The Bank (2001) Reviews

The Bank (2001)
Member Rating:  
A young man fascinated with the workings of the world of banking forms an alliance with an unscrupulous corporate predator in this drama. Jim Doyle (David Wenham) developed an interest in finance while he was a young boy growing up in a small Australian town, and as an adult he and his partners have developed BTSE (Bank Training Simulation Experiment), a sophisticated computer program that can anticipate the ups and downs of the world's money markets. Jim's program attracts the interest of Simon O'Riley (Anthony LaPaglia), the head of a major Aussie financial services corporation, Centabank; O'Riley is looking to cut costs and increase profits, and he's convinced BTSE can help him do just that. However, O'Riley has other, more aggressive ways of boosting his bottom line; Centabank has been shutting down small-town branch offices that have been faithfully serving customers for decades, and has developed a new enthusiasm for foreclosing on loans from smaller customers having trouble making ends meet. Two such customers are Wayne and Diane Davis (Steve Rodgers and Mandy McElhinney), who obtained a loan to start their own business building houseboats; when the local economy went into a nosedive, the Davises found themselves under the thumb of Centabank, and the bank's hounding of the couple led to an unfortunate accident that took the life of their young son. Determined to make Centabank pay for their son's death, Wayne takes on the corporation with the help of Stephen (Mitchell Buell), an activist lawyer. Jim, meanwhile, becomes romantically involved with Michelle (Sibylla Budd), a Centabank employee, and through her gets a clearer idea of just what O'Riley is trying to do. ~ Mark Deming, Rovi

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Starring:
David WenhamAnthony LaPaglia, (more)
Director(s):
Robert Connolly
Format(s):
DVD
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Average Ratings

(10 member reviews)  


Member Reviews


Ted M.

This movie had a lot of hard to understand dialect, and there were no subtitles. In spite of this, the movie was good and the acting was great.

Yes   |   No


Joseph D.

Excellent story-line, performances, and direction. It won't disappoint.

Yes   |   No


James V.

A terrifically-paced little melodrama/thriller about money (and the place most people keep it), THE BANK should have caused a much bigger hit on the radar of intelligent moviegoers. Australian films rarely generate more than a mini-blip, which is too bad. Discover the fun to be had here, as David Wenham and Anthony LaPaglia bring home the bacon with lip-smackingly good performances (LaPaglia is at the top of his very fine form) & writer/director Robert Connolly pulls together a swift, smart David & Goliath tale that is every bit as timely in 2006 as when it was made in 2001. Bearing comparison to Oliver Stone's "Wall Street" ("The Bank" is the better film), it blends two disparate stories, one of which threatens to capsize into sentimentality. But Connolly manages to give feelings their due, while racing ahead & pulling viewers along quite niftily. The final scene, in particular, is a model of taste, intelligence & restraint. This is the kind of film I'll suggest to everyone I know.

Yes   |   No


Shaunna H.

It was awesome. David Wenham is awesome. So it was AWESOME.

Yes   |   No


Robert D.

This film was not predictable although the story line would have you believe it was! Some good acting by the principles, particularly La Paglia..of course the aussie dialect didn't help especially without english subtitles..the ending was a surprise and that is always more interesting than the predictable. 3 stars!

Yes   |   No


Daniel R.

Well crafted film with good plot and surprise ending. If this had been made in the US, it would be a reviewed very well.

Yes   |   No


Matthew C.

b

Yes   |   No


Lorinda H.

NO SUB TITLES! It was difficult to follow with out the sub titles. Movie was okay, and I liked the ending.

Yes   |   No


Steve G.

Anthony LaPaglia does an excellent job of a no-nonsense, heartless & ruthless, and a devilishly ambicious cut-throat banker who will stop at nothing to make his "mark" in business history - even if it means taking down scores of innocent people who will lose everything while doing so. David Wenham does a nice job, too - as I didn't see this ending coming ! While the ending was fantastic, it was painfully slow for the first half of the movie. But a good job overall.

Yes   |   No


Frank S.

The movie was predictable and at times hard to understand (language). The ending was a disappointment. I would pass on this one unless you have nothing better to do for 1 1/2 hours.

Yes   |   No


 
 
 

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    Member Reviews
     
    Ted M.

    This movie had a lot of hard to understand dialect, and there were no subtitles. In spite of this, the movie was good and the acting was great.

    Yes   |   No

     
    Joseph D.

    Excellent story-line, performances, and direction. It won't disappoint.

    Yes   |   No

     
    James V.

    A terrifically-paced little melodrama/thriller about money (and the place most people keep it), THE BANK should have caused a much bigger hit on the radar of intelligent moviegoers. Australian films rarely generate more than a mini-blip, which is too bad. Discover the fun to be had here, as David Wenham and Anthony LaPaglia bring home the bacon with lip-smackingly good performances (LaPaglia is at the top of his very fine form) & writer/director Robert Connolly pulls together a swift, smart David & Goliath tale that is every bit as timely in 2006 as when it was made in 2001. Bearing comparison to Oliver Stone's "Wall Street" ("The Bank" is the better film), it blends two disparate stories, one of which threatens to capsize into sentimentality. But Connolly manages to give feelings their due, while racing ahead & pulling viewers along quite niftily. The final scene, in particular, is a model of taste, intelligence & restraint. This is the kind of film I'll suggest to everyone I know.

    Yes   |   No

     
    Read All 10 Reviews