The Thief Lord
When Prosper (Aaron Johnson) and Boniface's (Jasper Harris) parents die, their aunt Esther (Carole Boyd) plans to adopt five-year-old Bo and send 12-year-old Prosper away to boarding school. But befor…
The Thief Lord
When Prosper (Aaron Johnson) and Boniface's (Jasper Harris) parents die, their aunt Esther (Carole Boyd) plans to adopt five-year-old Bo and send 12-year-old Prosper away to boarding school. But before she can separate the two, Prosper takes Bo to Venice, the magical city about which their mother had often told them stories. In Venice, the boys live on the streets, and Prosper's money quickly runs out. When Bo becomes ill, Prosper tries to steal cough medicine from a pharmacy and narrowly escapes being caught. They use up the last of their food but are rescued by the Thief Lord (Rollo Weeks), a mask-wearing teenager named Scipio. The Thief Lord invites the boys to come to his hideout, an abandoned cinema called the Stella which is also home to three orphaned children Scipio has rescued: Hornet (Alice Connor), Riccio (George MacKay) and Mosca (Lathaniel Dyer). They steal from stores and Venice's wealthy tourists, but the majority of their money comes from Scipio, who goes on mysterious raids and always brings back treasures. Unfortunately, Barbarossa (Alexei Sayle) - the sleazy antique dealer to whom the children have sell their stolen goods - always cheats them. Bo brags that Prosper "is great at selling things", so Prosper is sent and ends up getting Barbarossa to quintuple his first price (500 euros, as opposed to 100 euros that he offered initially). Barbarossa tells Riccio and Prosper of a client who needs something stolen and will pay big money for it. Meanwhile, the boys' aunt and uncle, Esther and Max Hartlieb (Bob Goody), have traveled to Venice to find their nephews and hired Victor Getz (Jim Carter) to help. The detective stumbles across the boys in front of a pastry shop and chases them when they run away. He is distracted by a friend, Ida Spavento (Caroline Goodall), however, and loses them. Back at the Stella, the children celebrate Prosper's success. Riccio tells Scipio about Barbarossa's customer, and he decides to take the job. Scipio goes to see the client, a mysterious man known as the Conte (Geoffrey Hutchings), but only lets Prosper and Mosca meet him in person. The Conte asks them to steal a wooden wing, a fragment of the long-lost merry-go-round of the Merciful Sisters, for which he would pay fifty thousand euros. While Scipio, Prosper and Mosca are dealing with the Conte, Bo, Hornet and Riccio wait outside. Bo is approached by Getz, who befriends him. Bo accidentally let's slip that he lives in an abandoned cinema. Prosper and the others return and chase him off. Getz continues to follow them, however, so Scipio distracts him while the others escape, at the cost of letting him see his face. Scipio asks the gang to help stake out the mansion where the wing is kept while he goes away for a few days. Meanwhile, Getz finds his way to the house of Dottore Massimo (Robert Bathurst), owner of the Stella. He discovers that Scipio is not a poor orphan at all, but the rich Massimo's son. Massimo leaves Getz alone with Scipio, who makes a break for it and goes back to the Stella. Scipio urges his gang to leave but is unable to explain himself fully without revealing his true identity. Instead, the gang devises a plan to catch Getz; it works, and he is soon tied up. When Scipio doesn't show up for the stakeout the next day, the gang is confused. Getz (whom Mosca has released to help fix the projector) tells them what he knows. Not believing him, the gang visits Massimo's mansion. They find out that Scipio has lied to them about being an orphan and that all his 'loot' is from this house. It is Riccio who is the most upset, feeling betrayed. On their return to the Stella, they find Getz gone, although he has given them his 'word of honor' not to reveal their location, so long as he doesn't hear of any break-ins. He has fixed the projector, and they enjoy a short film Mosca has been working on for a long time. Even though their morale is low after discovering Scipio's betrayal, they decide to honor their bargain with the Conte. Getz tells Prosper and Bo's aunt and uncle that the boys have left Venice for Corfu, but they don't believe him and fire him. When the gang go to steal the wooden wing, they encounter Scipio but refuse to work with him. While looking around, they accidentally wake the owner of the house: Ida. After a confrontation, Ida agrees to let them take the wing so long as she comes with them. She takes them to the convent of the Merciful Sisters, where they learn the mystical secret of the merry-go-round: children who ride it become adults, and adults become children. Scipio takes them all on a boat to meet the Conte. The transaction goes off without a hitch. Barbarossa (who had been unable to get information