Genre: Period Drama/Adventure
Premise: A pair of thieves develop a scheme to steal the Mona Lisa in 1911 Paris.
About: “Thieves” has enjoyed semi-cult status in Hollywood as one of the better unproduced screenplays of the last 10 years. It was going to be made back in 2002 but fell apart at the last second. It’s gearing up to be shot again by the writer himself.
Writer: Jeremy Leven

The original celebrity

Well, I gave it a shot. The script’s pedigree and the fact that it was being championed by two of my friends convinced me I would fall in love with it. But alas, I did not. I wanted a story with an elaborate “Thomas Crowne Affair”-like plot to steal the Mona Lisa – I wanted people coordinating a series of impossibly timed maneuvers inside a small once-in-a-lifetime window. I wanted 1911 Mission Impossible. Instead I got a slightly above-average love story with characters I found mildly amusing.

Lovers, Liars and Thieves is a tough read. 6-7 line action paragraphs litter the script, testing your fortitude and making every page read likes it’s 3. I coulda swore I was on page 30 as I sludged through the opening act. When I looked up I found I was still on page 10! The writing is pretty. It’s just laborious and overly-detailed.

The story is about con artist/adventurer “The Marqui” and his partner in crime Daphne. The two are thick as thieves in the most literal sense and they luuuuuuuuv money. It’s clear right off the bat that they’re secretly in love each other. But both know that to give in to that love would mean the end of their edge. After their latest plan goes awry, however, Daphne decides she’s had enough and wants to retire. The Marquis suggests one last job – something so big they can spend the rest of their lives in luxury – the theft of the Mona Lisa.

Of course to pull off their plan they’ll need someone on the inside, and that person comes in the clumsy naive 60 year old cabinetmaker, Vincenzo. The plan is for Daphne to win over Vincenzo’s heart, then convince him to steal the Mona Lisa for her. That way even if he’s caught, they can hightail it out of town and let poor Vincenzo take the rap.

But that’s the problem I had with “Thieves”. Is that I wasn’t interested in that plan. I was more interested in the plan to steal the damn Mona Lisa! And that gets short shrift in the script. Instead we watch as Daphne starts to fall for Vincenzo, and The Marquis, who’s secretly in love with her of course, must make a choice. He can either call it all off before Daphne falls in love, thus ensuring they will be together. Or he can stay the course and land more money than he’s ever dreamed of. Money or love? That’s The Marquis question.

As I’ve alluded to, when the theft actually arrives, it’s quite simple, even bizarrely so. Vincenzo basically has to take the painting when the guards’ aren’t looking. I’m assuming that Leven’s betting by this point that we’ve developed more sympathy for Vincenzo, but to be honest I thought Vinenzo was the least interesting of the three and actually a big sad sap. Therefore I didn’t really care whether he got away with the theft or not. I would’ve been much more involved had The Marquis and Daphne been doing the stealing.

There are some fun moments along the way. For you period-heads and art historians you get a pre-fame over-sexed Picasso pushing his controversial new painting style. When the Mona Lisa goes missing, Picasso is one of the first ones questioned (Picasso is on record for hating the Mona Lisa and believing it should be burned). The Maquis trading quips with Daphne is enjoyable. The overall dialogue is impressive. There are gems like this one sprinkled all over the script:

[scrippet]
MARQUIS
You’re too hard on yourself, Daphné. The world was created with a tragic flaw. Many were given little, and a few were given too much — much too much. By an accident of fortune, we seem to have been blessed with a unique talent in asset reallocation.
[/scrippet]
I’ll even go on record as saying the structure and characters are written with an exceptional level of skill. So why didn’t I like this thing? I think it comes down to my expectations. I was expecting and hoping for something different. When I didn’t get it, I turned on the poor guy. This may have barely kept my interest, but it’s such a well-liked script I’m still going to recommend you check it out.

[ ] trash
[x] barely kept my interest
[ ] worth the read
[ ] impressive
[ ] genius

What I learned: Forcing your main character to choose between the thing he wants most (in this case, money) and the thing he doesn’t realize he needs (in this case, love) is the cornerstone of any great character arc. Because in the end, he’ll have to make a decision between the two. If he chooses money, he’s still the same shallow person. Whereas if he chooses love, it shows that he’s changed (or “arced”). Most (but not all!) screenplays have a main character that arcs.

