The Thomas Crown Affair (1968) - Turner Classic Movies

The Thomas Crown Affair


1h 42m 1968
The Thomas Crown Affair

Brief Synopsis

A bored tycoon turns to bank robbery and courts the insurance investigator assigned to bring him in.

Film Details

Also Known As
The Crown Caper, Thomas Crown and Company, Thomas Crown, Esquire
MPAA Rating
Genre
Romance
Crime
Drama
Release Date
Aug 1968
Premiere Information
World premiere in Boston: 19 Jun 1968; Los Angeles and New York openings: 26 Jun 1968
Production Company
Simkoe; Solar Productions, Inc.; The Mirisch Corporation
Distribution Company
United Artists Corp.
Country
United States
Location
Boston, Massachusetts, USA; Boston, Massachusetts, United States; Cape Cod--Provincetown, Massachusetts, United States; Salem, New Hampshire, United States

Technical Specs

Duration
1h 42m
Sound
Mono (Westrex Recording System)
Color
Color (DeLuxe)
Theatrical Aspect Ratio
1.85 : 1

Synopsis

In a Boston hotel room, Erwin Weaver finds himself being blinded with a bright spotlight and informed by a man, using a microphone to disguise his voice, that he can earn $50,000 for buying a Ford station wagon and driving it as instructed, whenever he is called. The mysterious man is millionaire businessman Thomas Crown, who later, bored with his various successes and disenchanted with the establishment of which he is a part, places phone calls to five men stationed at various phone booths around town. The men, who call him "Charlie," then agree to field calls again at precise intervals until each receives the signal from Tommy to "go." At the signal, the men head to the Mercantile Bank, where two of them commandeer an elevator, another quietly holds up the security guard, and another takes control of the elevator bank on the ground floor, holding bystanders at gunpoint and forcing to the ground two guards transporting over $2.5 million in cash. When one customer tries to run, he is shot in the leg, after which the robbers carry the bags of money out the front door, where Erwin waits in the station wagon. Dropping smoke bombs down the hallway, the robbers signal Erwin to drive off and then casually stride down the street. Erwin, nervous and inexperienced, is briefly caught in traffic jam, where he watches the police speed to the bank and round up the witnesses. Finally, he is able to drive away and, unaware that Tommy is following in his Rolls Royce, proceeds to the agreed-upon meeting point at a cemetery. As instructed, Erwin deposits the bags of money in a garbage can, changes the car's license plates and drives off. Posing as a mourner, Tommy retrieves the money and returns to his mansion, where he enjoys a celebratory drink in solitude. Meanwhile, Lt. Eddy Malone leads the police investigation, but finds few clues to the meticulously organized crime. After a witness identifies the station wagon, Eddy orders all similar cars searched, and although Erwin is stopped, the car passes inspection and he is released. Tommy flies to Geneva, where he deposits some of the cash in a secret bank account, easily convincing the bank manager to accept the new account without any personal information. Insurance investigator Jamie McDonald, furious that his company must pay off the bank, insists that Eddy work with a specialist, Vicki Anderson. Eddy is at first dismissive, but upon meeting the charming and sophisticated Vicki, allows her access to his files. She tells him that every crime has a personality, and despite disdaining her intuitive approach, he soon recognizes her intelligence. While they mull over how the crime has been accomplished, Tommy pilots his private plane and relaxes with his girl friend, Gwen. After a week of contemplation, Vicki deduces that the robber has transported the money to a bank in Switzerland over multiple airplane flights, knowing that the country's customs agents rarely inspect baggage. Realizing that a check of airline records would reveal repeat passengers, Eddy grows more enthusiastic about Vicki's unorthodox methods. She then wonders if the robber's cohorts could have been strangers, paid off in installments, and suggests that they place an advertisement