Genre: Action/Crime
Director: Nimrod Antal
Cast: Matt Dillon, Columbus Short, Milo Ventimiglia,
Skeet Ulrich, Laurence Fishburne, Jean Reno, Amaury Nolasco,
Fred Ward, Andre Kinney
RunTime: 1 hr 28 mins
Released By: Columbia TriStar
Rating: PG (Violence)
Official Website: http://www.armoredmovie.com/
Opening Day: 4 February 2010
Synopsis:
A crew of officers at an armored transport security firm risk
their lives when they embark on the ultimate heist….against
their own company. Armed with a seemingly fool-proof plan,
the men plan on making off with a fortune with harm to none.
But when an unexpected witness interferes, the plan quickly
unravels and all bets are off.
Movie Review:
Who
watches the watchmen indeed. Imagine the temptation if you're
charged with the responsibility of handling millions of dollars
everyday as you transport cold hard cash from one point to
another, with potential danger lurking around every corner
because your armoured truck is a prized target for thieves
who dare hijack your vehicle or conduct a heist. Such heist
films involving personal greed and inside jobs are nothing
new, given flicks like Hard Rain (starring Morgan Freeman
and Christian Slater) and The Take (starring John Leguizamo)
dealing with the same subject matter of corrupt security colleagues,
though Armoured upped the ante by having a slew of better
known names in its cast with the likes of Matt Dillon, Jean
Reno and Laurence Fishburne.
But the story here focuses on the rookie guard of Eagle Shield,
Ty Hackett (Columbus Short), a decorated war veteran whom
the system left behind, with parents already gone, a juvenile
kid brother to look after and double mortgages to pay off.
Suddenly, being propositioned by his senior colleagues to
join them in their opportunistic theft of US$42 million seems
like a god-given chance to settle his problems in one fell
swoop, especially with the promise that their alibi's water
tight, and that nobody would get hurt in the process. Should
that happen of course, we'll be in for with a darn boring
film, so expect Murphy's Law to kick in to shake things up
and change their game plan completely, making it all look
like an unplanned disaster..
So begins what could have been delivered in Reservoir Dogs
proportions, and for a moment I thought director Nimrod Antal
had it all figured out.. After all, I had enjoyed his film
Kontroll (2003) tremendously and felt that this would be an
equally thrilling ride. The build up was, but the execution
slowly crept into the implausible and became increasingly
illogical as the film went on, no thanks to the story by James
V. Simpson that clearly exposed major shortcomings in the
narrative plot with obvious research slack.
For instance, if security firms ran the way the fictional
Eagle Shield firm did in the business of transporting cash
safely from point to point, one can imagine the continuous
amounts of insurance payouts that has to happen. There are
irrational steps along the way of the proposed heist, and
it is precisely this complacency or incompetency that you
have to accept in order to watch the film, or buy into a number
of conveniences. Otherwise, everything will run fine and dandy,
and the bad guys all caught the minute the armored trucks
deviate for their secret rendezvous. Then again the counter-arguments
would be that this group aren't too bright to begin with,
which you may be inclined to believe when characters are exposed
to be simpletons, and serving little purpose except to be
body counts from ingenious, improvised methods to die.
The unnamed star of the show then had to be the armoured vehicles,
which were shot with some degree of romanticism involving
its thick doors, bulletproof windows, and a battering ram
of a body which were well on display during an obligatory
chase sequence. A pity that the film had gaping weak points,
just like how the muscled, reinforced vehicle, had gaping
holes to be exploited in its hinges, and thin floorboards.
Movie
Rating:
(Needs a thicker hide to protect itself from plot
cliches and conveniences)
Review by Stefan Shih
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