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February 24, 2008

The Bank Job, a review

The Bank Job

Based on a true story, The Bank Job starts in the crystal blue waters of the Caribbean, where a “British royal princess” is frolicking in the shallows.  She takes her frolic into a nearby beach villa where it quickly turns into a hot threesome with an athletic man and another young woman.  Unknown to her she is being photographed through an open window.

Suddenly we are back in grey wet London.  It’s the early seventies and Terry Leather (Jason Statham) is trying to sell second-hand cars out of his lockup garage in South London.  Terry is up to his ears in debt to a loan shark whose heavy crew are demanding payment or punishment.  

The royal photographs are worrying the upper class spooks in charge of MI5.  The photos have fallen into the hands of Michael X, an afro-Caribbean radical whose politics are a cover for racketeering and prostitution.  His possession of the photographs prevents the police from moving against him. 

Roger Donaldson (director of the superb The World’s Fastest Indian) paints his picture of 70s London with verve and economy.  Business is depressed, activist politics are on the increase, and a corrupt London police force is taking payoffs from the vice lords.  In scene after short scene, Donaldson shows London’s sleazy underbelly, with drugs and prostitution fuelling organized crime.

MI5 discover that the photographs are in a safe deposit box in Baker Street,.they need a way of getting them without arousing suspicion.  Luck comes their way, in the form of Saffron Burrows, a model with a past.  In return for a deal she recruits Terry to rob the bank.

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Jason Statham gives a really finely graduated performance as Terry.  Tough and manly, he is too smart for South London but too desperate to say no to the easy money he can get from the robbery.  He and Burrows’ Melanie circle around each other, Melanie playing to Terry’s unspoken desire for her.  The interplay between Statham and Burrows is subtly portrayed and they act out these scenes with a worried intensity which is both believable and captivating.

Comedy
The tension of the movie is alleviated by the comic strand that runs all through the Bank Job.  Terry’s mates are a pair of likely lads, Dave, a part-time porn actor and Kev, a wedding photographer who lives in a fantasy of being David Bailey.  Terry beefs up the team with a tough Greek welder/mechanic and an upper-class con man for a front man.  But it is Dave and Kev who give The Bank Job the sort of droll down-to-earth comedy that made The Italian job so much fun to watch.
   

Men and Machines
The Bank Job intercuts between the cynical old Etonians running MI5 and Terry’s slightly shambolic gang.  The movie steps up the pressure when Terry starts the robbery.  Here director Donaldson is on his favourite territory, men and machinery, and the Bank Job really starts to accelerate.  Terry and his crew dig a tunnel from the basement of an empty shop to the vault of the bank.  Donaldson goes the whole hog, with pneumatic hammers, thermic lances and pickaxes.  This is a bank raid in force, a visual and aural feast as the gang literally dig for gold. 

Donaldson directs the Bank Job at a cracking pace and sheer excitement drags the viewer along.  He gets amazing performances from every one of his cast and their characters all become very real in a short space of time.  He does this by dint of a tight articulate script that exposes the real feelings that his players have.    

Once the caper has gone down the gang realize they are in something much bigger and much more dangerous than they ever expected.  The Bank Job  becomes darker and more desperate and the caper starts to unravel, as weaker characters begin to get into trouble. 

This is a hell of a movie.  Donaldson directs with a real passion, the Bank job is fiercely suspenseful and once the vault is robbed, every scene is fraught with danger.  There is not a dud moment in the movie.  Jason Statham gives a magnificent performance, as an ordinary man called upon to show extraordinary courage.  His performance is by turns smart, loving, tough and desperate and there is not a scene that he does not carry with style.  Once again we are on Donaldson’s home turf, showing the strength of will that some men can conjure up, the determination to beat all odds.

Donaldson also makes the women in the Bank Job very real and Saffron Burrows as Melanie gets almost as much screen time as Statham and even when she is out of her depth her character never loses her guts.  There is also a visceral passionate scene between Terry and his wife (Keeley Hawes) that simply makes you hold your breath.  These are not  bit-players but living, breathing women in a world of danger.  

There are too many great performances to count.  Peter Bowles as a ruthless scheming MI5 boss almost steals the movie, as does David Suchet as the murdering vice lord in league with Michael X.  

It is such a pleasure to see a British film that is this good.  The Bank Job has character, plot and action and is a really satisfying film on so many levels.  The way it plays out the corrupt connections between the police, vice and the establishment has never been done so well.  

Go and see this movie.  It is sheer enjoyment from beginning to end and virtuoso moviemaking. The Bank Job  has all the hallmarks of a great British movie.     
 

The Bank Job goes on general release in the UK from the 28th February and in the US from the 1st of March.

Trailers for the Bank Job are here:

Windows Media      

High Definition Trailer

Medium Definition Trailer

Low Definition Trailer

   

Real Player

High Definition Trailer

Medium Definition Trailer

Low Definition Trailer

- Filed under: Books, Movies & Music — John Van Rijn @ 8:14 pm


3 Comments »

  1. Hi John,
    Thought your review was excellent - went to see the film on Saturday night and loved it. The review was totally accurate and really well done.

    Comment by Jim Handley — March 10, 2008 @ 8:47 am

  2. Hi John,
    Thought your review was excellent. We to see the film on Saturday and loved it. the review was spot on and very well written. Thanks

    Comment by Jim Handley — March 10, 2008 @ 8:48 am

  3. cool you saytik! Write more!

    Comment by George — November 6, 2008 @ 2:55 am

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