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The big robbery of a large bank robbery is carried out by a brave team of highly trained and armed men. This is the most dangerous operation in the city because this group did not allow anyone to confront it. All of the officer Mike Chandler and a young man find themselves in the face of that gang.
I can't begrudge you waiting until 211 shows up on a Blu-ray at Walmart that also contains ten other Cage movies...But I can tell you that when it does, you shouldn't skip over this one.
Even if 211 didn't ostensibly base itself on a real-life tragedy, it largely fails as a bank heist film by overloading itself with a bland supporting cast.
For collectors of [Nicolas] Cage insanity, I am sorry to say that your hero has come up painfully short here - this is as bored and listless of a performance as I have ever seen him give.
Unwatchable even by the subterranean standards of a direct-to-video Nicolas Cage thriller... 211 is the kind of low-grade schlock that leaves you with a newfound respect for the basic competence that most bad movies bring to the table.
A mortifying, poor showing for Cage. Classic film fans may remember when Buster Keaton was forced, in his later, near-destitute years, to do cameos in sixties beach party movies. This is worse.
It's probably foolish to wish that Nicolas Cage would once again make movies as good as Adaptation and Leaving Las Vegas. But is it too much to ask that he go back to the comparative glory days of Con Air and The Rock?