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| Original Title |
Bandits |
| Director |
Barry Levinson |
| Genre |
Comedy, Crime, Drama, Romance |
| Released |
2001-10-12 |
| MPAA Rating |
Rated PG-13 for some sexual content, language and violence. |
| Rated |
6.8 |
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| A charismatic convict (Bruce Willis) and a hypochondriac inmate (Billy Bob Thornton) break out of prison in a cement truck and immediately start a bank robbing spree. Becoming known as the "Sleepover Bandits", the two kidnap bank managers the night before their robbery, spend the night with their families, and then all go to the bank in the morning to get the dough. Using a dim-witted stunt man (Troy Garrity) as their getaway driver and lookout, the three successfully pull off several jobs that gets them recognition on a tv show about America's criminals. When a bored housewife (Cate Blanchett) with a failing marriage decides to runaway, she ends up in the hands of the criminals. Initially attracted to Willis, she nonetheless also ends up in bed with Thornton and a confused romantic relationship begins. Continuing along with their spree, the bandits hit the wall when the bank managers realize that they are non-violent and therefore no threat to them or their employees. This leads to one more big score at the Alamo Bank, where in the very opening scenes, things appear to go awry. |
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| Bruce Willis as Joe Blake , Billy Bob Thornton as Terry Lee Collins , Cate Blanchett as Kate Wheeler , Troy Garity as Harvey 'Dog' Pollard , Brian F. O'Byrne as Darill Miller , Stacey Travis as Chloe Miller , Bobby Slayton as Darren Head , January Jones as Claire , Azura Skye as Cheri , Peggy Miley as Mildred Kronenberg , William Converse-Roberts as Charles Wheeler , Richard Riehle as Lawrence Fife , Micole Mercurio as Sarah Fife , Scott Burkholder as Wildwood Policeman , Anthony Burch as Phil |
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Energetic, romantic fun. Works wonderfully. ***1/2 (out of four)
BANDITS / (2001) ***1/2 (out of four)
Barry Levinson's clever romantic comedy Bandits makes stealing money look
fun and simple. I can see it now: young, influential criminals holding up
entire banks with magic markers. Certain things in this movie make such
perfect sense, we wonder why nobody's thought of them before.
Even the casting makes perfect sense. Who better to play a handsome,
spontaneous ladies man than Bruce Willis? And who could portray an
intelligent, hypochondriac better than Billy Bob Thornton? Together, these
two characters make the perfect man. Of course, it's only a matter of time
before a woman becomes involved and finds herself split between the two.
But Bandits is anything but your average run-of-the-mill romantic comedy.
Willis and Thornton play Joe Blake and Terry Collins, two criminals in a
high security prison. As the movie opens, they escape from prison in such a
way that probably makes the other prisoners hit themselves on the head and
ask "Why didn't I think of that?"
Just as soon as they switch getaway cars, Joe and Terry rob a bank to
finance their upcoming adventures. After hooking up with an old friend of
Joe's, a wannabe stuntman played by Troy Garity, the criminals devise a
foolproof plan to rob banks: they take the bank manager hostage the night
before a heist, sleep over at his house, then go into the bank with him the
next morning before business hours. No unexpected holdups. No complications.
Just take the money and leave before the first customer arrives.
The Joe and Terry dream of escaping to a tropical location and opening a
margarita bar. Their success as bank robbers eventually puts them at the top
of the FBI's most wanted list. Things become even more complicated when Kate
Wheeler (Cate Blanchett) runs into one of the crooks and wants to become a
part of their lifestyle. When she falls in love with both men, the situation
really starts to heat up.
Oscar-winner Barry Levinsion gives Bandits a humble sense of reality. He
doesn't place Joe and Terry on a pedestal and treat them like superheroes;
he actually opens the film revealing their presumed demise. Although in
interviews he explains that he was initially unsure how to handle the
material, his uncertainty does not show in the final production. He has
found the perfect blend of romance, action, and comedy to satisfy all tastes
and styles.
Bandits opens with a bookend revealing parts of the film's finale. This
doesn't really work. Normally, this technique is used when a movie is more
about a journey than what actually happens at the end. Although Bandits is
indeed more about a journey, the movie's structure does not support such an
opening. It doesn't provide us with enough information to work effectively,
and, after a final twist at the very end, this technique seems pointless
since it doesn't reveal the actual ending, anyway.
Nonetheless, Bruce Willis, Billy Bob Thornton, and Cate Blanchett deliver
fine performances, forming a charismatic, unlikely love triangle. Troy
Garity, gleeful and eccentric, steals all of his scenes in memorable
supporting role. Despite the various structural flaws, the cast alone is
enough to redeem Bandits as an above average comic adventure. It's one of
the year's most fun surprises.
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