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(2008) rt: 111m **
Director: Roger Donaldson
Starring: Jason Stratham, Saffron Burrows
The heist movie is as old as moviemaking itself.
The genre has been tried in every variation, but usually it involves
a reluctant leader who is either enticed into to doing just one more
big score before retiring to some beach in Fiji, or else our protagonist
is forced into committing said crime because some evil dude is holding
his wife/daughter/politician and he is the only person who can pull
off the caper for the crime lord, mob boss, drug kingpin or whomever
it is who was smart enough to hold his loved ones for ransom.
None of that seems to apply here, as Jeremy Stratham and his little
band of bank robbers basically seem to need the money. The opportunity
presents itself in the form of a femme fatale who used to be in Stratham's
life back in the day--and apparently, even as a drop-dead beautiful
model, slept with one of his schmucky buddies. She's a femme fatale
because her motivations are unclear. But, unfortunately for the viewer,
we know exactly what's going on from the beginning. And it's not because
we deduce any of the facts; the filmmaker invites us in to all of
the inside dope. That, I feel, is the film's big undoing.
Normally in these twisty caper movies, we the audience have to try
to peer around blind corners to figure out the motivation of every
character, figuring out what's next and how they're going to pull
it off. Sure, all may be revealed in the end, but it's that reveal
(the "aha" moment) that makes these films fun. This movie
believes in total transparency. We know exactly how things go down,
who's after whom, the intent of every character, etc. That's what
makes this more of the typical Jeremy Stratham, straight action, movie
than you would expect. Except that he throws like one punch the entire
movie, and drives nothing but a van in one scene. Atypical for him.
I could just feel the script being planned out, as the movie telegraphs
every move, fills in all the requisite stereotypical characters and
just kind of dies on the vine.
I was disappointed, honestly, as I had heard decent things about this
film. It must have been from people who haven't seen the fifty other
movies that executed the same plot in a better way. [DVD, MF]
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