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Promotional poster for Inside Man IMDB 7.5/10 (21,899 votes) | |
Directed by | Spike Lee |
Written by | Russell Gewirtz |
Produced by | Brian Grazer |
Starring | Denzel Washington Clive Owen Jodie Foster Willem Dafoe Christopher Plummer |
Cinematography | Matthew Libatique |
Edited by | Barry Alexander Brown |
Music by | Terence Blanchard |
Distributed by | Universal (USA) UIP (International) |
Release dates | March 23, 2006 |
Running time | 129 minutes |
Language | English |
Budget | $45,000,000 |
Inside Man is a 2006 crime-drama film starring Denzel Washington, Clive Owen and Jodie Foster, and directed by Spike Lee. The film's screenplay is written by Russell Gewirtz and produced by Brian Grazer. It was released in North America and several European markets on March 23 and 24.
Synopsis
Inside Man is the story of detective Keith Frazier (Denzel Washington) who matches wits with a clever bank robber Dalton Russell (Clive Owen) in a tense hostage drama. As the dangerous cat-and-mouse game unfolds, a wild card emerges: a power broker Madeline White (Jodie Foster) whose character reveals that this is no ordinary robbery, and that Russell is no ordinary bank robber. Rather, Russell wanted to crack the social political system because: everyone --regardless of sex, skin color, nationality, or occupation -- is affected by it, and because he "can". Template:Spoiler The bank robbers, led by Dalton Russell, enter the bank disguised as painters. They use infrared flashlights to knock out security cameras prior to taking out firearms, then take the customers and staff hostage and remove their keys and cell phones. Although they make numerous death threats to hostages, they display a hesitancy to kill hostages who refuse to cooperate, beating them instead. The hostages are forced to don the same clothes as the robbers; hooded coveralls with sunglasses and masks, to make it difficult to distinguish robber from hostage, a critical part of the robbers' plan.
When they request food for the hostages, the police bug the pizza boxes. However, Russell anticipates this and plays a recorded speech by former Albanian President Enver Hoxha for them via an iPod, sending them on a wild goose chase. The robbers then demand an airplane by a certain time, something Arthur Case (Christopher Plummer), the founder of the bank, is eager to arrange, but the police do not intend to give in to the demand.
Prior to Case's offering help with the robbers demand, he commissions Madeline White to assure that certain interests of his are protected in the bank robbery. Specifically, a safety deposit box whose contents he wanted to remain a secret or, if that was not possible, be destroyed. In one of White's first private meetings with Case, he hires her though she is small and soft-spoken. She warns him that her bite is worse than her bark. He then calls her a "whore". White thanks Case, for he has shown her that despite his "lipstick" a pig remains a pig. White uses her connections with the mayor to gain permission to enter the scene, and manipulates Frazier to let her talk to Russell. When she calls Russell, and mentions the special interests she wants to protect, Russell, who had deliberately refused to make extended contact with anyone prior, agrees to talk to her.
White enters the bank and talks to Russell, where he reveals Case's secret. He shows her the document that the case contained, which proves that Arthur Case, the chairman of the board of directors and founder of the bank, had heavily profited by working with the Nazis during World War II. When White requests to access the safety deposit box that Case mentioned, he shows her the already-extracted contents, which he intends to keep. After assuring Russell that Case will make him a very wealthy man if he is able to escape the bank with this document, she leaves.
Despite Russell's demands, Frazier realizes this is not a typical hostage situation/bank robbery. As the police consistently stall for more time, Russell continues to extend the deadline. Frazier realizes that it's Russell that has been stalling the police, not vice versa. Attempting a bluff, Frazier tells Russell that his plane is ready but he needs to know that all the hostages are safe before he can let them leave. Russell allows him to enter the bank, and Frazier is taken on a tour of the building and checks all the hostages. Upon exiting the bank, Frazier suddenly attempts to aggresively overpower Russell, only to fail when another robber comes to Russell's aid. Intriguingly, Russell still lets Frazier leave unharmed with seemingly no repercussion for his attack. Frazier takes notice of this, but before long the robbers call and direct the police to point their cameras to a specific window on the second floor, where they show the execution of one of the hostages. An enraged Frazier confronts Russell again, demanding to know their true intentions. He tells them that they never really wanted a plane in the first place, and that "you've got everybody marching to your beat, including me, and I'm through buyin' it." Russell simply replies that Frazier is "too damn smart to be a cop" and closes the door on him.
The hostage execution prompts the SWAT team into action, and they plan to raid the building. Since they cannot tell hostage from robber, they decide to use rubber bullets to simply knock everyone out.
