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 | | Bank Job (Widescreen) | | Videos/DVDs: See more matches | | | Video Reviews Available: 6 |  | The Bank Job - DVD Review By: Chris Cabin - filmcritic.com DVD Reviews Published on: 7/4/2008 7:34 PM | |
Based on some unspeakable, super classified bank robbery that took place in 1971 London, the investigation of which yielded no recovered money nor any arrests, Roger Donaldson's The Bank Job throttles its engines and tosses in just enough criminal bottom-dwellers to keep the viewers' minds away from the fact that it's still just another heist flick with a cockney accent and a taste for pints.
Names changed (get this) to protect the guilty, the whole mess breaks out when political revolutionary Michael X (Peter De Jersey) snaps some shots of Princess Margaret getting double teamed by two young men on a secluded island. read the full review | |
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 | | Ocean's Twelve | | Videos/DVDs: See more matches | |  | Ocean's Twelve - DVD Review By: Christopher Null - filmcritic.com DVD Reviews Published on: 9/15/2007 4:23 AM | |
Danny Ocean and his crew of master thieves are back on the hunt in Ocean's Twelve, but damn if you won't have a hard time mustering up an opinion about it. Twelve picks up 3 1/2 years after the surprisingly delightful original (er, remake), with our heroes living high on the hog on the spoils from robbing Terry Benedict's (Andy Garcia) Bellagio casino. Abruptly, Benedict finds them all -- Danny (George Clooney) is married to Tess in the suburbs, Frank (Bernie Mac) is running a nail salon, and so on -- and demands his money back in two weeks. read the full review | |
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 | | Ocean's Eleven (2001-Widescreen) | | Videos/DVDs: See more matches | | User Rating: 5 |  | Ocean's Eleven (2001) - DVD Review By: Annette Cardwell - filmcritic.com DVD Reviews Published on: 9/15/2007 4:23 AM | |
In the words of George Peppard from his immortal role on TV’s The A-Team, I love it when a plan comes together, and, man, does it ever come together in nearly every possible way in Steven Soderbergh’s very clever, stylish, slick, and engrossing remake of the Rat Pack ensemble heist film Ocean’s Eleven.
Since his feature debut with sex, lies and videotape, Soderbergh has walked the tenuous line between art and entertainment. He very rarely insults his audiences’ intelligence or sense of humor or style -- even when he busted into the Hollywood big time. Now, a year after picking up his Oscar for the epic Traffic, he shows his range by dipping back into his old cheeky, seductive comedic bag of tricks last seen in Out of Sight. read the full review | |
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