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    Takers [Blu-ray]

    4.1 6

    Director: John Luessenhop Cast: Hayden Christensen

    Hayden Christensen
    , Idris Elba
    Idris Elba
    , Matt Dillon
    Matt Dillon
    , Paul Walker
    Paul Walker
    , Zoe Saldana
    Zoe Saldana


    Blu-ray

    (Wide Screen / Subtitled / Dubbed)

    $14.99
    $14.99

    Temporarily Out of Stock Online

    Customer Reviews

    • Release Date: 01/18/2011
    • UPC: 0043396349971
    • Original Release: 2010
    • Rating: PG-13
    • Source: Sony Pictures
    • Language: English
    • Runtime: 6420
    • Sales rank: 28,342

    Special Features

    Yeah Ya Know (Takers) by T.I. - Music Promo; Filmmaker & Cast Commentary; ; Explosive Blu-Ray Exclusives: Executing the Heist - The Making Of; Take Action! - Inside Look at the Stunts; Movie IQ

    Cast & Crew

    Performance Credits
    Hayden Christensen A.J.
    Idris Elba Gordon Jennings
    Matt Dillon Jack Welles
    Paul Walker John Rahway
    Zoe Saldana Lilli
    Chris Brown Jesse Attica,Security Guard #1
    Michael Ealy Jake Attica
    Steve Harris Lt. Carver,Ghost,Actor
    Jay Hernandez Eddie Hatcher
    Marianne Jean-Baptiste Naomi
    Gaius Charles Max
    Gideon Emery Sergei
    Zulay Henao Monica
    Glynn Turman Chief Det. Duncan
    Isa Briones Sunday
    Andrei Runtso Constantine
    Vladimir Tevlovski Ethan
    Harrison Miller Eddie Jr.
    Karl Knuth Scott's Bodyguard
    Conrade Gamble Haitian Thug
    Jermaine Holt Dealer #2,Dealer #2
    Martin Shuler Prison Guard
    Danny Epper Bank Guard #1
    Bobby McLaughlin Bank Guard #2
    Nancy Wetzel Chopper News 14 Reporter
    Andrew Fiscella Security Chief
    Juna Kim Asian Girl #1
    Natasha Ellie African American Girl
    Will McFadden Haitian's Lawyer
    Daniel Stevens Slick
    Troy Brenna Sweatpants,Sweatpants
    Gino Anthony Pesi Paulie Jr.
    Mike Wood Police Tech
    Terrell Lee Parole Officer
    Noelle Smith Officer of the Day,Russian #5
    Lanny Joon Vice Cop
    Roger Stoneburner Wasted Junkie
    Erik Stabenau Armed Driver #1
    Jim Lewis Armed Driver #2
    Matt Taylor Armed Guard #1
    Marcus Young Armed Guard #2
    Jimmy Roberts Armed Guard #3
    Dustin Meier Armed Guard #4,Police Officer Jesse Chase #1
    James Martinez Officer in Charge
    Laura Shay Griffin Receptionist
    Ashleigh Falls Frumpy Bank Teller
    Joanna Rhambo Woman in Underwear at Gordon's
    Bryan Ross Officer #4
    Nathan Bell Cop in a Hole
    Joey Digiandomenico TV News Reporter #1
    Craig Susser TV News Reporter #2
    Ben Skorstad 2nd News Helicopter Pilot
    Tim Sitarz Russian #1
    Gokor Chivichyan Russian #2
    Roman Mitichyan Russian #3
    Vladimir Orlov Russian #4
    Brad Jensen News 14 Chopper Pilot
    Michael Duisenberg News Reporter Channel 8
    Chris Antonucci News 14 Camera Crew
    Scott Wilder Police Officer Jesse Chase #2
    Patrick Stickland Doorman
    Paul Stephen Hubbard Internal Affairs Officer
    Johnathon Schaech Scott
    Nicholas Turturro Franco Dalia,Franco Dalia
    Paul Haslinger Composer

    Technical Credits
    Peter Allen Screenwriter,Screenwriter
    Gabriel Casseus Screenwriter,Executive Producer
    John Luessenhop Screenwriter
    Avery Duff Screenwriter
    Will Packer Producer
    Tip "T.I." Harris Producer,Producer
    Jason Geter Producer
    Glenn S. Gainor Executive Producer,Producer
    Chris Brown Executive Producer
    Morris Chestnut Executive Producer,Producer
    Lindsey Hayes Kroeger Casting
    David H. Rapaport Casting,Casting
    Lance Gilbert Stunts
    John Frazier Special Effects
    Nicolas Stern Producer
    Deb Adair Sound Effects
    Kami Asgar Sound Effects
    Bill W. Benton Sound Effects
    Anita Cannella Sound Effects
    Paul Pirola Sound/Sound Designer

    A Los Angeles detective races to bust a group of notorious thieves before they can carry out a 20-million-dollar heist in this crime thriller from director/co-screenwriter John Luessenhop and writing partner Avery Duff. Their heists are planned to perfection, and they never leave behind a shred of evidence. But when greed gets the best of the gang and they agree to one last job, one seasoned detective (Matt Dillon) vows to put them behind bars for good.