offering a reward for anyone who has noticed a loved one who was out of town during the robbery and suddenly come into possession of a sudden influx of cash. Later, the two consider photographs of the short list of men who lately have made multiple trips to Switzerland. After instinctively discarding most of the suspects, Vicki sees Tommy's picture and is instantly attracted to the urbane entrepreneur. Attending his polo game soon after, she brazenly attracts his attention by filming him with a home movie camera, and later declares to an unconvinced Eddy that Tommy is definitely the culprit. Knowing he will be there, she attends an art auction, prompting Tommy to outbid her on a set of lithographs in order to have an excuse to approach her. As they talk, she reveals immediately that she is investigating him as a suspect in the bank robbery, causing him to laugh incredulously at her candor. Over dinner, the two well-matched adversaries spar verbally, their attraction growing. Later, while Tommy notes that his house is being watched, Eddy wonders to his assistant why a man as wealthy as Tommy would rob a bank, concluding it must be "for kicks." The newspaper ad attracts the attention of Erwin's irritable wife, who calls with information about Erwin's suspicious behavior. Although Eddy expressly forbids Vicki from pursuing Erwin using illegal means, she hires private detectives to steal Erwin's station wagon and kidnap his son, demanding $5,000 in ransom. Refusing to call the police, Erwin delivers the money only to find Vicki, who returns the boy and cash, which she points to as proof of his involvement in the robbery, and extracts a full confession. Eddy, jealous at how impressed Vicki is with Tommy's plot and appalled by her unethical techniques, questions her morality, causing her to admit with anger that she is indeed immoral and interested only in her compensation, ten percent of the recovered money. Vicki then invites Tommy to meet her at the police station, where she and Eddy watch through a two-way mirror as he waits in a room with Erwin. Erwin, however, has no idea what Tommy looks like, and Tommy reveals no glimmer of recognition. After Vicki introduces Eddy to Tommy and the two greet each other warily, Tommy brings her to his house, where she admires his refined taste. Over drinks, she taunts him that he will eventually lose their rivalry, then challenges him to a game of chess. During the intense game, their sexual chemistry reaches a peak, and finally he pulls her to him for a long kiss. As the pair continues to date, their romance deepens, as does their psychological struggle. Weary of being trailed by police and audited by the IRS, Tommy deliberately begins dating Gwen again, knowing Vicki will be informed. Upset, she confronts him about Gwen, but he replies that he is merely testing her devotion. They visit his unbuilt beach house, which consists only of a foundation and fireplace, and happily wander the cozy town. In a spa sauna, Vicki urges Tommy to let her cut a deal for him, but when he instructs her to call Eddy, as he has presupposed, Eddy refuses any deals. Confused by her feelings of guilt, Vicki is further shocked when Tommy declares that he is planning another robbery. One night soon after, he announces that the robbery will take place the following day and informs her of the cemetery at which he will pick up the money, stating that he is testing her to ensure that she is on his side. Despite her dismay and hesitance, Vicki informs Eddy about the pickup, and the next day they await Tommy at the cemetery. When it appears that he is not coming, Eddy angrily questions Vicki if she has been honest, but just then, the Rolls Royce drives in with a funeral procession, then veers off toward them. Eddy triumphantly has the car surrounded, but when Vicki opens the door, the driver, a messenger, hands her a telegram from Tommy. It states that he has "left early," asks her either to join him with the money or keep the car, and is signed "All my love, Tommy." As Tommy jets away to safety, wondering what Vicki will do, she tears up the telegram and searches the sky, overcome by emotion.

