The Big Heist | |
---|---|
Genre | Docudrama |
Based on |
The Heist by Ernest Volkman John Cummings |
Screenplay by | Jere Cunningham Gary Hoffman |
Directed by | Robert Markowitz |
Starring |
Donald Sutherland John Heard Jamie Harris Janet Kidder |
Theme music composer | Lou Pomanti |
Country of origin |
Canada USA |
Original language(s) | English |
Production | |
Producer(s) | Robert Markowitz Mark Winemaker |
Cinematography | Rudolf Blahacek |
Editor(s) | David Beatty |
Running time | 92 min |
Production company(s) |
Alliance Atlantis A&E Network Gary Hoffman Prod. |
Release | |
Original network | A&E Network |
Original release |
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The Big Heist is a Canadian-American TV movie which first aired in 2001, on the A&E Television Networks.
Based on the 1986 book The Heist: How a Gang Stole $8,000,000 at Kennedy Airport and Lived to Regret It, the film tells the story about the 1978 Lufthansa Heist. The heist was also the subject of the much better-known 1990 film Goodfellas, directed by Martin Scorsese, and of the 1991 made-for-television film, The 10 Million Dollar Getaway.
Although the movie correctly depicts the Lufthansa Heist, showing Jimmy Burke as the leader of a crew linked to Paulie Vario, the crew wasn't part of the Gambino family as depicted, but rather was a large part of the Lucchese crime family, and the robbery brought a large quantity of funding for Tony Corallo.
Although Burke did have connections with John Gotti, Gotti was never involved with the Lufthansa Heist nor did he want to be a part of it. According to a rumour, on an FBI wire tap from the 1980s years after the original heist, Gotti was heard to say to underboss and his capo Aniello Dellacroce: "I didn't want any part of that shit that Burke and those other fucks pulled. Only micks would do something crazy like this. Micks are fucking crazy; end of fucking statement". It was also alleged by Hill, in Hill's book The Lufthansa Heist that John Gotti personally killed Tommy DeSimone, a member of the actual stick-up crew. In another mistake film makes, Henry Hill is shown in one scene as having fallen asleep alongside a male and female prostitute, after having used a large quantity of cocaine. This implied bisexuality of Hill's was a falsehood. Hill was happily married (although he'd had two different affairs - both with women), and if the accusations had been true it would have been Jimmy Burke's duty to have killed Hill; homosexual acts were seen as going against the mob's rules.