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    What is it about thieves in movies that causes them to lose any sense of practicality? Don't they ever think about setting up a retirement plan so they don't have to pull that "last big job" that invariably goes wrong? And when someone offers them a deal that seems to be too good to be true, don't they know that it almost certainly is, as we've all been told? I mean, a lot of thought goes into a big heist, or at least that's sure what the average caper movie leads us to believe. So how do these master criminals never see the obvious flaws in their plans? All of these thoughts might run through your mind while watching Takers, though admittedly not for long -- while it's even more improbable than the average heist movie, the picture is fast and stylish enough to roll over the lapses in its own logic like a tank over a pothole, and Idris Elba's performance is strong enough to give the movie some much-needed gravitas. Takers wastes no time introducing us to its crew of upscale burglars in the midst of a heist. Gordon (Elba) is the cool, thoughtful leader of the crew, and John (Paul Walker) is his quietly confident second-in-command. Jake (Michael Ealy) is the weapons expert and sensitive guy of the group, while his younger brother, Jesse (Chris Brown), is bright and fast on his feet but a little too cocky for his own good. And piano-playing A.J. (Hayden Christensen), who looks like a lost character from Swingers, is the gadget and hardware expert. These guys are clearly very successful and live like high rollers, flaunting their wealth and expensive good taste at every opportunity (so much for not calling attention to your ill-gotten gains). While celebrating their latest score, they're visited by Ghost (Tip "T.I." Harris), a former member of the team, who after six years has just been released from prison. Ghost has a beef with his former partners, especially Jake, who is now engaged to Ghost's former girlfriend Rachel (Zoe Saldana), but is willing to forgive and forget in exchange for helping stage a daring robbery of an armored car loaded with 25 million in cash. However, the big job needs to take place in a week, and this pushes the crew's planning capabilities to the edge, especially when Gordon's drug-addicted older sister, Naomi (Marianne Jean-Baptiste), decides to check herself out of rehab early and appear at his doorstep. Meanwhile, Jack (Matt Dillon) is an obsessive police detective in the classic style -- divorced, loves but ignores his daughter -- who has been investigating the bank job that opens the movie and is grimly determined to put the thieves behind bars, while his more laid-back partner, Eddie (Jay Hernandez), worries about him when he isn't dealing with his chronically ill son. Takers was directed by John Luessenhop, who is also one of four credited screenwriters, and most of the time he keeps the story moving relentlessly forward, which is good thinking since this is the sort of movie that trips itself up when it slows down. Most of the characters aren't at all well drawn, and the only one with a backstory that amounts to anything is Gordon, as he struggles with a tricky heist and a complicated relationship with his sister. Idris Elba gives what's easily the film's best and most subtle performance, and his strength, intelligence, and caution carry the movie over more than a few rough spots. (And Marianne Jean-Baptiste, who earned an Oscar nomination for her work in Secrets & Lies, does the best she can in what practically defines the term "thankless role" as his sister.). Matt Dillon clearly tries his best with a role that rounds up most available clichés about the cop whose life is his work, and the rest of the cast struggles to make much of their sketchy characters. Hayden Christensen's greatest triumph is that you lose the desire to strangle him by the halfway point, while Tip "T.I." Harris' performance is so one-note in its villainy that it's hard to imagine how anyone with any sense would trust him. Luessenhop also subscribes to the current conventional wisdom on staging action sequences that the more your camera shakes and the faster you cut, the better, which reduces several chase sequences to several incoherent minutes of random blurs. But Luessenhop does manage to come up with a reasonably imaginative robbery and keeps the tension steady throughout, even if his obvious John Woo lifts call too much attention to themselves. Takers is a non-think action flick that works just well enough to make its hour and three-quarters move by amusingly and painlessly, though it doesn't hold up to careful thought afterward, and Elba definitely deserves to be the lead in a better and more challenging movie.

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