Films about bank
robberies run the risk of following a formula, and one of the things that I
enjoyed about the 2010 movie The Town was that it offered a fresh (at least to
me) variation on the theme. In this film, the smartest of the robbers does
something not very smart – he falls in love with the manager of the bank he has
just robbed. Mind you, given that the manager is played by the very attractive
Rebecca Hall, it's not entirely an implausible plot twist.
The film is set in
Boston, and the "town" of the title is Charlestown, an area
apparently associated with violent crime, although on one view, that negative
images unfair and out of date. I don't know the truth of it, but I must say
that, the more I see of Boston in the movies, the keener I am to visit the city
one day. I get a very strong impression of a truly fascinating place.
Ben Affleck directs the
film and also plays the lead character – very effectively and sensitively, I
thought. His backstory is neatly conveyed, without slowing the action, as is
his relationship with his fellow criminals. The mastermind behind the robberies
is, of all things, a florist (that was a touch of imaginative storytelling that
I enjoyed!) played by Pete Postlethwaite, who is very well cast as a menacing villain.
Postlethwaite, who died of cancer earlier this year, is an actor who always made
a strong impression, and he's a real loss to the cinema.
I found this film
gripping throughout. I've seen one or two reviews that compare it to Heat,
starring Al Pacino, but personally I thought The Town was significantly better.
Affleck and Rebecca Hall are both highly charismatic, and Jon Hamm does a good
job as the detective pursuing them. Among heist films, I'd rate this one very
highly.