Help keep Salon independent

When art imitates life, and then life imitates a heist film

Cinema glamorized the perfect heist. The Louvre’s latest robbery shows what happens when someone takes notes

Weekend Editor

Published

Thieves stole priceless jewels from the Louvre in broad daylight, emulating similar heist from Lupin and Ocean's 8. As the police hunt down the treasures, it may be hard for some to separate cinematic art from real life. (Remon Haazen / Getty Images)
Thieves stole priceless jewels from the Louvre in broad daylight, emulating similar heist from Lupin and Ocean's 8. As the police hunt down the treasures, it may be hard for some to separate cinematic art from real life. (Remon Haazen / Getty Images)

It was a scene straight out of Lupin — or maybe Ocean’s 8. In just four minutes, a team of thieves used a lift to scale the Louvre’s facade, slipped through a window, smashed display cases and vanished with eight priceless pieces from France’s crown jewel collection.

As the Associated Press reported, the robbery took place Sunday morning just steps from the Mona Lisa. The stolen items included sapphire and emerald sets once worn by Napoleon’s wives and Empress Eugénie’s diamond corsage brooch. One piece — Eugénie’s emerald crown — was later found outside the museum, broken. French Culture Minister Rachida Dati called it a “professional four-minute operation.”

No one was injured, but the embarrassment runs deep. The Louvre, already under fire for overcrowding and staff shortages, is now confronting how a “daylight heist” could unfold inside the world’s most famous museum in Paris.

For pop culture fans, though, the plot feels familiar. The pilot episode of Netflix’s original show Lupin centers around a Louvre jewel robbery, a modern French TV show inspired by Maurice Leblanc’s gentleman thief. In Ocean’s 8, an all-female crew lifts diamonds at the Met Gala. From The Thomas Crown Affair to Inside Man, audiences adore the art of the steal.

And maybe that’s the uncomfortable truth. Society romanticizes the perfect heist — the charm, the precision, the elegance — until it happens in real life. In 1911, when the Mona Lisa disappeared from this same museum, the thief was celebrated as a folk hero. But Sunday’s robbery, like that one, isn’t an art — it’s a crime.

It’s tempting to marvel at the audacity, to imagine Danny Ocean or Assane Diop at work. But as investigators comb Paris for clues, one question lingers: have we blurred the line between admiration and imitation?

By CK Smith

CK Smith is Salon's weekend editor.

MORE FROM CK Smith

Related Topics ------------------------------------------

Related Articles