Following the 2001 economic collapse in Argentina, many citizens felt the banks had "robbed" them. Consequently, the public viewed these thieves as folk heroes rather than villains.
The heist was a "success" until it wasn’t. The documentary explores how the group was eventually caught not through forensic evidence, but because of a personal betrayal. Alicia Di Tullio, the wife of Rubén de la Torre, turned them in after discovering her husband planned to flee to Paraguay with a younger woman and his share of the loot. Los Ladrones: la verdadera historia del robo de...
The heist is celebrated for its lack of bloodshed, relying on wit and distraction rather than brute force. 5. Conclusion Following the 2001 economic collapse in Argentina, many
Fernando Araujo, a plastic artist and martial arts instructor, explains the heist not as a criminal act, but as a conceptual art piece. He spent years planning the "perfect crime" to prove it could be done without violence. The documentary explores how the group was eventually
Sebastián García Bolster, the technical brain, details the construction of "The Power" (a hydraulic tool used to crack the safe deposit boxes) and the complex tunnel system used for the escape.