  • Anonymous

    Is this similar to Pierre, Pierre from a few years back?

  • http://www.blogger.com/profile/08439555051697115476 Carson Reeves

    No no. Completely different. This feels more like an adventure period piece. Pierre Pierre (which I reviewed here: http://scriptshadow.blogspot.com/2009/04/pierre-pierre.html) was more dark comedy.

  • http://www.blogger.com/profile/08239067667651048280 Joshua James

    Someone actually did steal the Mona Lisa, cut it out of its frame (it’s painted on wood) and then carried it right out.

    Kept it in a trunk for two years. When he was caught, the excuse he used was one of national pride (he wanted to return it to Italy) but I don’t think it played well.

    I think (I could be wrong) Bill Goldman used this as an example of how to build a movie from a real life event in one of his books, pitching a story about a mastermind who hires a poor sap to steal the Mona Lisa but never takes it from the guy, instead sells six forged Mona Lisas to private collectors while the sap sits on the real painting, waiting for the mastermind to call.

    And he never does. If I remember right, that is.

    That’d be a good flick.

    but I do know it was actually stolen.

  • http://www.blogger.com/profile/13593976245341180685 Cash Bailey

    Ron Bass’s original draft of ENTRAPMENT was a teriffic caper flick.

    At least, until Connery and that hack Jon Avnet gutted it.

  • http://www.blogger.com/profile/08439555051697115476 Carson Reeves

    JJ, *spoilers* – yes, that is this script.

    Cash, I have heard great things about the original draft of Entrapment. And while I was reading this, Entrapment crossed my mind a few times. It’s that kind of script.

  • Kingston Alomar

    The orignial draft to Entapment was brilliant. I still don’t know why they changed it to what they did. I still love the film, but man that original Entrapent could have been Oscar worthy. I know they changed it from the Chinese New Year to Kuala Lumpur’s new building, but they could have still kept that love story and the darker ending. What a missed opportunity.

  • http://www.blogger.com/profile/06872780969179149381 martinb

    It was a great concept that made use of a real incident and real historical personalities. (Wikipedia: “Apollinaire was arrested on suspicion of stealing the Mona Lisa from the Louvre in 1911. Apollonaire pointed to his friend Picasso, who was also brought in for questioning, but both were later exonerated.”) I thought the repeated use of settings mimicking well-known paintings was a nice touch. But the script never quite gelled for me.

    First, the writing. As Carson said, it is rather ponderous, although it conveys a good sense of Paris of those times.

    Second, the occasional anachronisms in speech, e.g. “Cold as a witch’s tit.” which pulled me completely out of the world of the script.

    Third, there was no spark to the relationships. I never felt I was reading about flesh-and-blood people with intense feelings for each other who were risking everything.

    And finally, it needed one last twist in the plot. It’s a con rather than a heist, so I wasn’t too perturbed by the fairly easy theft, but the ending was unsatisfactory. First we have the Marquis and Daphne in New York, then Daphne in Italy and the Marquis in Morocco chatting to a reporter. What happened in between? We had one fairly tame scene, but I feel there should have been a last major con of each other where the good guy wins out. As it is, I’m not sure which of the three I should be rooting for.

  • http://www.blogger.com/profile/08439555051697115476 Carson Reeves

    Yeah, I agree. One last twist would’ve been nice. In these fictionalized re-tellings of real-life events, you might as well take advantage of the “fiction” part and write the best story you can. Don’t hold back just because of real-life facts. Nobody’s going to hold you to it.

  • JoeM

    I’m doing a documentary on Vincenzo Peruggia, the man who stole the Mona Lisa. We’ve interviewed his daughter, a relative of his supposed accomplice, been to the Louvre, and the Uffizi. I’ve known about Leven’s story for years. The Marquis story is a nice fiction but never happened. Check out our blog: http://www.monalisadocumentary.blogspot.com

  • Anonymous

    cool concept…..downhill from there.

    In a heist movie, you want to root for the bad-ass crew who comes up with some ingenius plot to steal a priceless something, but while i read this script, i kept wanting them to get caught so i wouldnt have to read anymore…..

    ~Maureen~

  • http://www.blogger.com/profile/08439555051697115476 Carson Reeves

    Hey Joe, thanks for the link.

    Maureen, lol.

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