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Heist (2015 film)

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Heist
Theatrical release poster
Directed byScott Mann
Written by
  • Stephen Cyrus Sepher
  • Max Adams
Produced by
  • Randall Emmett
  • George Furla
  • Wayne Marc Godfrey
  • Alexander Tabrizi
  • Stephen Cyrus Sepher
Starring
CinematographyBrandon Cox
Edited byRobert Dalva
Music byJames Edward Barker
Tim Despic
Production
companies
Distributed byLionsgate Premiere
Release date
  • November 13, 2015 (2015-11-13) (United States)
Running time
93 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Budget$15 million[1]
Box office$4.1 million[2]

Heist (also called Bus 657), is a 2015 American heist action thriller film directed by Scott Mann and written by Stephen Cyrus Sepher and Max Adams, based on the original story by Sepher. The film stars Robert De Niro, Jeffrey Dean Morgan, Kate Bosworth, Morris Chestnut, Dave Bautista, Sepher, and Gina Carano. The plot of the film revolves around a casino heist by an employee who needs to pay for his sick daughter's treatment.

The film was released on November 13, 2015, by Lionsgate Premiere.[3]

Plot

Luke Vaughn is working in a Southern casino ("The Swan") run by Francis "The Pope" Silva. Vaughn has a sick daughter, and needs $300,000 for a necessary surgery. He approaches "Pope" who refuses his plea for a loan; when Vaughn is insistent, Pope fires him and has him beaten by his right-hand man, Derrick "Dog" Prince.

Security guard Cox tells Vaughn the casino is laundering for the mob. Vaughn, who has the codes to the vault, joins Cox and steals the money. After the heist, the thieves are intercepted by Dog's henchmen. A gun battle ensues, wounding one of the thieves. Once their getaway driver escapes, the rest are forced to hijack a city bus. Police officer Kris Bajos hears the gunshots and pursues the bus. When Cox shoots through a window at Bajos, she calls for reinforcements. The police setup a road block.

Vaughn writes a passenger's phone number on a bus window, to enable Bajos to contact him. He warns her that Cox will kill passengers if the police do not clear the road blocks. Bajos follows through and Vaughn orders Bernie, the bus driver, to ram the road block, allowing the bus to enter the interstate highway. Passengers' mobile phones are thrown from the bus and Vaughn asks one of the passengers, a veterinarian student, to take care of the wounded thief. Cox calls Jono, an old man who aided them in planning the robbery, to update him. The bus is running low on fuel, so Vaughn calls for a fuel tanker.

Detective Marconi joins forces with Bajos and instructs her to drive the fuel tanker. Marconi briefs SWAT and monitors the bus via a police helicopter. Vaughn allows Pauline and a young boy to leave the bus. During refueling, Vaughn allows Bajos to board the bus to check on the hostages. After Bajos suggests that the wounded thief be let off the bus for medical treatment, Cox objects and she has an altercation with Cox, during which she takes his gun from his waist. Vaughn defuses the situation. As she wraps up refueling, Vaughn asks Bajos to let him know how Pauline is. At the police station the boy is reunited with his mom and Bajos interviews Pauline. Dog learns the location of Jono through a police radio scanner.

With the wounded thief suffering blood loss Vaughn calls Marconi, who boards the bus from a SWAT truck with a medical emergency kit. He hands the vet student a syringe with 'pain meds' and the wounded thief dies. Marconi gets a call from Pope and tosses the phone to Vaughn, revealing Marconi's affiliation with Pope. Marconi is thrown from the bus and a SWAT team attacks the bus, popping a tire, causing it to crash near a bridge.

With police surrounding the bus, Cox holds Bernie hostage. Vaughn shoots Cox, saving Bernie. Vaughn receives a call from his daughter saying that she is okay and Bajos tells him she knows about the hospital bills. Vaughn negotiates with Marconi the release of all the hostages except one and, once the tire is repaired, the bus departs. The police authorities follow the bus, but Vaughn escapes with the money in a police car.

Vaughn arrives at Jono's, but finds him shot dead. Dog knocks him out with a shot of rock salt. Back on the bus, they are joined by Pope and Marconi, though Pope kills Marconi as Dog pours gasoline over Vaughn. Pope gloats that Vaughn did not make it to the hospital by 7pm with the money. However, Pauline is Vaughn's sister, and hid $300,000 under her shirt by pretending to be pregnant. She pays the hospital bill. Bajos deduces what Pauline is doing but does not stop her.

Pope shoots Dog dead before he can light up Vaughn. Pope loosens Vaughn's ropes and tells him his mother had a saying about people on their deathbed speaking of regrets. He hands a grateful Vaughn the keys to his Rolls Royce car, which is parked outside, so he can go visit his daughter. Pope waits on the bus as the police arrive.

