The Bank Job

March 7th, 2008



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The Bank Job

Still of Roger Donaldson and Jason Statham in The Bank JobRoger Donaldson and Saffron Burrows at event of The Bank JobStill of David Suchet in The Bank JobStill of Jason Statham in The Bank JobStill of Jason Statham and Daniel Mays in The Bank JobStill of Jason Statham in The Bank Job

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.

Release Year: 2008

Rating: 7.4/10 (77,033 voted)

Critic's Score: 69/100

Director: Roger Donaldson

Stars: Jason Statham, Saffron Burrows, Stephen Campbell Moore

Storyline
Business is slow for Terry Leather, a London car dealer, married with children. He's an artful dodger, so Martine, a former model with a thing for him, brings him her scheme: a bank's alarm is off for a couple weeks, so let's tunnel into the vault. He assembles a team, not realizing her real goal is a safe-deposit box with compromising photos of a royal: she needs the photos to trade for avoiding a jail sentence - and MI-5, or is it MI-6, is pulling the strings two steps removed. A Trinidadian thug, a high-end bordello owner, and a pornographer also have things stored in the vault, so the break-in threatens many a powerful personage. Is there any way these amateurs can pull it off?

Writers: Dick Clement, Ian La Frenais

Cast:
Jason Statham - Terry Leather
Saffron Burrows - Martine Love
Stephen Campbell Moore - Kevin Swain
Daniel Mays - Dave Shilling
James Faulkner - Guy Singer
Alki David - Bambas
Michael Jibson - Eddie Burton
Georgia Taylor - Ingrid Burton
Richard Lintern - Tim Everett
Peter Bowles - Miles Urquart
Alistair Petrie - Philip Lisle
Hattie Morahan - Gale Benson
Julian Lewis Jones - Snow
Andrew Brooke - Quinn
Rupert Frazer - Lord Drysdale

Taglines: The true story of a heist gone wrong... in all the right ways.



Details

Official Website: Lionsgate [uk] | Lionsgate [United States] |

Release Date: 7 March 2008

Filming Locations: Aldwych Underground Station, Aldwych, Holborn, London, England, UK

Box Office Details

Budget: $20,000,000 (estimated)

Opening Weekend: £951,013 (UK) (2 March 2008) (324 Screens)

Gross: $30,028,592 (USA) (1 June 2008)



Technical Specs

Runtime:



Did You Know?

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.

Goofs:
Anachronisms: By 1971, almost all new cars in Britain were delivered with reflective white / yellow plates (introduced in 1966). So it would be very odd to see silver on black plates on a nearly new car (such as the Triumph driven by the MI6 agents).

Quotes:
[first lines]
Eddie Burton: [while drilling a mileage meter back] Another Terry Leather low mileage here.



User Review

Improbable Reality

Rating: 8/10

If "The Bank Job" were fiction, it would be a fairly decent robbery caper. As it is, "The Bank Job," a veritable documentary and realistic whodunit, is awesome.

Unlike most films, this one requires a couple of advance tips: First, watch it with the improbable idea in mind that most of it is actual, hard-to-believe truth; second, don't be impatient. As the story of a 1971 bank robbery begins, the setting in London, the parade of seemingly unconnected stories and characters is rather confusing, complex, disjointed. But stay with it - there is a crescendo of excitement and excellence.

The true elements of "The Bank Job," some hidden until recently by Britain's "D Notice" censorship law (modified in 1993, becoming DA, or Defense Advisory) are these:

1. A big bank robbery did take place on Baker Street in 1971, culprits never found, money never recovered. After initial big headlines, the story disappeared from the newspapers.

2. There was serious police corruption in London in the 1970s, cops on payrolls of drug dealers and pornographers.

3. Princess Margaret was involved in a series of affairs, some caught on compromising photos which were not published by the otherwise relentlessly sensational British press, under the D-Notice rule.

4. There was a militant British black-power advocate, called Michael X, involved in a one-man, multi-country crime wave. (In 1971, John Lennon paid for Michael X's bail, something not mentioned in the film.)

"The Bank Job" director Roger Donaldson (of "No Way Out") brings together all these true threads in a way that may be true even in its totality, director and cast prevailing over some shoddy work from too many writers.

The content is all true, the context is excitingly possible. Did the government, in trying to prevent exposure of Princess Margaret by evidence in Michael X's possession, mastermind the bank robbery? Was MI-5 or MI-6 (says a policeman in the film: "I never remember which is which") involved, and actually assisting the robbers? Again, possibly.

The cast is remarkable: Jason Statham is the ringleader, the bad guy of "Transporter" and "The Italian Job" turning into a scourge of the really bad guys. Saffron Burrows, James Spader's vamp nemesis on "Boston Legal," brings her remarkable name and looks to the criminally and emotionally ambiguous major female role.

Peter De Jersey is a totally scary Michael X; David ("Poirot") Suchet is a frightening crime lord; and a whole host of top British stage actors fill in big roles and small ones. Don't be misled by reviews speaking of a so-so thriller - "The Bank Job" is a great deal more than that, even to the point that you may want to see it more than once.

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