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The vault review
The vault review







the vault review

A phone call goes out to the police that couldn’t have been made by anyone in the bank. Once the basement level is opened up all sorts of ghostly happenings begin. And when Vee slips on the knuckle duster to pound a hapless customer early on it’s clear that these two are going to clash, even without the impending paranormal. But she struggles to maintain order when things go initially wrong. Leah (Francesca Eastwood, Awake) is cool cucumber personified. The executed plan takes up enough of the opening to also give an opportunity to establish the criminal characters. Except the staff never go down there due to……rumours. Then, concerned deputy manager Ed ( James Franco), says that far more cash is stored in the old disused safe in the basement. The bickering turns violent and it looks like the robbery is going to end in a bloodbath. This causes a diversion whilst the rest of the crew come in disguised as a fire crew.īut once the robbery is underway there is much less cash available than thought or needed. The sisters pose as an angry customer and a job applicant respectively. So live-wire sister Vee (Taryn Manning) and cold calculating sister Leah, (together with some hired muscle) execute a well thought out plan to rob a bank.

the vault review

Good hearted brother, Michael (Scott Haze), owes money to bad people. Because what pulls the shutters down on this robbery, by a bunch of desperate infighting criminals, is this: a haunted vault. Employee at the wrong place at the wrong time? Retired cop customer who fights back? Double crossing? You know the score. Bank-robberies-gone-wrong movies usually take the turn of infighting, police intervention, or unplanned variables.









The vault review