Cote d'Azur
Villa - An Aerial View
Robie Seated In the Rear of a Bus to Monte Carlo (Next to
Director Hitchcock)
Robie with Flirtatious Teenaged Blonde Danielle Foussard (Brigitte
Auber) on a Motorboat Escaping to Cannes
The Cannes' Carlton Hotel and Its Beach
On the Beach, the First View of Frances
Stevens (Grace Kelly)
Robie at the Nice Flower Market and at His Villa With H.H. Hughson
(John Williams) of Lloyds of London
At the Carlton Hotel, Hughson Having Dinner With the Stevens
Later, Robie Having Drinks at the Carlton Hotel with Frances and Her
Mother Mrs. Stevens
An Invitation for a Convertible Sports Car Drive and
a Picnic Lunch, to Visit Villas for Rent
Frances Explaining Her Previous Night's Abrupt Kiss
Walking in the Sanford Villa's Gardens
Parked and Overlooking Code d'Azur Coastal Rooftops
Frances to Robie: "Do
you want a leg or a breast?"
Robie Kissing Frances as Part of Their Enticing Lunch
Feast
Frances: "You're
going to see one of the Riviera's most fascinating sights"
Frances Describing a Thwarted Robbery-Crime Scene
Frances Fondling Her Own Necklace
Frances: "Give up John, admit who you are. Even in this light, I
can tell where your eyes are looking"
Robie Admiring and Holding Frances' Jewels
The Explosive Kissing-Fireworks Sequence
Later, Frances to Robie: "Give them back to me...Mother's jewels!"
The Death of Danielle's Father Foussard During A Trap Set For Robie at
the Silva's Villa
Closing Scene: Robie and Frances Kissing on the Veranda of His Cote
d'Azur Villa: ("Mother will love it up here")
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