Bank Robber | |
Director: | Nick Mead |
Producer: | Lila Cazès |
Music: | Stewart Copeland |
Cinematography: | Andrzej Sekuła |
Editing: | Maysie Hoy Richard E. Westover |
Distributor: | I.R.S. Releasing Corporation |
Runtime: | 91 minutes |
Country: | United States |
Language: | English |
Budget: | $2 million[1] |
Gross: | $115,842 (USA) |
Bank Robber is a 1993 American crime film written and directed by Nick Mead in his directorial debut.
Billy is a well-dressed bank robber who decides to do one last heist so he can sail off to a tropical island with his girlfriend, Selina. On his last robbery, he forgets to destroy a surveillance camera. He then must hide out in the Heartbreak Hotel until he can get out of trouble. On the way everyone he knows wants a cut of his money, including hotel clerks and pizza delivery boys, who all recognize him. Back at the bank, the police chief and bank manager use the heist as a cover for them opening the vault and passing out the money, as Billy only went for the tellers' cash. The police chief himself speaks of buying an RV.
While Billy is seeing Selina, a broadcast comes through, and the police chief announces Billy wasn't the robber of the bank. When Billy starts to get paranoid in his hotel room, he gets desperate. Billy then dresses up, leaves the motel, and meets two cops in the street who shoot him, then carry him off to Pricilla, a prostitute. She pays them and drives away with a wounded Billy. Sometime later she is seen on a beach with Billy watching a sunset.
Actor | Role | |
---|---|---|
Billy | ||
Priscilla | ||
Judge Reinhold | Officer Gross | |
Officer Battle | ||
Selina | ||
Marisa Benoit | ||
NC1 | ||
Mother | ||
Andy |
Stephen Holden of The New York Times gave it a mixed to negative review: