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Rocknrolla - BLU-RAY Version (2008) Certificate 15

Rocknrolla - BLU-RAY Version
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Rated 3.5 stars
Average rating
(68%)
 
Starring: Tom Wilkinson | Thandie Newton | Gemma Arterton | Gerard Butler | Ludacris | Mark Strong | Jeremy Piven | Jamie Campbell Bower | Idris Elba
Director: Guy Ritchie
Studio: WARNER HOME VIDEO
Run time: 114 mins
Genres: Action/Adventure | Audio Descriptive | Comedy
Languages: English, English Audio Description
Released: February 02, 2009
Also available on: Also Available on: DVD

Guy Ritchie returns to form with this cockney crime caper starring Gerard Butler and Tom Wilkinson. Lenny Cole (Wilkinson) is a bungling London crime boss who calls the shots in London's underworld. We learn all about Lenny from Archie (Mark Strong)--his second in command--who serves as the film's sly narrator. When a wealthy Russian property dealer by the name of Uri (Karel Roden) looks to Lenny for help on a major new deal, Lenny is eager to assist (for a very large fee, of course). Uri agrees to pay, and as a show of faith, he insists that Lenny borrow his lucky painting. Uri then asks his accountant, Stella (Thandie Newton), to transfer the money to Lenny, but things quickly go awry when two crooks known as Mumbles (Idris Elba) and One Two (Butler) intercept the money before it reaches him. To make matters worse, the lucky painting has mysteriously been stolen, and the number one suspect is a crack-addicted pop star, Johnny Quid, who is presumed dead. Violent hijinks ensue as Lenny desperately tries to locate the painting, Uri calls in some sadistic thugs to recover his money, and Johnny Quid suddenly resurfaces. Men are battered with golf clubs, fed to crawfish, and attacked with machetes, and a surprise twist ending neatly ties up the whole bloody mess.
Fans of Ritchie will likely be very pleased to see him return to his SNATCH-style of filmmaking. ROCKNROLLA has the same frenetic, humorous edge as the film that made him famous, though critics might complain that this particular style is starting to look a little dusty. Regardless, ROCKNROLLA features many fine performances, and once you get past the rather slow beginning, it kicks off into an entertaining and amusing romp.

Highest rated reviews

5 out of 5 people found the following review helpful:

*** May contain spoilers ***


Rated 3 stars
Guilty

A Customer from Brighton, England, 22nd January, 2009

Pleasures really do not come any guiltier than this. Guy Ritchie's latest is crass, nihilistic, shambolic, desperate, self-indulgent, and fundamentally pointless.... and also pretty irresistible as a bit of mindless entertainment. Bits of it are lame, bits of it are reprehensible, but none of it is boring. It rattles along so briskly that there's little time to stare into the many gaping plot holes, the obligatory eclectic soundtrack impresses, and although it doesn't deserve them, it features an exceptional ensemble cast all turning in excellent performances. But it isn't all fun and games. First up, a shockingly abhorrent sequence that depicts a brutal, senseless stabbing outside a nightclub is tastelessly sexed-up to feel like both a music video, and an utterly perverse paean to maverick heroism. Secondly, the denouement is fantastically offensive; a prime example of the kind of infantile, moronic machismo that Guy Ritchie's fiercest detractors have always had a field day with. A depressive artist decides to kick his musical career to the curb in order to focus on the far more noble and righteous career of slapping people for a living? Aside from those two instances of bewildering twattery (of that stupefying vintage that only Guy Ritchie can provide) this is really quite good, and marks a significant return to non-horrific form.

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2 out of 2 people found the following review helpful:

Rated 3 stars
Cockerkneesup

A Customer from Manchester, 5th February, 2009

All the way through RocknRolla, I was trying to work out what it reminded me of. Only towards the end did it hit me. Guy Ritchie is no longer making thrillers - he's making his own Cockernee versions of Oscar Wilde. Characters stand about throwing polished dialogue at each other, nothing much happens, and while emotionally uninvolving, the entertainment moves smartly along. Of course, Wilde was a poetic genius making tart observations about his society, whereas Ritchie is a visual stylist with nothing whatever to say, but the film is still quite diverting. None of the performances are outstanding because nobody has a real character, but Mark Strong and Tom Wilkinson under and overact respectively to amusing effect. It looks stunning, and Ritchie still uses editing and slow motion with real panache, making the whole seem much more clever than it actually is. I still think 'Snatch' is a genuinely great film, and 'Lock Stock' an impressive debut, and after the screaming nightmare of 'Swept Away' and 'Revolver', at least 'RocknRolla' shows Ritchie he can still keep the audience watching. The question is, can he do anything else?

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2 out of 3 people found the following review helpful:

Rated 2 stars
That's it...

A Customer from Enfield, 5th February, 2009

...I've now lost my patience with these Guy Ritchie films. I've watched this and Revolver in the recent weeks and both were, in my opinion, just not worth watching. It's just a heap of stylised meaningless claptrap. If you want gritty drama you're better off watching The Bill. I'm sure Mr.Ritchie and the cast love the films but it's just not entertaining. Move on mate, try something different - it looks like Lock stock but has been edited with new software. Maybe the divorce will shake you out of this little fantasy gangster world you live in, here's hoping.

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1 out of 1 people found the following review helpful:

Rated 4 stars
Blooming marvellous!

Treadstone from , 15th March, 2009

I'm starting to doubt the integrity or should I say intelligence of many who write reviews on this site. This movie is without a doubt very good. Yes its perhaps not as good as previous Guy Richie films yet it is still better than most gangster type films that I have seen since. I enjoyed it immensely, smart, witty, great twists, enthralling and I look forward to seeing the sequel. Ignore the negative gripes that others have made, its definitely worth seeing.

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Most recent reviews

Rated 2 stars
Bit Disappointing

PJ2704 from , 3rd March, 2010

Was a bit disappointed with this. It was a good film with a great cast but was expecting a bit more twist and excitement from a Guy Ritchie movie.

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Rated 3 stars
Watchable

jenathome from , 18th February, 2010

Film is good fun, entertaining, has 'lock, stock' elements to it, carries you along well. Good ending. Recommend for a good evening in.

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Rated 3 stars
average fair

A Customer from Canvey Island, 8th February, 2010

Quite a tired format the usual Guy Ritchie offering but you must know that before you rent i suppose, to be be fair a couple of good side plots and larger than life characters but unfortunately been done better in other films imo , true romance set the bench mark and also an earlier ritchie flick lock stock was enjoyable.

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Rated 4 stars
Loved it

A Customer from Mansfield, UK, 6th February, 2010

British gangster type films a very good one

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