Photo Collections

The Thomas Crown Affair - Movie Poster
The Thomas Crown Affair - Movie Poster

Videos

Movie Clip

Thomas Crown Affair, The (1968) -- (Movie Clip) You Won't Like Her Cop Eddy Malone (Paul Burke) frustrated, Steve McQueen (title character) delivering to the Swiss banker (Michael Shillo) and insurance man Jamie (Gordon Pinsett) decides to call in financial crime specialist Vicki (Faye Dunaway, her first scene), in Norman Jewison’s The Thomas Crown Affair, 1968.
Thomas Crown Affair, The (1968) -- Let's Play Something Else After the pantomime with the chess pieces, Vicki (Faye Dunaway) and Steve McQueen (title character) in the often-mocked "360" shot, in Norman Jewison's The Thomas Crown Affair, 1968, photography by Haskell Wexler.
Thomas Crown Affair, The (1968) -- (Movie Clip) Windmills Of Your Mind The snazzy opening from director Norman Jewison (and editors Hal Ashby and Ralph Winters), Noel Harrison’s vocal on the hit tune by Michel Legrand and Alan & Marilyn Bergman, leading to title character Steve McQueen interrogating clownish recruit Jack Weston, in The Thomas Crown Affair, 1968.
Thomas Crown Affair, The (1968) -- (Movie Clip) Blessed Are The Pure In Heart The climax of the elaborate opening bank heist in Boston, Erwin (Jack Weston), the literal bag-man, delivers loot to a suburban cemetery where mastermind and title character Steve McQueen awaits in his Rolls-Royce, in director Norman Jewison’s original The Thomas Crown Affair, 1968.
Thomas Crown Affair, The (1968) -- (Movie Clip) Whose Head Are You After? Bostonian Steve McQueen (title character), whose hobby is bank robbery, makes a point of meeting Vicki (Faye Dunaway) at an art auction, having noticed her photographing him earlier at a polo match, whereupon she reveals her own game, in Norman Jewison’s The Thomas Crown Affair, 1968.

