

It starts when a marine archaeologist discovers and extracts a treasure from a drowned ship. Now let’s delve into the making of the heist team. It is supposed to be the safest vault in the entire world. The Vault revolves around a heist that involves stealing a treasure from a vault inside the Bank of Spain. The film saw a theatrical release in Brazil and Taiwan on January 15, 2021, and has been made both in Spanish and English. Finally, Famke Janssen stars as Margaret, while Emilio Gutiérrez Caba plays the character of Chairman.

Axel Stein plays Klaus, while José Coronado stars as Gustavo. Luis Tosar plays another one of the heist-team members, Simon. Sam Riley plays the character of James, while Liam Cunningham plays Walter Moreland. Ástrid Bergès-Frisbey plays another lead as Lorraine, she recruits Thom to the heist team. The cast includes Freddie Highmore, who plays the lead character of Thom Laybrick, a genius engineer. Distributor Sony Pictures released the film in Spain, while TF1 distributed the film worldwide. The Vault is a co-production between Ciudano Ciskul, El Tesoro de Drake AIE, Telecinco Cinema, and Think Studio. While Daniel Aranyó handled the cinematography, David Gilbert served as the editor. Arnau Bataller has composed the music for the film. While Álvaro Augustin, Ghislain Barrois, Freddie Highmore, Eneko Lizarraga, and Fransisco Sánchez serve as the producers for the film. Santaolalla, Andres Koppel, and Rafa Martinez have penned the screenplay. Rowan Athale, Michel Gaztambide, Borja Glez. Jaume Balagueró is the director of the thriller, and the language used in the film is English. In various regions, it’s also known as Way Down. The Vault manages to be an entertaining heist film that manages to elevate itself with its great cast and their chemistry.The Vault is a Spanish heist thriller film that hit theatres in 2020.

It’s the actor and his moments during the climactic heist that bumps The Vault a step higher than your average heist film. Tosar as Simon, the explosives expert, becomes the heart and soul of the piece. The find for those familiar with Michael Mann, Jim Jarmusch, and Spanish Cinema will be happy to see the addition of Luis Tosar. Here he plays world-weary stick in the mud with the kind of authority and wit that isn’t typical of this kind of role. Riley has always been underutilized since his brilliant debut in Control. Here he brings that rapscallion no-bullshit advisor/mentor that made him a favorite on Game of Thrones here. Many will know Cunningham from his work in Game of Thrones. The film’s secret weapon is the supporting cast headed by Liam Cunningham, Sam Riley, and Luis Tosar. The chemistry between the two is one of the highlights of the film. Bergès-Frisbey is all swagger and style to Highmore’s bumbling nerd. It helps that Astrid Bergès-Frisbey as Lorraine his handler of sorts is a star in the making. Here it’s the right sort of infectious devil may care looking for an adventure style of hero that works. Hell, Highmore does it on the regular now in The Good Doctor. The impish socially awkward genius has been done countless times. The combination of actors works great to give us a crew of good and baddies that make The Vault a top to bottom enjoyable ride. Balagueró’s cast is aces with great Spanish and English stars. Groups working together to solve the tidal wave of problems that come up during the runtime of the film. Essentially, the best of them are hang out films. The only hitch they have ten days to pull the heist off all while the 2010 World Cup takes place.Īny heist film is only as strong as its cast. Their offer help them take back the deep-sea salvage of lost treasure. That comes in the form of Walter (Liam Cunningham) and Lorraine (Astrid Bergès-Frisbey), and their crew (populated with the likes of Sam Riley, Luis Tosar). Thomas like any good movie hero wants more. Still at Oxford, the young man, has everyone from Big Tech to Oil Companies chomping at the bit to offer him the world. Thomas (Freddie Highmore) is a genius in every sense of the world. Director Jaume Balagueró moves from Zombie Action-Comedy Horror to slick heist films without skipping a beat. The director’s second English language film retains his sense of home (re Spain) while finding himself with a strong Spanish/British cast.
