Top Rank DVDs
Home Bookmark This Page
View Cart

 

The Bank Job [Blu-ray] + Digital Copy


Click image
for larger view
List Price: $39.99
Now Only: $17.99

17 Used from $11.99
43 New from $14.41

Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours


 
 


Editorial Reviews:  
 
 
Disney The Bank Job (Blu-ray) A small-time crook takeson a bank heist when an old friend offers him an inside track to the vault. Along with his hastily assembled team of low-rung criminals, Terry (Statham) finds himself deep into this real-life heist and quite suddenly the target of ruthless mobsters,the police, government officials at the highest level, and even the royal family.
 
 
A cheerful, energetic, and completely entertaining movie, The Bank Job follows some small-time hoods who think they've lucked into a big-time opportunity when they learn a bank's security system will be temporarily suspended--little suspecting that they're being manipulated by government agents for their own ends. The result is that the movie doubles its pleasures: While the robbery itself has the usual suspense of a heist film, when the robbery is over the hoods find themselves being hunted by the police, the government, and brutal criminal kingpins who were storing dangerous information in a safety deposit box. The Bank Job won't win any awards, but it's enormously fun. Director Roger Donaldson (No Way Out, Species) propels the action along with vigor, editing zippily with perfect clarity among multiple storylines and various colorful characters. Jason Statham (Snatch, The Transporter), as the leader of the bank robbers, successfully steps away from his usual bone-crunching roles to a more human presence. The rest of the cast--including Saffron Burrows (Deep Blue Sea), Keeley Hawes (Tipping the Velvet), David Suchet (Poirot), and many faces familiar from British film and television--give their characters the right degree of personality and flavor without getting fussy or detracting from the headlong rush of the story. A little sex, a lot of action, a sly sense of humor, and a twisty plot; if more movies had these basic pleasures, the world would be a happier place. --Bret Fetzer

Stills from Bank Job (click for larger image)







 


The Bank Job [Blu-ray] + Digital Copy

If you like this DVD movie, check out these items!

User Comments About The Bank Job [Blu-ray] + Digital Copy
 
ok flik
 

Watch Street Kings. Statham is always great, but this movie was slow and boring. The only good part is that its a true story. And the English accents drove me crazy. If you want a great movie, its not this one.



Surprisingly exciting
 

He's moved beyond simply scowling and karate chopping people in the windpipe. It's a no-frills tale that will leave you wondering at the lengths people will go to for wealth and to save their skin when they get in trouble.

Jason Statham shows that he's grown as an actor in this one. This film isn't fancy.

I didn't know anything about this film prior to seeing it other than that it was based on a true story about a group of English petty criminals who decide to tunnel beneath a bank in order to rob safe deposit boxes. The heist is the idea of a woman played by Saffron Burrows, who has a specific and ulterior motive for wanting to rob a certain safe deposit box.

It's not as polished as The Italian Job or as smarmy as Ocean's Eleven, Twelve and Thirteen. His crew members are distinct and colorful, and they are extremely likeable despite their criminal acts.

It's a sad story told simply and in straightforward fashion.



Sexed up, but still boring
 

The Bank Job has more nudity and blatant semi-porn than any movie I've seen in a while. Aside from Jason Stratham's character, all of the criminal gang are faceless and pretty unremarkable in the end. There is a haphazard quality to the film. If you want a more traditional, more action packed heist movie, watch The Italian Job. Unless you're a thirteen year old male, or want to watch porn without the stigma of actually having to rent it, you might find this movie a bit boring. There is little likability among them. Deeper examination of her story would have provided a very interesting parallel to the main action. This is a busting at the seams steam fest with crud loads of gratuitous sex, nudity, and titillation, but with very little real substance.

Also, the stakes feel fairly low until near the end of the film, when they are jacked through the roof, contributing to the unbalanced quality of the narrative flow. At times I was expecting it to go the direction of Oceans 11 and be a 'lovable set of criminals' movie where each character contributes their set of skills to accomplish a goal; a sort of criminal 'magnificent seven.' The Bank Job starts down that path, but then abandons it in mid stream. I'm all for period pieces that are free from cliched car chases, violent shoot-em ups, or two-dimensional characters, but sadly this movie lacks the former but without the compelling plot of a true drama. If you want something in the middle, there is always The Thomas Crown Affair. Most importantly, one of the best plot elements is left relatively unexplored: the story of a female MI5 agent who has infiltrated a domestic terrorist organization. If you want a cleaner alternative, check out Flawless.



Exceeds the formulaic take on the bank heist genre
 

I was looking for a way to characterize my feeling about Jason Statham. Hey, why mess with success. I went into "The Bank Job" thinking it would be a rather formulaic cinematic take on the bank heist genre. This is quite good stuff. Instead, I was pleasantly surprised. Then, I read this pitch-perfect gem from reviewer Monkdude on these pages: "I'm not the biggest Jason Statham fan, mainly because he always looks and sounds the same in every role, but here he shows a little more range and is quite likeable.". Lucky for me, he continues to play slight variations on that role.

[Guy Ritchie put him Lock, Stock & Two Smoking Barrels (Widescreen Edition) straight from a French Connection UK ad shoot]. Good show, Steve Chasman. He'll always be Handsome Rob (The Italian Job (Special Collector's Edition)) in my book. What struck me in the Extras is how Statham's managers picked and shepherded this film as a project for him. Hats off to co-writers Dick Clement & Ian La Frenais for wrapping a taut thriller around that. As I mentioned earlier, Statham's got a nice little career going.

Exactly. I'm impressed. I especially liked the 'Extras' on the DVD, which reinforced how much of the tale was snatched from a real-life event. Good management has definitely played a part in that. The guy's carved out quite a good career, despite having started as a model. [I think this was Steve Chasman discussing this point - he's a producer of the film].



The best caper film I've seen in years
 

Yes, stated like that, it's a somewhat complicated plot, but the characters explain everything very nicely along the way. The result is much preferable to the _Ocean's Eleven_ remake. Everybody enjoys a good heist flick, and this one is much better than most.

Terry Leather, whose used car business is slightly bent, is recruited by a woman with whom he used to be involved who was strong-armed into it by MI-5, which actually wants to acquire the contents of one of the bank's safety deposit boxes, which includes some incriminating photos involving a Royal Person, which were taken by a Trinidadian hoodlum, whom the government is consequently powerless to arrest. And this one turned out to be bigger even than the Great Train Robbery. One thing that makes this yarn especially enjoyable, at least to me, is that there are no big-name stars.

Based on the true story of the 1971 robbery of a bank in London's Baker Street, it involves a group of small-time crooks who use ingenuity and imagination to make their big score by tunneling under the bank's vault. This means the actors are defined entirely by their roles here, and the result is almost like a documentary. Not all the characters survive the robbery's aftermath, but those who do pretty much get away with it and are mostly sympathetic, at that.

In fact, Peter Bowles (whom I remember from _To the Manor Born,_ 25 years ago) is the only one I had even heard of.



 

Movie Categories
Action & Adventure
African American Cinema
Animation & Cartoons
Anime & Manga
Arts & International
Classic Movies
Comedies
Concerts & Music Videos
Cult Movies
Documentaries
Dramas
Educational
Family & Kids
Fitness & Yoga
Horror
Musicals
Mystery & Suspense
Sci Fi & Fantasy
Special Interest
Sports
Television Shows
VHS Movies
War & Military
Westerns

© 2005-2006 TopRankDVDs.com