Trailer

Hosted Intro

Film Details

Also Known As
The Crown Caper, Thomas Crown and Company, Thomas Crown, Esquire
MPAA Rating
Genre
Romance
Crime
Drama
Release Date
Aug 1968
Premiere Information
World premiere in Boston: 19 Jun 1968; Los Angeles and New York openings: 26 Jun 1968
Production Company
Simkoe; Solar Productions, Inc.; The Mirisch Corporation
Distribution Company
United Artists Corp.
Country
United States
Location
Boston, Massachusetts, USA; Boston, Massachusetts, United States; Cape Cod--Provincetown, Massachusetts, United States; Salem, New Hampshire, United States

Technical Specs

Duration
1h 42m
Sound
Mono (Westrex Recording System)
Color
Color (DeLuxe)
Theatrical Aspect Ratio
1.85 : 1

Award Wins

Best Song

1968

Award Nominations

Best Score

1968

Articles

The Thomas Crown Affair (1968) - The Thomas Crown Affair


Thomas Crown (Steve McQueen), an investment banker in Boston's Back Bay, has become bored with his wealth and life of ease. In a constant quest for excitement, he challenges himself with a risky venture - an elaborately planned robbery that will net him a cool 2.6 million dollars. The heist is successfully carried off through a team of professional thieves, none of whom know each other or have any idea of their employer's true identity. The police are completely baffled and call in Vicki Anderson (Faye Dunaway), a freelance insurance investigator whose deductive reasoning quickly narrows down the prime suspects to Crown, whose frequent trips to a Switzerland bank arouse her suspicions. Thus begins a complex cat and mouse game between the huntress and the hunted that eventually develops into a serious romance. In the grand finale, Thomas puts Vicki's love to the test by revealing his plans for a final heist.

One of the most stylish and entertaining caper movie of the sixties, The Thomas Crown Affair (1968) was made at a time when the two stars and their director were at their career peaks. Steve McQueen had recently received a Best Actor Oscar nomination for his performance in The Sand Pebbles (1966) and was about to star in his biggest box office success to date, Bullitt (1968). Faye Dunaway was still riding high from her role in Arthur Penn's Bonnie and Clyde (1967) which earned her the first of three Academy Award nominations. And director Norman Jewison had just completed In the Heat of the Night which won the Oscar for Best Picture of 1967 and made Jewison the most sought after director in Hollywood.

The Thomas Crown Affair began with McQueen, serving as an uncredited producer; he had been searching in vain for a script that would allow him to play against his usual man-of-action persona. He enlisted Jewison in his endeavors - the two men had enjoyed a good working relationship on a previous feature together, The Cincinnati Kid (1965) - and the director found the perfect vehicle for McQueen in a screenplay by former Boston attorney Alan R. Trustman. The actor had wanted to play a sophisticated contemporary character for a long time and Thomas Crown, a millionaire with impeccable taste, was just the ticket. Dressed in $350 suits and adorned with fashionable accessories like a $2,250 Patek Philippe watch, McQueen seemed to have little in common with the scruffy bad boys he played in The Magnificent Seven (1960) and The Great Escape (1963). But it was only a facade, for McQueen was still playing a cocky, rebellious individual with distaste for authority. Thomas Crown was just more subversive in his dealings with the Establishment and, like the real life McQueen, liked to play hard which accounts for the numerous scenes with the actor skydiving, hang-gliding, playing polo and driving his dune buggy on the beach.