Frazier later speaks to the cop who initially reported the robbery, asking him to tell the story about the time a twelve year-old stuck a gun at him. The cop tells the story using racist slang, which Frazier (who is African American) tells him to tone down. After the story, the cop apologizes, saying that he should "watch what he says, because you never know who's listening." It suddenly dawns on Frazier that the written message Russell had initially sent out (and brought to the police command center) could have been bugged. He rushes into the command center and finds the written message, rips it apart, and indeed finds a transmitter. He orders Captain John Darius (Willem Dafoe), in command of the police on the scene, to recall his men, but Darius ignores him.
Before the police can storm the bank, the robbers detonate a bomb at the front door of the bank and a horde of identically dressed robbers and hostages burst out of the bank. The police detain and interrogate everyone, but during the robbery, all the robbers (except Dalton) had feigned to be hostages at one point, each of them making a scene so that the true hostages would incorrectly identify them as hostages. Thus, during Frazier's interrogations, he could not single out any robbers amongst them. However, as Frazier had met Russell personally, he knew that he was missing. Russell apparently did not leave the bank with the others, but a search of the building revealed nothing as well. The end result: a perfect crime; no money missing, no people killed or seriously injured (it was discovered that the hostage execution was faked) and no "robbers" found, even the weapons the robbers left behind were merely toy replicas — it was as if the incident never occurred. As such, Frazier's boss tells him to bury the case.
Frazier refuses, and looking through the bank's records, finds that a certain safety deposit box never appeared on any records since the bank's founding. He obtains a search warrant from a judge to open it. He is then confronted by White, who informs him of Case's dealings with the Nazis. She quotes Baron de Rothschild, "When there's blood on the streets, buy property." She also tries to convince Frazier to drop his investigation, reminding him that she has held up to her end of her deal with him (guaranteeing he would be promoted, and returning money he was implicated in stealing prior to the events of the movie). He refuses again, and points out there was no deal that he agreed to. He then pulls out the James Bond style recording pen which an officer had showed him earlier, and plays the conversation which took place in the car. White and the Mayor tell Frazier that he has no choice but to assist them because of the cash missing in the previous case. Frazier says he doesn't need help with that, because he is innocent. White says it does not matter if he's innocent or not, he'll go down for it anyway.
White confronts Case about these dealings with the Nazis, in which he confesses everything to her. He also reveals that the safe contained diamonds, including a Cartier ring, belonging to a Jewish friend whom he allowed to die at the hands of the Nazis in exchange for money. He is remorseful for what he did, and had thus led a life of philanthropy and humanitarianism to try to reconcile with his guilt. He then offers her a check for her services, and it appears he expects her to condemn him for his actions. She says that she's currently helping the nephew of Osama bin Laden acquire a duplex in New York City, and so is hardly in a position to take a moral high ground. Case retorts that he doesn't believe her for she wouldn't have told him if it was true. As White walks away she smugly replies, "We've listed you as a reference", to an enraged Case.
It is then revealed that Russell hid himself behind a fake wall erected inside the supply room (literally, the "inside man"). At the beginning of the movie, Russell narrates from the space behind the fake wall, which at first appeared to be a prison cell. He emerges a week after the "robbery" was committed. As he does so, he deliberately bumps into Frazier, who does not recognize him, and they exchange brief apologetic words. Russell is picked up by his associates, and is presumably never caught. His associates ask him for the ring, and Russell reveals it is in safer hands -- Frazier's.
Frazier opens the safety deposit box to find a single diamond ring, a pack of gum (which Russell had offered to him when they met during the bank robbery, as a sign for Frazier that he was already in the safe deposit box), and a message from Russell, "follow the ring." He interprets this as Russell's desires for him to continue the case. He confronts Arthur Case, where he shows him the ring, and informs him of his desire to follow it. He later barges in on a lunch that White and the mayor were having, indicating he had discovered it was linked to a wealthy Jew who had died in a concentration camp, making it very incriminating to Case. He offers White the pen with the recording, and gives her a card to have the war crimes reparations committee look into the situation. White notes that Frazier probably made copies, but it's clear she'll assist him. Frazier then leaves with the ring.
Frazier, in his brief encounter with Russell, had mentioned his girlfriend, specifically, that he wanted to propose to her but did not have the financial means of buying a ring. Russell replied that if he loves her, money should not matter. After his final encounter with White, Frazier goes home and finds a diamond in one of his pockets. He then realizes that it was dropped there by the man he bumped into in the bank, and that Russell was that man. Frazier smiles.
The film shows flashforwards of freed hostages interrogated by the police throughout the film.
Reviews
Film location
Much of the filming of Inside Man was done in Lower Manhattan at or near 20 Exchange Place, off William Street and Wall Street and just blocks from the New York Stock Exchange and South Street Seaport.
Trivia
- The film touches on contemporary issues such as the treatment of Sikhs after 9/11 (in the form of a Sikh man) and also contains interspersed bits of New York humor and pride. Notice in particular, how the boiler-suits the hostages are made to wear reference those worn by Guantánamo detainees, and that the shot of Madeleine White being searched (and the shadows cast on her body) echo the notorious and iconic photo from Abu Ghraib prison of a hooded Satar Jabar with arms outstretched; a prisoner in US custody.
