Home  |  About Us  |  Contacts  |  Products    
 News Items
 Top Stories
 News Briefs
 Vatican
 Origins
 Africa
 Headlines
 Also Featuring
 Movie Reviews
 Sunday Scripture
 CNS Blog
 Links to Clients
 Major Events
 2008 papal visit
 World Youth Day
 John Paul II
 For Clients
 Client Login
 CNS Insider
 We're also on ...
 Facebook
 Twitter
 RSS Feeds
 Top Stories
 Vatican
 Movie Reviews
 CNS Blog
.
 For More Info

 If you would like
 more information
 about Catholic
 News Service,
 please contact
 CNS at one of
 the following:
 cns@
 catholicnews.com
 or
 (202) 541-3250

.
 Copyright

 This material
 may not
 be published,
 broadcast,
 rewritten or
 otherwise
 distributed,
 except by
 linking to
 a page on
 this site.

.
  Movie Review

Takers

By Kurt Jensen
Catholic News Service

NEW YORK (CNS) -- There's a moral center to "Takers" (Screen Gems), or so at least its creators would have you believe. It doesn't quite come off that way, and this crime thriller is ultimately a tired exercise in gunfire, explosions and insipid dialogue.

Director John Luessenhop, who co-wrote along with Peter Allen, Gabriel Casseus and Avery Duff, tells the story of a gang of five skilled thieves. Team leader Gordon (Idris Elba) is joined by right-hand man John (Paul Walker), explosives expert A.J. (Hayden Christensen) and brothers Jesse (Chris Brown) and Jake (Michael Ealy).

After each elaborately planned job, in which they're always several steps ahead of the authorities, they seek nothing more than expensive suits, cigars, cognac, overseas bank accounts and women. But they're still portrayed as somewhat moral -- sophisticated good-time guys who take care of their relatives -- and are much more appealing than the other criminals with whom they sometimes collaborate. How these guys even found each other in the first place, though, is never explained.

Then, Ghost (Tip "T.I." Harris) -- the only member of the crew who was shot during an earlier job and imprisoned -- turns up, having served his term. He's embittered, has connections to Russian mobsters, and has a plan the Russkies devised for the highly engineered robbery of an armored truck. The rest of the film hinges on whether the fast-talking Ghost can be trusted, and how many of the gang members will survive.

Matt Dillon plays grumpy Los Angeles detective Jack Welles, who is always the requisite pace behind when the explosions occur, even as he deals with a boatload of his own torment.

It all adds up to the distressing formula: Two exciting chase sequences; speaker-rattling gunfire; suits by Armani; script by International House of Cliche.

The film contains constant stylized gun violence and an instance of male rear nudity, as well as pervasive crude and fleeting profane and crass language. The Catholic News Service classification is A-III -- adults. The Motion Picture Association of America rating is PG-13 -- parents strongly cautioned. Some material may be inappropriate for children under 13.

- - -

Jensen is a guest reviewer for Catholic News Service. More reviews are available online at www.usccb.org/movies.

END


Copyright (c) 2010 Catholic News Service/USCCB. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or otherwise distributed.
CNS · 3211 Fourth St NE · Washington DC 20017 · 202.541.3250


 FIND A MOVIE

   Looking for a
   movie review?

Movie List


   Click "Movie List"
   button above
   
   OR
   
   Enter a keyword
   from the movie
   title in the box
   below and click
   the "Search"
   button.