As much as Steve McQueen enjoyed his role in The Thomas Crown Affair, Faye Dunaway cites it as one of her favorite moviemaking experiences. Like McQueen, she got to model an elegant wardrobe featuring over 29 costume changes yet play a complex character at the same time. In her biography, Looking For Gatsby, she wrote, "Vicki's dilemma was, at the time, a newly emerging phenomenon for women: How does one do all of this in a man's world and not sacrifice one's emotional and personal life in the process?" As for her co-star, she said "it was really my first time to play opposite someone who was a great big old movie star, and that's exactly what Steve was. He was one of the best-loved actors around, one whose talent more than equaled his sizable commercial appeal." Regarding her own performance in the film, Dunaway stated, "while it may be the chess scene that stays with most people, there are other moments in the movie that I am more fond of. Vicki's entrance is great. I walk seemingly for miles in close-up, with dark glasses and a big hat and a slight smile. You don't know who this woman is or what she's up to...And I liked very much the earlier scenes with Paul Burke, when I've just been brought on the case and I'm working out who master-minded the heist."

The Thomas Crown Affair was filmed at over ninety locations in and around Boston during the summer of 1967, including Beacon Hill (the address of Crown's luxurious apartment), Little Italy, Crane's Beach, Pier 4, and the National Shawmut Bank for the complicated heist. At the latter location, according to Jewison in Faye Dunaway by Allan Hunter, "The guards and bank people were in the know, but nobody else was. Our robbers scared a lot of customers and pedestrians, who thought they were seeing a real robbery. But oddly, no one tried to interfere. I think they were afraid to get involved." For this same sequence, Jewison employed a split-screen technique that he had first viewed at a film exposition at the 1964 World's Fair. Director John Frankenheimer had previously used the process for Grand Prix (1966) but Jewison limits his use of the split screen technique and, as a result, the bank robbery is one of the most memorable segments in the film.

It is, however, the erotic chess game between McQueen and Dunaway which was the most discussed aspect of The Thomas Crown Affair during its original release. Critic Penelope Gilliatt described it as "two goldfish going after the same crumb" and it has since been parodied in numerous films; the most famous is Peter Sellers' seduction of Shirley MacLaine in Being There (1979) while the two characters watch Jewison's film on television. According to the director in an interview in Sight and Sound magazine, "There was one paragraph in the script which said they sat down to play chess. I'd worked with the author, and it was his first film. And I think the phrase he used was 'chess with sex." And since it was the only physical contact of the two characters, I became involved with the scene and felt that it should - well, I wanted to film the longest kiss in screen history. I thought this one physical thing should tell everything about that aspect of their relationship, so that I wouldn't have to deal with it anymore. So we ended up spending three days shooting a kiss. I must say it was a marvelous inspiration from the cameraman. [Haskell] Wexler and I devised all sorts of things to keep the scene going and build it cinematically."

During the 1968 Oscar race, The Thomas Crown Affair was nominated for Best Music Score by Michel Legrand and Best Song - "The Windmills of Your Mind" - which won in the latter category. To this day, the film remains a popular favorite among Steve McQueen and Faye Dunaway fans and is even rumored to be one of former President Jimmy Carter's favorite movies. In 2000, The Thomas Crown Affair was remade with Pierce Brosnan and Rene Russo in the roles originally created by McQueen and Dunaway. While immensely popular with moviegoers, this version lacks the flamboyant excess that made the original so entertaining.

Producer/Director: Norman Jewison
Screenplay: Alan R. Trustman
Art Direction: Robert Boyle
Cinematography: Haskell Wexler
Costume Design: Ron Postal, Alan Levine, Theadora Van Runkle
Film Editing: Byron Brandt, Hal Ashby, Ralph Winters
Original Music: Michel Legrand
Principal Cast: Steve McQueen (Thomas Crown), Faye Dunaway (Vicki Anderson), Paul Burke (Eddy Malone), Jack Weston (Erwin), Biff McGuire (Sandy), Addison Powell (Abe), Astrid Heeren (Gwen), Yaphet Kotto (Carl), Gordon Pinsent (Jamie).
C-103m. Letterboxed.