- The song in the opening credits, set against the backdrop of Brooklyn and Lower Manhattan, is a popular Hindi song called "Chaiyya Chaiyya", from Mani Ratnam's 1998 film Dil Se. The song is composed by the film composer A. R. Rahman, and the lyrics are by Gulzar, a well known Indian poet.
- There is a scene in the film where the police department orders pizza for the hostages. In several shots, you can see that the lid of the pizza box reads, "Sal's Pizzeria", which is the infamous name of the pizzeria in Spike Lee's movie Do the Right Thing.
- Throughout the movie, a little boy is seen playing a game on his PSP, which Russell, briefly, expresses an interest in during a solitary moment with him. The game being played was made just for the movie being created using pre-rendered CGI and faintly resembles Grand Theft Auto: San Andreas (it should be noted, however, that the game's violence is far more extreme than most games, including San Andreas.) Russell displays a sense of morality by mentioning that he should talk to the kid's father about his tastes in games and goals.
- The film contains direct references to several films starring Al Pacino — Serpico, Dog Day Afternoon, and The Godfather's Michael Corleone are all mentioned or discussed.
- Two actors from Dog Day Afternoon were cast as a homage to that movie, in similar roles. Marcia Jean Kurtz plays a hostage named "Miriam" in both films, and Lionel Pina delivers pizza in both.
- The mock malt liquor "Da Bomb" from Spike Lee's Bamboozled also shows up at the end of the movie. This liquor was also seen two other Lee films, "Clockers" and "Sucker Free City."
- Venezuelan President Hugo Chávez has mentioned that he likes the movie (April 9, 2006, broadcast of Aló Presidente).
- Frazier's girlfriend is reading Gotham Diaries at the end of the film. This book was written by Lee's wife, Tonya Lewis Lee.
- At one point a picture of Buddy Christ from Dogma can be seen on the wall.
- There are several instances of product placement in the film, such as the aforementioned iPod, the DELL computer boxes covering the entrance to Dalton's 'cell', Madeline White's Apple Cinema Display and the Sony PSP owned by the little boy. Also, Poland Springs water and Wrigley's Juicy Fruit were shown.
- Keith Frazier's name is derived from Spike Lee's love of New York sports teams. Two of New York's greatest sports legends and current sports broadcasters are ex-Met Keith Hernandez and ex-Knick Walt Frazier. In the command center scene where Frazier brags to his partner that he is destined to make Detective, First Grade, he recites his soon-to-be rank and name in the elongated speaking fashion of former New York Knicks announcer Marv Albert.
- All of the interrogation scenes were ad-libbed.
- As Dalton Russell emerges from the bank towards the end of the film, we see his Nazi-collaborator-hunting-cohorts sitting in a Volkswagen Touareg parked alongside the curb. This is humorous because the company's origins lie with Adolf Hitler and the Fascist Third Reich ("Volkswagen", in German, translates literally to "People's Car" in English). These cars were also built by minorities in multiple Concentration Camps throughout Germany.
- When Russell says "therein lies the rub", in reference to how he is going to commit the perfect bank robbery, he is misquoting Hamlet's famous soliloquy in Act III, Scene I, "ay, there's the rub".
- There are numerous references, towards the end, to similar suspense and crime drama films such as The Fugitive, The Usual Suspects and Ocean's Eleven.
- Although it is indeed possible to buy a digital recorder from Amazon.com - they are not available in pen form as stated in the film.
Box Office
As of August 12, 2006, the film has grossed a total of US$88,513,495 in the United States and US$183,082,926 Worldwide.
It is the highest grossing R-rated film of 2006 as of fall 2006.
Featured Cast
Actor | Role |
---|---|
Victor Colicchio | Sergeant Collins |
Willem Dafoe | Captain John Darius |
Kim Director | Stevie |
Chiwetel Ejiofor | Detective Bill Mitchell |
Jodie Foster | Madeline White |
Peter Gerety | Captain Coughlin |
Carlos Andres Gomez | Steve |
Marcia Jean Kurtz | Miriam |
Peter Kybart | Mayor |
Ken Leung | Wing |
Clive Owen | Dalton Russell |
Christopher Plummer | Arthur Case |
Bernie Rachelle | Chaim |
James Ransone | Steve-O |
Amir Ali Said | Brian Robinson |
Denzel Washington | Detective Keith Frazier |
Notes
- "Inside Man (Story)". TheInsideMan.net Retrieved January 13, 2006.
External links
- Inside Man at IMDb
- Inside Man — Official website
- Inside Man at Rotten Tomatoes
- Inside Man at Metacritic
- Inside Man Trailer
- A viral ad for the movie, where you attempt to answer confusing questions to release hostages