The Vault (2021 film)
The Vault | |
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Directed by | Jaume Balagueró |
Written by |
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Produced by |
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Starring | |
Cinematography | Daniel Aranyó |
Edited by | David Gallart |
Music by | Arnau Bataller |
Production companies |
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Distributed by |
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Release dates |
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Running time | 118 minutes[1] |
Country | Spain |
Language | English |
Budget | €15 million |
Box office | $9 million |
The Vault, titled Way Down in various regions,[a] is a 2021 Spanish heist action thriller film directed by Jaume Balagueró.[1] The film stars Freddie Highmore, Àstrid Bergès-Frisbey, Sam Riley, Liam Cunningham, Luis Tosar, Axel Stein, José Coronado and Famke Janssen.[2] The story bears a passing resemblance to that of the Black Swan Project, recovered in 2007 by Odyssey Marine Exploration, a private marine salvage firm, but later turned over to Spain after 5 years of legal wrangling.[3]
Plot
[edit]Thom is a gifted engineering student at Cambridge University who is being courted by recruiters from several major oil companies, all promising him increasingly richer salaries and job perks if he agrees to work for them. Thom dismisses the offers, later explaining to his oil executive father over dinner that he does not want the life that a career in the oil industry would bring him. During this conversation, he receives an anonymous text message from somebody observing him in the restaurant who tells him to meet at a club.
He goes to the location he is instructed and meets a woman named Lorraine, who then introduces him to Walter, who runs a salvaging company that had recovered a large treasure known as "the treasure of Guadalupe" but it was seized by the Spanish government because Walter's company was not legally salvaging the site.
Walter has put together a team consisting members with various skillsets including Lorraine, a con artist; Simon, a logistics expert; Klaus, a computer hacker; and James, Walter's longtime treasure-hunting partner. Walter needs Thom's engineering genius to help them breach the vault that holds the confiscated treasure inside the Bank of Spain. Thom agrees to help and joins them in Madrid during the 2010 World Cup as Spain is contending for the championship title. Using the crowd noise from the many fans gathered in the city to watch the matches as cover, they scout the bank and determine that the vault sits on a giant scale underneath a large water reservoir. If the weight on the scale fluctuates in the slightest, the vault floods, drowning any intruders who might be inside.
After spending days to find a solution before the finals, Thom accepts Lorraine’s invite to go to a bar to unwind, where he sees a bartender make a cocktail drink that gives him the solution to the mechanics of the vault. Thom determines that they can defeat the scale by freezing it with 500 liters of nitrogen, slowing the mechanics of the scale long enough that it would not register their presence and trigger a flood while they retrieve the treasure.
They move forward with their plan, with Simon successfully freezing the scale beneath the floor of the vault while Thom, Lorraine, and James perilously make their way inside. Thom’s plan has worked and they rush to retrieve the box containing a collection of three coins from Sir Francis Drake that describe where to find his massive treasure hoard.
As they locate the coins, Gustavo, the head of bank security, has regained control of his systems after they were unknowingly penetrated by Klaus days earlier. Having learned in the days prior that the team had already infiltrated the bank to scout it, he dispatches a strike team to arrest the intruders. Believing they are compromised, Walter tells the trio to surrender to the team. James then pulls a gun on Thom, refusing to surrender, and demands Thom hand over the coins, revealing that he’s working for the British government. The vault locks down trapping them inside, however, James' diving experience affords him the ability to swim to safety and he abandons the other two.
Running out of time, Thom suspects that the key to stopping the flow of water into the vault is tricking the scale by adding more weight and making it think the vault is full of water. He instructs Simon to stack the empty nitrogen canisters onto the scale for additional weight, but it is not enough to halt the flow of water. The team loses contact with Thom and Lorraine, believing they have drowned, until as a last resort Simon himself climbs onto the scale with a radio broadcasting the world cup commentary, with the last bit of weight ceasing the water flow.
The vault begins to drain, and Thom and Lorraine are able to evade the bank security as they escape to the square where many fans watch Spain defeat the Netherlands for their first World Cup title.
At the British Embassy, James has reported to Margaret, an associate of both his and Walter’s, and delivers the coins, only to find out that the coins are fakes and that Walter is still in possession of the originals. As the team relaxes in Saint Tropez, Walter finds that the treasure is buried under the Bank of England. A new heist begins two years later as the 2012 Olympics begin in London.