by Jeff Stafford
The Thomas Crown Affair (1968) - The Thomas Crown Affair

The Thomas Crown Affair (1968) - The Thomas Crown Affair

Thomas Crown (Steve McQueen), an investment banker in Boston's Back Bay, has become bored with his wealth and life of ease. In a constant quest for excitement, he challenges himself with a risky venture - an elaborately planned robbery that will net him a cool 2.6 million dollars. The heist is successfully carried off through a team of professional thieves, none of whom know each other or have any idea of their employer's true identity. The police are completely baffled and call in Vicki Anderson (Faye Dunaway), a freelance insurance investigator whose deductive reasoning quickly narrows down the prime suspects to Crown, whose frequent trips to a Switzerland bank arouse her suspicions. Thus begins a complex cat and mouse game between the huntress and the hunted that eventually develops into a serious romance. In the grand finale, Thomas puts Vicki's love to the test by revealing his plans for a final heist. One of the most stylish and entertaining caper movie of the sixties, The Thomas Crown Affair (1968) was made at a time when the two stars and their director were at their career peaks. Steve McQueen had recently received a Best Actor Oscar nomination for his performance in The Sand Pebbles (1966) and was about to star in his biggest box office success to date, Bullitt (1968). Faye Dunaway was still riding high from her role in Arthur Penn's Bonnie and Clyde (1967) which earned her the first of three Academy Award nominations. And director Norman Jewison had just completed In the Heat of the Night which won the Oscar for Best Picture of 1967 and made Jewison the most sought after director in Hollywood. The Thomas Crown Affair began with McQueen, serving as an uncredited producer; he had been searching in vain for a script that would allow him to play against his usual man-of-action persona. He enlisted Jewison in his endeavors - the two men had enjoyed a good working relationship on a previous feature together, The Cincinnati Kid (1965) - and the director found the perfect vehicle for McQueen in a screenplay by former Boston attorney Alan R. Trustman. The actor had wanted to play a sophisticated contemporary character for a long time and Thomas Crown, a millionaire with impeccable taste, was just the ticket. Dressed in $350 suits and adorned with fashionable accessories like a $2,250 Patek Philippe watch, McQueen seemed to have little in common with the scruffy bad boys he played in The Magnificent Seven (1960) and The Great Escape (1963). But it was only a facade, for McQueen was still playing a cocky, rebellious individual with distaste for authority. Thomas Crown was just more subversive in his dealings with the Establishment and, like the real life McQueen, liked to play hard which accounts for the numerous scenes with the actor skydiving, hang-gliding, playing polo and driving his dune buggy on the beach. As much as Steve McQueen enjoyed his role in The Thomas Crown Affair, Faye Dunaway cites it as one of her favorite moviemaking experiences. Like McQueen, she got to model an elegant wardrobe featuring over 29 costume changes yet play a complex character at the same time. In her biography, Looking For Gatsby, she wrote, "Vicki's dilemma was, at the time, a newly emerging phenomenon for women: How does one do all of this in a man's world and not sacrifice one's emotional and personal life in the process?" As for her co-star, she said "it was really my first time to play opposite someone who was a great big old movie star, and that's exactly what Steve was. He was one of the best-loved actors around, one whose talent more than equaled his sizable commercial appeal." Regarding her own performance in the film, Dunaway stated, "while it may be the chess scene that stays with most people, there are other moments in the movie that I am more fond of. Vicki's entrance is great. I walk seemingly for miles in close-up, with dark glasses and a big hat and a slight smile. You don't know who this woman is or what she's up to...And I liked very much the earlier scenes with Paul Burke, when I've just been brought on the case and I'm working out who master-minded the heist." The Thomas Crown Affair was filmed at over ninety locations in and around Boston during the summer of 1967, including Beacon Hill (the address of Crown's luxurious apartment), Little Italy, Crane's Beach, Pier 4, and the National Shawmut Bank for the complicated heist. At the latter location, according to Jewison in Faye Dunaway by Allan Hunter, "The guards and bank people were in the know, but nobody else was. Our robbers scared a lot of customers and pedestrians, who thought they were seeing a real robbery. But oddly, no one tried to interfere. I think they were afraid to get involved." For this same sequence, Jewison employed a split-screen technique that he had first viewed at a film exposition at the 1964 World's Fair. Director John Frankenheimer had previously used the process for Grand Prix (1966) but Jewison limits his use of the split screen technique and, as a result, the bank robbery is one of the most memorable segments in the film. It is, however, the erotic chess game between McQueen and Dunaway which was the most discussed aspect of The Thomas Crown Affair during its original release. Critic Penelope Gilliatt described it as "two goldfish going after the same crumb" and it has since been parodied in numerous films; the most famous is Peter Sellers' seduction of Shirley MacLaine in Being There (1979) while the two characters watch Jewison's film on television. According to the director in an interview in Sight and Sound magazine, "There was one paragraph in the script which said they sat down to play chess. I'd worked with the author, and it was his first film. And I think the phrase he used was 'chess with sex." And since it was the only physical contact of the two characters, I became involved with the scene and felt that it should - well, I wanted to film the longest kiss in screen history. I thought this one physical thing should tell everything about that aspect of their relationship, so that I wouldn't have to deal with it anymore. So we ended up spending three days shooting a kiss. I must say it was a marvelous inspiration from the cameraman. [Haskell] Wexler and I devised all sorts of things to keep the scene going and build it cinematically." During the 1968 Oscar race, The Thomas Crown Affair was nominated for Best Music Score by Michel Legrand and Best Song - "The Windmills of Your Mind" - which won in the latter category. To this day, the film remains a popular favorite among Steve McQueen and Faye Dunaway fans and is even rumored to be one of former President Jimmy Carter's favorite movies. In 2000, The Thomas Crown Affair was remade with Pierce Brosnan and Rene Russo in the roles originally created by McQueen and Dunaway. While immensely popular with moviegoers, this version lacks the flamboyant excess that made the original so entertaining. Producer/Director: Norman Jewison Screenplay: Alan R. Trustman Art Direction: Robert Boyle Cinematography: Haskell Wexler Costume Design: Ron Postal, Alan Levine, Theadora Van Runkle Film Editing: Byron Brandt, Hal Ashby, Ralph Winters Original Music: Michel Legrand Principal Cast: Steve McQueen (Thomas Crown), Faye Dunaway (Vicki Anderson), Paul Burke (Eddy Malone), Jack Weston (Erwin), Biff McGuire (Sandy), Addison Powell (Abe), Astrid Heeren (Gwen), Yaphet Kotto (Carl), Gordon Pinsent (Jamie). C-103m. Letterboxed. by Jeff Stafford

