Movie
Disclaimer: All content and media belong to original content streaming platforms/owners like Netflix, Disney+ Hotstar, Amazon Prime Videos, JioCinema, SonyLIV etc. 91mobiles entertainment does not claim any rights to the content and only aggregate the content along with the service providers links.
6.3/10
IMDbOutstanding SingleCamera Picture Editing for a Miniseries Movie or a Special | 2004 | William B.
Outstanding Sound Editing for a Miniseries Movie or a Special | 2004
Best Sound Editing in Television Long Form Sound Effects Foley | 2004
Best Edited Miniseries or Movie for Commercial Television | 2004 | William B.
Budget 10,000,000 USD
Some statistics: Number of location shooting days: 24Number of cameras used: 8Number of extras used: 900Number of real LAPD Officers used as extras: 35Number of rounds of blank ammunition fired: 40,000Number of bullet hole squibs used: 5,000Number of blood squibs used: 100-150Amount of theatrical blood used: 10 gallonsNumber of police cars destroyed: 30
Scenes on the residential streets where the robbers tried escaping from the bank were filmed on the actual locations behind the real bank.
The Bank Of America in the real robbery is in North Hollywood, the one used in the film was a vacant bank in a strip mall in La Habra, California.
The physical appearances of the two robbers in real life are actually swapped in the film.
The photo that Ron Livingston (Donnie Anderson) holds of his "dad" is actually the real life LAPD SWAT officer Donnie Anderson who was one of the 3 SWAT officers who engaged the final suspect and whom Ron Livingstons character is loosely based on. You can also see him and other officers being awarded the LAPD Medal for Valour for their part in the ordeal at the end of the film.
"Bobby Martinez: [shooting at Phillips] I'm hitting them, but they're not going down! Harris: They've got Kevlar! Head shots! Bobby Martinez: Aim for the head! Harris: Aim high!"
"Frank McGregor: RHD. Robbery-Homicide Division. We're the best of the best, and we get all the high-profile cases. L.A. Confidential. Al Pacino in Heat. Joe Friday and all that. The only difference is, those guys don't have to juggle 75 cases all at once. Me, I've got to prioritize. Back in '95, my priority was them. We had a name for them. We called them the "High-Incident Bandits". Chatsworth. Two years prior. These guys decided to make an early withdrawl. They killed the guard, executed him. Ambushed him. Took his head off with an AK-47. That kind of firepower in a bank job is unheard of. These guys were an anomaly. I made a promise to that widow that I wouldn't quit until I caught up with the sons of bitches that killed her husband. We make promises like that all the time in my kind of work. We like to think that we mean it. That time I really meant it. Six months later, another armored car. Then, two more banks. Takeover-style. The most dangerous kind. They got away with over two million dollars. I guess they wanted to live the good life and they wanted to live it pretty fast. Instead of getting a job like the rest of us. Anyway, they disappeared into the wind one day, but I knew they'd be back."