Chicago Sun-Times

Art heist gets true-crime treatment in Netflix’s riveting ‘This Is a Robbery’

Huge 1990 art robbery, still unsolved, gets the dazzling Netflix true-crime treatment

- RICHARD ROEPER,

More than 30 years ago, a priceless Rembrandt painting titled “Christ in the Storm of the Sea of Galilee” and 12 other works were stolen from the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum in Boston in one of the biggest, most brazen, most captivatin­g and most confoundin­g art heists ever.

Today, that Rembrandt is hidden away but on display in a palace in Saudi Arabia. Or maybe it’s somewhere in Canada, South America or Japan or France or Jamaica, or in the basement of a church in South Boston or buried in the backyard of some old gangster’s house. Perhaps the most likely and certainly saddest scenario of all: These beautiful and irreplacea­ble works were destroyed and discarded by some person(s) who had upwards of $500 million in art on their hands, and couldn’t figure out a way to sell them without getting caught.

We don’t know. Maybe nobody knows. If anybody connected to the heist is still alive and does know, he ain’t talking. Yet even though the case remains unsolved, the four-part Netflix true crime documentar­y series is a dazzling mash-up of the usual elements that go into these increasing­ly popular docu-programs: archival news footage and crime scene photos; audio recordings from informants; grainy security cam footage; wellcrafte­d graphics mapping out the timeline and the locales for various key events; interviews with a number of investigat­ors, prosecutor­s, defense attorneys, eyewitness­es and journalist­s; and stylish re-creations of events from long

ago. “This Is a Robbery” raises more questions than it answers, but those questions are deeply intriguing.

Filmmakers and brothers Colin and Nick Barnicle demonstrat­e a keen eye for dramatic storytelli­ng from the very start, as “This Is a Robbery” plays out like a nonfiction version of “The Thomas Crown Affair,” complete with a stirring soundtrack and a nifty twist or two every once in a while. In the first chapter, we go inside the walls of the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum in Boston, a nondescrip­t building with a stunningly gorgeous courtyard hidden inside that looks like something from the Renaissanc­e, and beautifull­y appointed galleries, each with its own theme, on multiple floors. In the very early hours of March

18, 1990, with the night still black, two men dressed as Boston police officers knocked on the door of the museum, talked their way inside, bound and gagged the security guards, and made off with some 13 artworks, including the aforementi­oned Rembrandt, along with paintings by Vermeer, Degas and Manet, an ancient Chinese beaker and a bronze eagle that had been attached to a Napoleonic flag. (The latter two items weren’t of particular historic or monetary value, adding to the strangenes­s of the crime.)

In later episodes, “This Is a Robbery” pivots from the original heist to a deep dive into the world ‘THIS IS A ROBBERY: THE WORLD’S BIGGEST ART HEIST’ ★★★½

A four-part docuseries available Wednesday on Netflix. of organized crime in the greater New England area in the 1990s and 2000s. We’re introduced to myriad crooks and con men and and killers, many of whom might have been involved in the Gardner Museum heist. One prime suspect turns up dead in the trunk of a car. The FBI has an informant infiltrate a group of wise guys and arrests them on another case, in the hopes one of them will spill the beans about the location of the loot from the museum, but nobody sings. A former sister-in-law of one suspect tells a story about hanging the Manet in his shabby apartment. Says one defense attorney: “Everybody who did the robbery is whacked or died of natural causes or unnatural causes.”

On the 23rd anniversar­y of the case, the FBI called a press conference and announced the thieves were dead — but they didn’t identify them by name. They also said, “We do not know where the art is currently located,” a formal way of saying, “We still don’t know what the hell happened to the art.” The reward for the return of the artwork has soared from $1 million to $5 million to $10 million, but though “This Is a Robbery” presents some solid and credible theories about who pulled off the heist, we’re still in the dark about the whereabout­s of the art.

Here’s hoping the Rembrandt isn’t burned or cut to ribbons or lost to the winds. Maybe we’ll have a story down the road about how someone was at a garage sale and bought what they thought was a reproducti­on of “Christ in the Storm on the Sea of Galilee,” only to find out it’s the real thing.

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 ?? ISABELLA STEWART GARDNER MUSEUM ?? Manet’s “Chez Tortoni” was one of the paintings swiped during the 1990 heist.
ISABELLA STEWART GARDNER MUSEUM Manet’s “Chez Tortoni” was one of the paintings swiped during the 1990 heist.
 ??  ?? Empty frames hang in the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum in Boston, awaiting the return of works stolen in 1990.
Empty frames hang in the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum in Boston, awaiting the return of works stolen in 1990.

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