Quotes

Trivia

The Academy Award-winning song "The Windmills of Your Mind" from this movie is sung by actor Noel Harrison, son of Rex Harrison.

Legendary documentary filmmaker Frederick Wiseman reportedly wrote one version, or contributed to screenplay of this film, without any on-screen credit.

Of all of the films that Steve McQueen made in his career, this is reported to have been his favorite.

After watching a five hour rough cut of The Thomas Crown Affair, composer Michel Legrand took a six week vacation during which he wrote 90 minutes of music. The film was then reedited to the music, instead of the other way around. If this experiment had failed, Legrand would have written a second score in the traditional way free of charge.

Notes

The working titles of this film were Thomas Crown, Esquire, The Crown Caper and Thomas Crown and Company. The film's opening credits show brightly colored photographs of the actors in shots from the picture, sometimes in small frames within the larger screen, and sometimes with only parts of their faces shown, with the facial features being mixed with others as they appear. The names of Steve McQueen, Faye Dunaway, Paul Burke and Jack Weston appear with their photographs. Although the picture's copyright claimant was Mirisch-Simkoe-Solar Productions, the actual production companies were The Mirisch Corporation, Simkoe and Solar Productions, Inc., the latter of which was formed by McQueen in 1961.
       The Thomas Crown Affair marked the first feature film written by Alan R. Trustman, a Boston lawyer and former banker. According to contemporary sources, Trustman first thought of the film's story while working at a bank, and later wrote the treatment after becoming a lawyer. He sold the treatment to the William Morris Agency, which then interested director Norman Jewison. In modern sources, Jewison has noted that he worked extensively with Trustman on the screenplay.
       In his autobiography, Jewison stated that both he and Trustman originally wanted Sean Connery for the part of "Thomas Crown," but Connery, tired after completing You Only Live Twice (see below), declined. Modern sources assert that Jewison also considered Rock Hudson for the role. McQueen, whom Jewison had directed in 1965's The Cincinnati Kid, lobbied hard for the part, which Jewison was reluctant to give him, as he felt it was too divergent from McQueen's onscreen and offscreen personas. Jewison also noted that among the many actresses considered to play "Vicki Anderson" were Brigitte Bardot, Julie Christie, Leslie Caron, Vanessa Redgrave, Sharon Tate, Raquel Welch, Candice Bergen and Anouk Aimeé. On the suggestion of McQueen, Jewison tested Camilla Sparv, but ultimately the part went to Dunaway on the strength of footage Jewison saw from 1967's Bonnie and Clyde before its release. Modern sources include Bruce Glover in the cast. The picture marked the screen debut of fashion model Astrid Heeren, although she went on to make only two more films.
       As noted by contemporary sources, The Thomas Crown Affair was shot mostly on location in Boston, MA, with interiors filmed at the Samuel Goldwyn Studios in Hollywood. Studio publicity related that the production shot for ten weeks in ninety locations around Boston. In press releases, Jewison asserted that the initial bank robbery was filmed at the downtown branch of the National Shawmut Bank, and that although the guards and bank officials knew what was going on, the customers did not because the filmmakers were using a concealed camera. Although they apparently thought that a real robbery was occurring, none of the customers or pedestrians interfered in any way. In an October 1968 American Cinematographer article, director of photography Haskell Wexler clarified that it was mostly the exterior sequences that were shot at the Boston bank, with many of the interiors shot at the Goldwyn Studios. Hidden cameras were used frequently to photograph various street scenes in Boston as well. Other Boston locations listed by studio press releases include Beacon Hill, Copp's Hill Cemetery, the Commons and Crane's Beach, as well as Provincetown on Cape Cod. The glider scenes were shot in Salem, NH, according to contemporary sources. In November 2003, WSJ reported that the house used for Crown's mansion was a property on Beacon Hill that was one of three built by merchant Harrison Gray Otis.
       According to modern sources, the producers applied to the FBI for cooperation in shooting the picture and sought to film the FBI headquarters in Boston, but the agency refused, claiming that the script made it look incompetent. Studio press releases noted that the dune buggy in the film was designed and customized by McQueen and Pete Condos, "an off-road vehicle builder." McQueen, a sports enthusiast, learned to play polo for the film and was taught by Gary Wooten and Neil R. Ayer, real-life polo players, as well as by first assistant director Jack N. Reddish, who was a nationally ranked player at the time. In February 1968, Box Office reported that United Artists had alerted distributors that the company would be seeking blind bids for exhibition rights to the picture, as prints of it would not be finished in time to be viewed before its release. Blind bidding was no longer a common practice by the late 1960s, and UA had to make special efforts to notify the National Association of Theatre Owners of its intentions.