Cast

Production

On November 6, 2013, at the American Film Market sale, it was announced that film production and financing company Emmett/Furla/Oasis Films acquired a heist script, then titled Bus 757, from writer Stephen Cyrus Sepher.[1] The script, about a card dealer who puts a crew together to rob a bank and hijack a city bus, with an announced budget of $15 million budget, was being produced by Randall Emmett, George Furla, Alexander Tabrizi and Sepher.[1] On May 17, 2014, it was announced that Scott Mann would direct, Lionsgate would distribute, and Robert De Niro would star in the lead role of "The Pope", the casino owner whose money is the target of the heist.[4]

The title of the film had been changed to Bus 657 by September 24, 2014, when Jeffrey Dean Morgan, Kate Bosworth, Dave Bautista and Gina Carano joined the cast of the film, which also added Max Adams as an additional screenwriter.[5] On October 13, it was confirmed that screenwriter and actor Sepher was spotted on the set, later confirmed to be performing as one of the robbery crew.[6][7] Morris Chestnut was spotted on the set on October 15, with his casting as Derrick "Dog" Prince confirmed two days later, acting as "The Pope's" right-hand man who has to bring the money back before the cops seize it and realize it's dirty.[8][9]

Filming was scheduled to take place in Baton Rouge, Louisiana,[10] but was moved to Mobile, Alabama and filming began on October 13, 2014.[11][6] On October 15, De Niro was spotted filming in the Crystal Ballroom of The Battle House Hotel, which had been transformed into a 1940s-style casino called "The Swan Casino".[12] On the same day scenes were filmed on the corner of Royal and St. Francis streets in downtown Mobile.[8] On October 21, filming took place on the Causeway, which was closed by the police from the eastbound entrance of Bankhead Tunnel to east of the USS Alabama Battleship Memorial Park.[13]

Release

In October 2014, at the American Film Market sale, the film (under its second title, Bus 657) was sold to a number of international distributors, including Lionsgate International for the UK.[14] The film was released on November 13, 2015 in a limited release and through video on demand.[3]

Reception

The film was poorly received by film critics. As of September 2022, the film holds a 29% approval rating on the review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, based on 28 reviews with an average score of 4.8 out of 10. The website's consensus reads, "Heist stacks its deck with an all-star cast but this humorless action potboiler doesn't give them a good hand to play."[15] Metacritic gave the film 37/100, a generally unfavorable rating, based on a weighted average rating of 11 reviews.[16]

Chris Nashawaty of Entertainment Weekly gave Heist a C, describing it as a generic and forgettable thriller that is particularly derivative of Speed, which he considered a superior film.[17] Writing in the New York Post, Kyle Smith also made the Speed comparison and said the film is "Unabashedly preposterous in the manner of 1980s action movies", but added that the solid character motivations, occasionally witty dialogue, and clever final plot twist serve to make it a serviceable if unimpressive film. He gave it two stars.[18]

References

  1. ^ a b c McNary, Dave (2013-11-06). "AFM: Emmett/Furla/Oasis Boards 'Bus 757′". Variety. Retrieved 2017-11-05.
  2. ^ "Heist (2015)". The Numbers. Retrieved 2017-11-05.
  3. ^ a b Doty, Meriah (2015-09-18). "See Robert De Niro Get Targeted in 'Heist'". Yahoo! Entertainment. Retrieved 2017-11-05.
  4. ^ Fleming, Mike Jr. (2014-05-17). "Cannes: Robert De Niro Catches 'Bus 757', Heist Pic From Emmett/Furla/Oasis". Deadline Hollywood. Retrieved 2017-11-05.
  5. ^ Fleming, Mike Jr. (2014-09-24). "'Bus 657′ Castings: Jeffrey Dean Morgan, Kate Bosworth, More Board Robert De Niro Pic". Deadline Hollywood. Retrieved 2017-11-05.
  6. ^ a b Ikenberg, Tamara (2014-10-13). "'Bus 657' starts shooting in downtown Mobile; former WWE champion Batista on set". The Birmingham News. Retrieved 2017-11-05.
  7. ^ Ikenberg, Tamara (2014-10-23). "A glimpse inside the multi-talented mind behind 'Bus 657'". The Birmingham News. Retrieved 2017-11-05.
  8. ^ a b Ikenberg, Tamara (2014-10-16). "'Bus 657' star Morris Chestnut makes Mobile stargazers swoon". The Birmingham News. Retrieved 2017-11-05.
  9. ^ Fleming, Mike Jr. (2014-10-17). "Morris Chestnut Boards 'Bus 657′". Deadline Hollywood. Retrieved 2017-11-05.
  10. ^ Scott, Mike (2014-05-19). "Robert De Niro boards thriller 'Bus 757,' to be shot in Baton Rouge". The Times-Picayune. Retrieved 2017-11-05.
  11. ^ Scott, Mike (2014-09-26). "Robert De Niro's 'Bus 657' bolts Baton Rouge, heading down I-10 to Mobile". The Times-Picayune. Retrieved 2017-11-05.
  12. ^ Ikenberg, Tamara (2014-10-15). "Robert De Niro walks among us: star has arrived in Mobile for 'Bus 657' shoot". The Birmingham News. Retrieved 2017-11-05.
  13. ^ Levins, Angela (2014-10-21). "Scout your route: Parts of Causeway, Bankhead eastbound closed for filming of movie 'Bus 657'". The Birmingham News. Retrieved 2017-11-05.
  14. ^ McNary, Dave (2014-10-31). "AFM: Robert De Niro's 'Bus 657′ Picks Up Foreign Sales". Variety. Retrieved 2017-11-05.
  15. ^ "Heist". Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved September 24, 2022.
  16. ^ "Heist (2015)". Metacritic. Retrieved 2017-11-05.
  17. ^ Nashawaty, Chris (November 17, 2015). "Heist: EW Review". Entertainment Weekly. Retrieved 5 November 2022.
  18. ^ Smith, Kyle (November 13, 2015). "'Heist' Is a Preposterous 80s Action Throwback". New York Post. Retrieved 5 November 2022.