out of Prosper, Hornet, and Riccio) leads police to the Stella, where they take Hornet and Bo, who had remained behind during the exchange, and close down the Stella. Prosper and the others return to find Hornet and Bo gone; thinking it was Getz who sold them out, they go to confront him. Getz insists he is on their side, then tells them that the money the Conte gave them is fake. With the phone on speaker, he calls Aunt Esther and learns that Bo is with her and Hornet with the police. Ida and Getz are able to get Hornet, whose real name is Catarina, from the Merciful Sisters, with whom the police have left her, and Ida allows the gang to stay at her place. That night, Scipio sneaks out of his father's mansion and finds and wakes Prosper. He persuades him to come with him to the Conte's secret island in order to ride the merry-go-round to become an adult. Bo sneaks out of the hotel they are staying in and returns to the Stella. Getz, alerted by a phone call from Aunt Esther, finds Bo and brings him back to Ida's house. Meanwhile, the Conte (whose real name is Renzo) and his sister the Contessa (Anita Wright) are now children (having ridden the merry-go-round), around the same as Riccio and the others. The Conte offers a ride on the merry-go-round as payment in lieu of money. Only Scipio takes the offer, but he jumps off after being warned by Prosper and the Conte that he risks becoming an old man. When Barbarossa appears, Scipio encourages him to use the ride, which turns him into a young child. The merry-go-round breaks as his ride ends. On their return, Prosper is reunited with Bo. The adult Scipio appoints himself Getz's new partner in the detective business, to which the man does not object. After drinking himself to sleep, Barbarossa is left alone as the children reunite at Ida's. The adults' step outside. The aunt and uncle, who had followed Getz, seize the opportunity to enter the house and try to snatch Bo. Riccio, Prosper, and Mosca fend off the two adults while Hornet keeps Bo with her, but the children lose the upper hand until Scipio returns and forces the uncle and aunt out at gunpoint. Riccio and Mosca take the money they deserve from Barbarossa's safe and split it among the gang. Scipio uses his share to buy the boys a boat and establishes bank accounts for the others. In the final scene, Victor, Ida, Prosper, Hornet and Bo are on Scipio's old boat. Driving the boat, Ida comments that they would make a great family. They all happily decide to stay together.
The Thief Lord
Adventure,Drama,Family
Film Details
When Prosper (Aaron Johnson) and Boniface's (Jasper Harris) parents die, their aunt Esther (Carole Boyd) plans to adopt five-year-old Bo and send 12-year-old Prosper away to boarding school. But before she can separate the two, Prosper takes Bo to Venice, the magical city about which their mother had often told them stories. In Venice, the boys live on the streets, and Prosper's money quickly runs out.
When Bo becomes ill, Prosper tries to steal cough medicine from a pharmacy and narrowly escapes being caught. They use up the last of their food but are rescued by the Thief Lord (Rollo Weeks), a mask-wearing teenager named Scipio. The Thief Lord invites the boys to come to his hideout, an abandoned cinema called the Stella which is also home to three orphaned children Scipio has rescued: Hornet (Alice Connor), Riccio (George MacKay) and Mosca (Lathaniel Dyer).
They steal from stores and Venice's wealthy tourists, but the majority of their money comes from Scipio, who goes on mysterious raids and always brings back treasures. Unfortunately, Barbarossa (Alexei Sayle) - the sleazy antique dealer to whom the children have sell their stolen goods - always cheats them. Bo brags that Prosper "is great at selling things", so Prosper is sent and ends up getting Barbarossa to quintuple his first price (500 euros, as opposed to 100 euros that he offered initially).
Barbarossa tells Riccio and Prosper of a client who needs something stolen and will pay big money for it. Meanwhile, the boys' aunt and uncle, Esther and Max Hartlieb (Bob Goody), have traveled to Venice to find their nephews and hired Victor Getz (Jim Carter) to help. The detective stumbles across the boys in front of a pastry shop and chases them when they run away.
He is distracted by a friend, Ida Spavento (Caroline Goodall), however, and loses them. Back at the Stella, the children celebrate Prosper's success. Riccio tells Scipio about Barbarossa's customer, and he decides to take the job.
Scipio goes to see the client, a mysterious man known as the Conte (Geoffrey Hutchings), but only lets Prosper and Mosca meet him in person. The Conte asks them to steal a wooden wing, a fragment of the long-lost merry-go-round of the Merciful Sisters, for which he would pay fifty thousand euros. While Scipio, Prosper and Mosca are dealing with the Conte, Bo, Hornet and Riccio wait outside.