       According to the audio commentary recorded by Jewison for the film's 2005 DVD release, he first became fascinated by the use of multiple screens during the 1967 Expo in Montreal, at which Christopher Chapman's short film A Place to Stand was exhibited. The short consisted entirely of images on multiple screens, and Jewison realized that the technique could be an optimal way to convey several story points without having to focus on them individually at length or employ a complicated montage. The director frequently used the multiple screen technique for The Thomas Crown Affair, most notably during the first bank robbery, when the criminals arrive separately in Boston, contact Crown and then rob the bank. Different actors and actions are seen in small frames within the larger screen, which is sometimes black or filled with other action, and occasionally the smaller frames move in and out of focus to draw attention to other action. Sometimes the same action is seen in multiple small frames that fill the entire screen in a checkerboard effect, as during some shots of the polo match played by Crown and photographed by Vicki. The polo match was partially filmed by mounting a camera onto a chest harness on one of the players, according to the American Cinematographer article.
       In his autobiography, Jewison wrote that he hired Pablo Ferro to do the multiple screen work after Ferro designed the credits for his hit 1966 film The Russians Are Coming The Russians Are Coming. Jewison stated that for the work on The Thomas Crown Affair, which had a budget of $4 million, Ferro "came up with a complex process that involved mattes, an animation camera, [and] an optical printer," and that the action was not storyboarded ahead of filming, as was usual. In an information sheet about the special effects, submitted by Jewison to AMPAS so that the picture could be considered for a visual effects Oscar, he estimated that during the robbery sequences, because so much story information was conveyed "in the 3 ½ to 4 minutes of multiple image time, audiences had really been exposed to close to 15 minutes of straight-cut film." Jewison also asserted that The Thomas Crown Affair "was the first feature film to utilize the multiple image effect within a dramatic form."
       One of the film's most famous sequences is the chess match between Crown and Vicki, played in the study of Crown's mansion. The scene is played with very little dialogue, rapid cuts and a mixture of extreme close-ups and regular shots. After Vicki defeats Crown, he suggests that they play something else, then kisses her. In his DVD commentary and autobiography, Jewison stated that the chess and kissing scenes took three days to shoot. During the kiss, the camera begins to revolve 360 degrees around the characters, with increasing speed until the action goes out of focus and dissolves into various colors. Jewison related that in order to achieve the effect, Wexler, who used a handheld camera, stood on a skateboard while grips pushed him around the kissing actors. According to studio press materials, the game played by Vicki and Crown, designed by technical advisor Alfred Sheinwald, was based on a real, Grand Masters' match played in 1899. Several reviews of the film compared the chess sequence to the sexually charged eating scenes in the 1963 picture Tom Jones (see below). A clip of the chess sequence was included in the 1979 picture Being There, in which Peter Sellers watches the clip on television and imitates it while romancing Shirley MacLaine. Being There was directed by Hal Ashby, who had served as the supervising editor and associate producer of The Thomas Crown Affair.
       The elegant, chic costumes worn by McQueen and Dunaway are another frequently discussed aspect of the film. In contrast to the often hippiesh clothes of the late 1960s, the costumes were designed to enhance the picture's glamor and high style, according to contemporary comments made by Jewison and costume designer Thea Van Runkle, who designed Dunaway's costumes for Bonnie and Clyde. In studio press releases, Van Runkle emphasized what she called the "Method accessorizing" she used in The Thomas Crown Affair to highlight Vicki's emotions, such as a linen suit set off with carnelians and garnets to show that Vicki "was out for blood." Many reviews commented on the lavish outfits, with the Hollywood Citizen-News critic calling Dunaway "a dazzling vision."
       The picture received mixed reviews at the time of its release, although it was in the top twenty at the box office for the year, was very popular in Europe and has since become regarded as a classic of 1960s cinema. While some critics applauded the picture's emphasis on style over content, the Time reviewer complained that Jewison has "turned out a glimmering, empty film reminiscent of an haute couture model: stunning on the surface, concave and undernourished beneath." The Variety critic, however, hailed the film as "[w]ell-tooled, professionally crafted and fashioned with obvious meticulous care," and asserted: "A major asset in the story is its essential simplicity, and its lack of plot pretension." Several modern sources claim that McQueen considered The Thomas Crown Affair his favorite of all his movies.
       The film received an Academy Award nomination for Best Original Score and won an Oscar for Best Original Song for "The Windmills of Your Mind." The song became very popular, although in his autobiography, Jewison noted that he first asked Andy Williams to sing the song for the film, but Williams demurred and the assignment went to Noel Harrison. Another hit song from the film was set to the love theme heard during the chess game. Alan and Marilyn Bergman later wrote lyrics for the theme, and under the title "His Eyes, Her Eyes," the song has been recorded by numerous singers.
       In 1999, M-G-M released a remake of the film, also titled The Thomas Crown Affair. Directed by John McTiernan, the remake starred Pierce Brosnan as a millionaire art thief who is pursued by an insurance investigator played by Rene Russo. Faye Dunaway appeared in the 1999 film in a small role as Crown's analyst, and the song "The Windmills of Your Mind" was recorded in a new version by Sting.

Miscellaneous Notes

1968 Golden Globe for Best Original Song ("The Windmills of Your Mind").

Released in United States Summer June 1968

Released in United States Summer June 1968