Den of Thieves ** ½ /
*****
Directed by: Christian Gudegast.
Written by: Christian Gudegast and Paul
Scheuring.
Starring: Gerard Butler (Nick
Flanagan), Curtis "50 Cent" Jackson (Levi Enson), Pablo Schreiber
(Ray Merrimen), O'Shea Jackson Jr. (Donnie), Evan Jones (Bosco), Cooper Andrews
(Mack), Maurice Compte (Benny 'Borracho' Megalob), Kaiwi Lyman-Mersereau (Tony
Z Zapata), Dawn Olivieri (Debbie O'Brien), Lewis Tan (Actor), Mo McRae (Gus
Henderson), Meadow Williams (Holly), Brian Van Holt (Murph), Max Holloway
(Bas).
If
you’re going to steal, you may as well steal from the best. Den of Thieves is a
L.A. set bank robbery film that desperately wants to be Michael Mann’s Heat,
but of course cannot be, because nothing can be that great. It’s a film that
flashes back and forth between the crooks and the cops, drawing parallels
between the two of them, wanting to put them all on the same, morally dubious
footing. The problem is that writer/director Christian Gudegast is no Michael
Mann (no shame in that, no one is) –and he isn’t a William Friedkin either (To
Live and Die in L.A. is another key influence here). Unlike those two
directors, Gudegast cannot pull off the tricky balancing act between cops and
criminals like they did, and he gets bogged down in a twisty, turny plot that
wants to (and admittedly does) succeed in pulling the rug out from under us.
Mann and Friedkin didn’t need to do that, because their films had some much
else going for it. You almost wish that Gudegast had abandoned some of his
delusions of grandeur here, and made what he clearly really wanted to – a pure
heist movie. That’s where the movie is at its best. It’s when it strains to be
serious, that the film feels like the 140 minute film that it is.
The
film opens with a robbery by a professional crew, basically wearing
paramilitary gear, as the rob an armored truck making an early morning donut
stop. They don’t want the money inside the truck – they hadn’t picked any up
yet, it’s empty – they want to truck itself. Things don’t go precisely as
planned, and they end up killing a half dozen cops or so, but they get out. The
crew is led by Merriman (Pablo Schreiber), along with Lieutenant Levi (Curtis “50
Cent” Jackson) and his driver, Donnie (O’Shea Jackson Jr.) – among others.
Because of all the dead cops, the crime draws the attention of the Major Crimes
unit, led by Nick (Gerard Butler), whose crew of cops is basically a criminal
gang itself – they seemingly operate with no barriers at all, have lots of
money, and if they feel like it, will kidnap and beat-up suspects. Eventually
it becomes clear that Nick knows Merriman is planning something, and Merriman
knows he knows, and the two basically engage in a dick measuring context to see
who will back down first.
There
is a lot I liked about Den of Thieves. The robbery sequences are well handled,
and the various shootouts work better than most of their kind. The performances
are, for the most part, quite good. Pablo Schreiber is particular is excellent
as Merriman, and with this alongside Straight Outta Compton and Ingrid Goes
West, I’m willing to say now that O’Shea Jackson Jr. is a better actor than his
father. Even Gerard Butler, an actor I don’t normally like, and 50 Cent – who can
come across as emotionless – basically work here. While the film is way too
long, it’s never boring.
I
do think the film strains too much for seriousness, that doesn’t make much
sense. You could jettison everything involving Butler’s wife and kids (which
plays like Butler and company doing a juvenile version of the scenes in Heat,
where Pacino and his wife’s marriage collapses, and he takes his TV) and not
lose a thing. Likewise, you could lose a scene involving 50 Cent taking his
daughter’s prom date to the garage for a taking to (you don’t see that daughter
before than scene, or after) which is Gudegast basically trying to outdo a
similar scene in Bad Boys II. Whenever the film strays too far from its main
narrative it becomes more than a little awkward and stilted.
There
is much to like about Den of Thieves, but I don’t think the film ever
completely comes together. It’s trying too hard to do too much, and as a
result, it doesn’t do any of it particularly well. This is Gudegast’s debut
film, and if nothing else, it proves he has good taste in influences. Now, he
needs to do something more with them, other than simply try and copy them.
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