Bo is approached by Getz, who befriends him. Bo accidentally let's slip that he lives in an abandoned cinema. Prosper and the others return and chase him off.
Getz continues to follow them, however, so Scipio distracts him while the others escape, at the cost of letting him see his face. Scipio asks the gang to help stake out the mansion where the wing is kept while he goes away for a few days. Meanwhile, Getz finds his way to the house of Dottore Massimo (Robert Bathurst), owner of the Stella.
He discovers that Scipio is not a poor orphan at all, but the rich Massimo's son. Massimo leaves Getz alone with Scipio, who makes a break for it and goes back to the Stella. Scipio urges his gang to leave but is unable to explain himself fully without revealing his true identity.
Instead, the gang devises a plan to catch Getz; it works, and he is soon tied up. When Scipio doesn't show up for the stakeout the next day, the gang is confused. Getz (whom Mosca has released to help fix the projector) tells them what he knows.
Not believing him, the gang visits Massimo's mansion. They find out that Scipio has lied to them about being an orphan and that all his 'loot' is from this house. It is Riccio who is the most upset, feeling betrayed.
On their return to the Stella, they find Getz gone, although he has given them his 'word of honor' not to reveal their location, so long as he doesn't hear of any break-ins. He has fixed the projector, and they enjoy a short film Mosca has been working on for a long time. Even though their morale is low after discovering Scipio's betrayal, they decide to honor their bargain with the Conte.
Getz tells Prosper and Bo's aunt and uncle that the boys have left Venice for Corfu, but they don't believe him and fire him. When the gang go to steal the wooden wing, they encounter Scipio but refuse to work with him. While looking around, they accidentally wake the owner of the house: Ida.
After a confrontation, Ida agrees to let them take the wing so long as she comes with them. She takes them to the convent of the Merciful Sisters, where they learn the mystical secret of the merry-go-round: children who ride it become adults, and adults become children. Scipio takes them all on a boat to meet the Conte.
The transaction goes off without a hitch. Barbarossa (who had been unable to get information out of Prosper, Hornet, and Riccio) leads police to the Stella, where they take Hornet and Bo, who had remained behind during the exchange, and close down the Stella. Prosper and the others return to find Hornet and Bo gone; thinking it was Getz who sold them out, they go to confront him.
Getz insists he is on their side, then tells them that the money the Conte gave them is fake. With the phone on speaker, he calls Aunt Esther and learns that Bo is with her and Hornet with the police. Ida and Getz are able to get Hornet, whose real name is Catarina, from the Merciful Sisters, with whom the police have left her, and Ida allows the gang to stay at her place.
That night, Scipio sneaks out of his father's mansion and finds and wakes Prosper. He persuades him to come with him to the Conte's secret island in order to ride the merry-go-round to become an adult. Bo sneaks out of the hotel they are staying in and returns to the Stella.
Getz, alerted by a phone call from Aunt Esther, finds Bo and brings him back to Ida's house. Meanwhile, the Conte (whose real name is Renzo) and his sister the Contessa (Anita Wright) are now children (having ridden the merry-go-round), around the same as Riccio and the others. The Conte offers a ride on the merry-go-round as payment in lieu of money.
Only Scipio takes the offer, but he jumps off after being warned by Prosper and the Conte that he risks becoming an old man. When Barbarossa appears, Scipio encourages him to use the ride, which turns him into a young child. The merry-go-round breaks as his ride ends.
On their return, Prosper is reunited with Bo. The adult Scipio appoints himself Getz's new partner in the detective business, to which the man does not object. After drinking himself to sleep, Barbarossa is left alone as the children reunite at Ida's.
The adults' step outside. The aunt and uncle, who had followed Getz, seize the opportunity to enter the house and try to snatch Bo. Riccio, Prosper, and Mosca fend off the two adults while Hornet keeps Bo with her, but the children lose the upper hand until Scipio returns and forces the uncle and aunt out at gunpoint.
Riccio and Mosca take the money they deserve from Barbarossa's safe and split it among the gang. Scipio uses his share to buy the boys a boat and establishes bank accounts for the others. In the final scene, Victor, Ida, Prosper, Hornet and Bo are on Scipio's old boat.
Driving the boat, Ida comments that they would make a great family. They all happily decide to stay together..