Parents' Guide to The Thomas Crown Affair (1968)

Movie R 1968 102 minutes
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Common Sense Media Review

Barbara Shulgasser-Parker By Barbara Shulgasser-Parker , based on child development research. How do we rate?

age 13+

Classic '60s heist film has some violence.

Parents Need to Know

Why Age 13+?

Any Positive Content?

Parent and Kid Reviews

What's the Story?

THE THOMAS CROWN AFFAIR was a fresh, visually stylish look at a relationship between a successful working woman and a self-made man. Tommy (Steve McQueen) has planned a meticulous, seemingly-perfect bank heist, assembling an anonymous crew, members of which don't know him or each other. Vicki (Faye Dunaway) is the investigator who gets ten percent from the insurance company that paid the bank for its $2.6 million loss if she finds the money. Wearing miniskirts, lacquered talons, and arresting hats, she quickly starts dating her prey, immediately letting him know she's coming after him. He never denies that he's the heist mastermind, but blithely carries on the affair as if nothing about it is odd. They ride his dune buggy on the beach, bake lobsters in the sand, and play chess (in a long remarkable scene full of sexual tension but no nudity). As Vicki falls more deeply for Tommy, she wants to lessen the punitive consequences that he'll face when she nails him, but that love never makes her waver from the ultimate goal -- to catch him and get her ten percent.

Is It Any Good?

Our review:
Parents say : Not yet rated
Kids say : Not yet rated

Taken at face value, The Thomas Crown Affair is an engaging caper. Casting McQueen as a debonair finance guy in a three-piece suit was a canny departure given his usual film persona as ruggedly unflappable cool guy (the hard-driving cop in Bullitt, for example). He gives an Ivy League financier a renegade roguishness, making him believably obsessed with "who I want to be tomorrow." Some viewers may be nagged by the amorality of both the handsome, well-dressed thief and the beautiful, well-dressed lover-antagonist who seeks to bring him down. The lovers' conflict and attraction have the same roots -- Vicki never hides that she's going after him for a reward and he never denies he's committed the robbery. She is proud of being good at her job, even though she loves him, and he's proud of screwing the system, even though the system has been good to him.

Odd editing (framing different simultaneous action in rectangular windows arranged on the screen likes building blocks), an intrusive jazz score (notably famed composer Michel Legrand's hit song The Windmills of Your Mind, which won Best Original Song Oscar), and an emphasis on style over substance makes this film memorable and dated at the same time. Also, notably, the movie never says it aloud, but it clearly addresses the predicament of the few professionally-successful women who were out there 50 years ago. What Vicki probably had sacrificed in her life to become respected and valued at work might have made it extremely difficult for her to give it all up, even for love.

Talk to Your Kids About ...

  • Families can talk about what would lead a man who has everything to rob a bank. Do you think his goal was to set a difficult task for himself and prove he could accomplish it?

  • Does Thomas seem admirable? Could he have taken his genius for planning and helped people in need instead of committing a crime?

  • Do you think the director's use of separate boxed images on the screen at the same time was useful or distracting?

Movie Details

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