Cast
[edit]- Freddie Highmore as Thom Johnson, an engineering student at Cambridge University
- Àstrid Bergès-Frisbey as Lorraine, a con artist and later Thom's girlfriend
- Sam Riley as James, a former MI6 agent
- Liam Cunningham as Walter Moreland, owner of a salvaging company
- Luis Tosar as Simón, a logistics expert
- Axel Stein as Klaus, a computer hacker
- José Coronado as Gustavo Medina, the head of security of Bank of Spain
- Famke Janssen as Margaret
- Emilio Gutiérrez Caba as Bank of Spain Chairman
Release
[edit]The Vault was released theatrically on January 15, 2021 in Brazil and Taiwan, and in March in the U.S. On July 31, it was made available on Netflix.[4] On Amazon Prime Video in the U.K.
In Spain, the film was initially intended to be theatrically released in autumn 2020, but the release was postponed to November 12, 2021 due to the COVID-19 pandemic, which caused the shelving of all Telecinco Cinema titles pending for theatrical release.[5][6][7]
Box office
[edit]It opened with €1.2 million on its first weekend in Spain, becoming the best Spanish box-office debut so far in the year in that regard.[8] The film grossed $9 million worldwide ($6.9 million in Spain).[9]
Reception
[edit]On the review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, 60% of 30 critics' reviews are positive, with an average rating of 5.8/10. The website's critics consensus reads, "Its runtime passes painlessly enough, but The Vault's slickly engineered thrills are dulled by familiarity."[10] Metacritic, which uses a weighted average, assigned the film a score of 50 out of 100, based on 4 critics, indicating "mixed or average" reviews.[11]
See also
[edit]Notes
[edit]- ^ The film was titled Way Down in Spain and other European, South American, and Asian countries.
References
[edit]- ^ a b "The Vault". British Board of Film Classification.
- ^ Marsh, James (4 March 2021). "Way Down movie review: Ocean's 11 meets The Italian Job in heist thriller set in Spain". South China Morning Post.
- ^ Green, Robert (February 17, 2012). "Sunken treasure headed back to Spain". Reuters. Archived from the original on September 24, 2015. Retrieved December 9, 2018.
- ^ Balkovich, Robert (August 3, 2021). "The Freddie Highmore Crime Thriller Flop Defying Odds And Heating Up On Netflix". Looper.com.
- ^ "'Way Down', la superproducción de Telecinco Cinema con grandes aspiraciones en la taquilla, llega por fin a los cines españoles". audiovisual451.com (in Spanish). 10 November 2021. Retrieved 27 July 2022.
- ^ Fdez, Juanma (2 January 2021). "2020, el año en el que Mediaset le dio la espalda al cine español". Bluper (in Spanish). El Español. Retrieved 2021-10-07.
- ^ Heredia, Sara (15 November 2021). "Los 2 misterios en los que se centra 'Way Down', el gran atraco de Freddie Highmore". SoloCine.
- ^ "'Way Down' se convierte en el mejor estreno español del año y mantiene la taquilla por encima de cinco millones de euros". Audiovisual451. 17 November 2021.
- ^ "Way Down' Box Office". Box Office Mojo.
- ^ "The Vault (2021)". Rotten Tomatoes. Fandango Media. Retrieved 30 March 2022.
- ^ "The Vault". Metacritic. Fandom, Inc. Retrieved October 25, 2024.
External links
[edit]- 2021 films
- 2021 action thriller films
- 2021 crime thriller films
- 2021 multilingual films
- English-language Spanish films
- 2020s English-language films
- 2020s heist films
- 2020s Spanish films
- 2020s Spanish-language films
- Films about bank robbery
- Films about the FIFA World Cup
- Films directed by Jaume Balagueró
- Films produced by Álvaro Augustin
- Films produced by Ghislain Barrois
- Films set in 2009
- Films set in 2010
- Films set in Cambridge
- Films set in London
- Films set in Madrid
- Films set in Saint-Tropez
- Films shot in Madrid
- Spain at the 2010 FIFA World Cup
- Spanish action thriller films
- Spanish crime thriller films
- Spanish heist films
- Spanish multilingual films
- Telecinco Cinema films
- English-language crime thriller films
- English-language action thriller films