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The Bank Job (2008)
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Overview
Tagline:
The true story of a heist gone wrong... in all the right ways.Plot:
Martine offers Terry a lead on a foolproof bank hit on London's Baker Street. She targets a roomful of safe deposit boxes worth millions in cash and jewelry. But Terry and his crew don't realize the boxes also contain a treasure trove of dirty secrets - secrets that will thrust them into a deadly web of corruption and illicit scandal. full summary | add synopsisPlot Keywords:
moreNewsDesk:
(18 articles)
'Knight' spends third week at Oz No.1 (From digitalspy. 6 August 2008, 2:38 AM, PDT)
21 Is No. 1 (From Studio Briefing. 31 July 2008, 10:38 AM, PDT)
User Comments:
I'll Throw a Brick at You! moreCast
(Cast overview, first billed only)| Jason Statham | ... | Terry Leather | |
| Saffron Burrows | ... | Martine Love | |
| Stephen Campbell Moore | ... | Kevin Swain | |
| Daniel Mays | ... | Dave Shilling | |
| James Faulkner | ... | Guy Arthur Singer | |
| Alki David | ... | Bambas | |
| Michael Jibson | ... | Eddie Burton | |
| Georgia Taylor | ... | Ingrid Burton | |
| Richard Lintern | ... | Tim Everett | |
| Peter Bowles | ... | Miles Urquhart | |
| Alistair Petrie | ... | Philip Lisle | |
| Hattie Morahan | ... | Gale Benson | |
| Julian Lewis Jones | ... | Snow | |
| Andrew Brooke | ... | Quinn | |
| Rupert Frazer | ... | Lord Drysdale |
Additional Details
Also Known As:
Baker Street (UK) (working title)D-Notice (UK) (working title)
The Bank Job (USA) (working title)
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Parents Guide:
View content advisory for parentsRuntime:
111 minCountry:
UKLanguage:
EnglishColor:
ColorAspect Ratio:
2.35 : 1 moreCertification:
Canada:14A (Alberta/British Columbia/Ontario) | Australia:MA | Singapore:R21 | Finland:K-15 | Switzerland:14 (canton of Vaud) | Malaysia:18PL (cut) | UK:15 | Philippines:R-13 (MTRCB) | Canada:13+ (Québec) | Brazil:16 | Norway:15 | Germany:12 | Switzerland:14 (canton of Geneva) | Ireland:15A | USA:R (certificate #43693) | Portugal:M/16MOVIEmeter: 
Fun Stuff
Trivia:
Roger Donaldson said one of the most difficult days of filming was when he filmed the brothel scene. The scene called for the women to be walking around wearing only garters. However, Donaldson said that when he went to film the scene he discovered that most of the women shaved their genitals, which would have been anachronistic for 1971. So the actresses had to wear pubic wigs called "merkins." This caused a problem because the merkins were hard to secure in place and kept slipping, causing Donaldson much aggravation. moreGoofs:
Anachronisms: The two tone police sirens as heard on the film have a distinct Gallic note, and are not the familiar two tone siren used by the Metropolitan Police in the '70s and '80s. moreQuotes:
[first lines]Eddie Burton: [while drilling a mileage meter back] Another Terry Leather low mileage here.
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Soundtrack:
Save Me moreFAQ
A NOTE REGARDING SPOILERSHow much sex, violence, and profanity are in this movie?
Is this movie based on a novel?
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Sold to the American public as another D-level action pic staring Jason Statham, "The Bank Job" is actually a crafty British heist flick based on an incredible true story. The screenwriters deserve credit for creating a serviceable script with so many intertwining stories based on little actual evidence, conjecture, here-say, and conspiracy theories revolving around royal and political sex scandals, militant Caribbean drug lords, undercover MI5 agents, bumbling crooks, crooked cops, and double-crosses and cover-ups. It could've easily been a confusing mess, but providing the viewer pays attention, "The Bank Job" gets the job done as crackerjack entertainment.
Though aptly directed by veteran Roger Donaldson, the film does suffer from an overly salacious opening ten minutes designed to grab the audience's attention, some shoddy editing, and an intrusively bad action-style music score. There's also an attention to 1970's period detail in the dialogue and clothes that comes across as caricature and adds an accidentally humorous undertone to the otherwise cold-as-ice affair. However, the details of the "truth is stranger than fiction" tale and the fun had by the ensemble cast make for a breezy way to spend a few hours.
Donaldson also has an eye for the ladies. Led by a smashingly gorgeous Saffron Burrows (looking like a European version of Michelle Pfeiffer circa 1992), the powerful women depicted in "The Bank Job" are far more than just eye candy. Statham is also fairly good as the head of the bank robbing crew, and when he finally throws a brick at a guy near the end of the film, it will put a smile on any action fan's face.
Things get tidied up a bit too nicely in the end, where it seems only the really villainous characters have to face justice, but before the credits role, there are a series of real-life epilogued details plastered on the screen that make the viewer realize maybe this all really did happen. Now that's a jolly good show.