PLOT: A group of daredevil thieves (Idris Elba, Michael Ealy, Chris Brown, Paul Walker, and Hayden Christensen) are pushed into a dangerous armored car robbery by a recently paroled ex-colleague (T.I), while simultaneously being hunted by a dogged cop (Matt Dillon), and his partner (Jay Hernandez).
REVIEW: The biggest (unintentional) laugh I got out while watching the sneak preview of TAKERS the other night came during the closing credits, when no less than four writers were listed as having worked on the screenplay. This includes director John Luessenhop. The reason I found the number of writers so funny was that apparently it took four guys just to write a film that’s essentially an MTV CRIBS version of HEAT, with a little ITALIAN JOB (remake) mixed in.
Being a huge fan of Michael Mann (HEAT’s easily in my top 20 all-time best movie list); I found it impossible to take TAKERS seriously; as I knew there wasn’t a shred of originality in it. However, even if I had never seen HEAT, I probably would have still hated TAKERS. Director Luessenhop, while stealing much from Mann, obviously wasn’t able to figure out how Mann managed to stage a good action sequence. TAKERS has a few big action set pieces, and some of them would actually be pretty decent if they weren’t so terribly shot and edited. There’s a big Parkour inspired foot chase involving Chris Brown and Matt Dillon that might have been effective, but is so clumsily shot that it’s impossible to make out who’s chasing who.
This sequence in particular suggests that TAKERS is yet another film that’s been cut to ribbons by the studio distributing it. It was shot way back in 2008, a point that’s driven home by T.I’s character, who was busted in 2004 and complains about having spent four years in the joint. It’s sat on the shelf for AT LEAST eighteen months, and was once hilariously titled BONE DEEP, until sanity prevailed.
The one thing TAKERS sort-of has going for it is the cast, but even that’s a mixed bag. On the plus side, we’ve got Idris Elba and Matt Dillon. Elba’s a ridiculously talented guy who killed on THE WIRE for five seasons. In films he still hasn’t found his niche, but I have faith that at some point he’s going to establish himself as a top-shelf talent. While the film is unfocused, he has a few decent moments, especially in a subplot involving his crack-addicted sister, who’s just ditched rehab and is proving herself to be a big liability to Elba’s big score. As for Dillon- it must be said that the guy’s somewhat squandered the momentum he had going after his Oscar nomination for CRASH in films like ARMORED, or YOU, ME & DUPREE. However, he’s still not a bad actor, as he’s effective in the cop role, even if it’s riddled with all the standard clichés (young, inexperienced partner, mean ex-wife, problems with internal affairs, etc.).
Unfortunately, the rest of the B-list cast can’t measure up to Elba and Dillon. Michael Ealy’s not bad in his thinly written role, but Chris Brown (whose thuggish, girlfriend beating episode is likely one of the reasons TAKERS sat of the shelf for so long) is incredibly amateurish is the younger, hot-head of the group. He’s even out-acted by another musician, rapper T.I, who plays the villain, although his narration-style dialogue (oh daaaaamn, he’s jackin’ the truck!!!) during the big heist sequence adds yet another unintentional laugh to the film.
I guess I shouldn’t be surprised TAKERS is as bad as it is considering it’s being dumped in the dreaded last weekend in August (or as I call it “weekend of the damned”). TAKERS is a film that totally deserves this terrible release date, as it’s completely devoid of originality, and reeks of hack-filmmaking at it’s worse. As I stated earlier- Michael Mann should sue!