Starring
Craig Fairbrass, James Cosmo, Nathalie Cox, Mem Ferda, Steven
Berkoff, Nick Moran, Roland Manookian, Katie Clarkson-Hill. Directed
by Mark McQueen. (2017, 95 min).
Huh?
What was that?
I
found myself asking this question a lot during London Heist, a British
crime thriller starring a bunch of second-tier blokes who've popped-up in
lots of other films, but their names escape you.
Craig
Fairbrass (that soccer-loving thug from Cliffhanger) stars as
Jack, the leader of a group of bank robbers that pull-off what's
supposed to be one final score before calling it quits, only to have
it stolen by a local mob boss, who also kills Jack's dad (Steven
Berkoff, that ruthless kingpin from Beverly Hills Cop). Jack
hides his girlfriend, Nicole (Nathalie Cox, once talked into starring
in Clash of the Titans), with family friend Ray (James Cosmo,
Mel Gibson's uncle from Braveheart) while he seeks to avenge
his father's death and get the money back. Ray, however, talks Jack
into pulling off one more heist.
Everyone knows damn well who stole the cookies from the cookie jar. |
It's
a pretty standard "one-last-job" crime caper, full of the
usual shoot-outs, chases, escapes, double-crosses and the obsessed
cop hellbent on bringing the crew down (Nick Moran, one of the few guys from Lock,
Stock & Two Smoking Barrels who didn't really move up the totem pole). The action is adequate, though
the film itself only moves in fits and starts and there aren't any
real surprises. We've seen most of these characters before, so much
so that we suspect who's behind it all almost immediately.
Worst
of all, I had a really hard time following the damn thing.
The plot isn't all that complex, but most of the characters
(especially Fairbrass) mumble their dialogue with such thick British
accents that I had to back up the film a few times just to understand
what the hell they were saying. Every conversation was like listening
to a cast of Ozzy Osbournes.
All
of which makes London Heist more work to enjoy than the
overly-familiar story warrants. Everything culminates in a
predictable, anticlimactic denouement that isn't really worth the
time invested. Ultimately, this is a film as generic as its title.
EXTRA
KIBBLES
None
KITTY CONSENSUS:
MEH...
2 comments:
great film
I don't think it was at all bad. Craig was good as was Nick. My favourite villains Mem Ferda and James Cosmo absolutely smashed it !
It's definitely worth a watch.
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