| Cast overview, first billed only: | |||
| Denzel Washington | ... | ||
| Clive Owen | ... | ||
| Jodie Foster | ... | ||
| Christopher Plummer | ... | ||
| Willem Dafoe | ... | ||
| Chiwetel Ejiofor | ... | ||
| Carlos Andrés Gómez | ... | ||
| Kim Director | ... | ||
| James Ransone | ... | ||
| Bernie Rachelle | ... |
Chaim
(as Bernard Rachelle)
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| Peter Gerety | ... |
Captain Coughlin
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Victor Colicchio | ... | |
| Cassandra Freeman | ... | ||
| Peter Frechette | ... | ||
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Gerry Vichi | ... |
Herman Gluck
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From a cell, a man tells us he has planned the perfect bank robbery; he invites us to watch. An efficient gang enters a Manhattan bank, locks the doors, and takes hostages. They work deliberately, without haste. Detective Frazier is assigned to negotiate, but half his mind is occupied with the corruption charges he is facing. The bank's president has something to protect in a safe deposit box, so he brings in Madeleine White, a high-power broker with a hidden agenda. With an army of police surrounding the bank, the thief, the cop, and the plutocrat's fixer enter high-stakes negotiations. Why are the robbers asking for a plane, if they are so competent and they know they won't get one? Why aren't they in more of a hurry? If the job's perfect, why is the thieves' leader in a cell? Written by <[email protected]>
After painfully watching the last boring minutes of Inside Man I just wanted to look at IMDb to verify that I had just seen one of the worst movies of 2006. Then I saw its rating ... 7.5 ?!?!? What ?!?! After reading through all those comments I'm finally convinced that IMDb is badly invaded by professional movie pushers. To make it worse, this film is additionally pushed by Spike Lee & Denzel Washington fanatics.
This film has many problems: the script is awful, without any tension or suspense. Denzel plays the same over-the-top super-cop as many of his movies before (I won't watch Denzel movies in the near future). Jodie's character is laughable, she just doesn't add anything to the movie except her name. Chris Plummer has the most notable moments in the movie but he also suffers from the bad script.
The music score is unnerving and way to much in most of the scenes. And Mr. Lee's direction is screams Scorsese at you with all those angles, camera moves and steadycam shots. They don't help the story but make the movie look strangely dated, like a movie of the 90s.