Jude Law plays DOM HEMINGWAY, a larger - than - life
safecracker with a loose fuse who is funny, profane, and dangerous.
Not exact matches
I was in Sacramento
with a fella who had been on the 10 Most Wanted list and another
safecracker who was on the verge of getting on the list.
After years of writing for television and cutting his directorial teeth on the 1979 TV movie The Jericho Mile, Michael Mann made his feature film debut
with Thief (1981), a cool, gritty crime movie starring James Caan as the head of a high - end crew of professional
safecrackers.
«Dom Hemingway» Synopsis: After 12 years in prison, a larger - than - life
safecracker reteams
with a pal and goes about trying to collect what he's owed for keeping his mouth shut about his boss, while also trying to reconnect
with his estranged daughter.
Whether it's out of misplaced family loyalty or unconscious self - sabotage, Charlie goes in on what Paulie promises will be «a big score»
with an unassuming
safecracker (well - played by Kenneth McMillan, at the opposite end of the spectrum from his repulsive Baron Harkonnen in the same year's Dune), little realizing the safe they're robbing belongs to vindictive mobster Bed Bug Eddie (Burt Young), as is the $ 150,000 they find inside it.
Dennis reconnects
with his old accomplice and Therese's new lover, Rene (Paul Rudd), a reformed
safecracker who didn't show up for the heist that got him busted.
Its tale of ace
safecracker and dangerous drunk Willie (Billy Bob Thornton), brought on board an annual mall Santa scam by criminal mastermind Marcus (Tony Cox), isn't all that inventive upon closer scrutiny,
with Zwigoff's interest in the peculiarities of loneliness exhibiting themselves this time as caustic to no end and displeasingly bitter.
The movie follows larger - than - life ex-con
safecracker who sets out
with his best friend (Grant) to pick up his payment for keeping his mouth shut for twelve years in prison.