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| Lock, Stock and Two Smoking Barrels | |
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| Film poster | |
| Directed by | Guy Ritchie |
| Produced by | Matthew Vaughn |
| Written by | Guy Ritchie |
| Starring | Jason Flemyng Dexter Fletcher Nick Moran Jason Statham Steven Mackintosh Vinnie Jones Sting |
| Music by | David A. Hughes John Murphy |
| Distributed by | Universal Pictures PolyGram Filmed Entertainment (now Universal Studios) (UK) Gramercy Pictures (US) |
| Release date(s) | August 28, 1998 (UK) |
| Running time | 105 min. |
| Language | English |
| Budget | £800,000 |
| All Movie Guide profile | |
| IMDb profile | |
Lock, Stock and Two Smoking Barrels is a 1998 English crime film directed and written by Guy Ritchie. The story is a heist film involving a self-confident young card shark who loses £500,000 to a powerful crimelord in a rigged game of three card brag. In order to pay off his debts, he and his friends decide to rob a small-time gang who happen to be operating out of the flat next door. The film garnered Guy Ritchie international acclaim, and introduced actors Vinnie Jones, a former Welsh international football player, and Jason Statham, to worldwide audiences.
In 2000, Ritchie won an Edgar Award from the Mystery Writers of America for Best Motion Picture Screenplay. In 2004, the magazine Total Film named Lock, Stock and Two Smoking Barrels the 38th greatest British film of all time.
A television series, Lock, Stock...The Series, followed in 2000.
Contents |
There are four criminal gangs involved in the plot. The first (in order of appearance) is not really a gang at the outset as it consists of four friends: Eddie, Tom (also known as "the fat man" in complete contrast to his appearance), Soap and Bacon. The second is that of \'Hatchet\' Harry Lonsdale with Barry \'The Baptist\', Harry\'s personal bodyguard and counsellor, Big Chris, Harry\'s debt-collector and Little Chris, son of Big Chris who collects along with him on jobs. The third is Rory Breaker\'s gang, consisting of numerous heavies. Finally, the fourth is Dog\'s gang, consisting of some five men, one of whom, Plank, is key to the plot. Also involved is the fence, Nick the Greek, Liverpudlian criminals, Gary and Dean, and a group of "Botanicals" lead by Winston, who illegally grow marijuana.
At the start of the film Eddie and friends collect £25,000 each to help Eddie bet against Harry \'The Hatchet\' Lonsdale, an infamous gangster and a card sharp. However, the game was fixed by Harry and Eddie ends up owing £500,000 to Harry. Barry threatens to cut off Eddie and his friends\' fingers, one by one, for each day the debt goes unpaid. The friends are understandably distressed. Meanwhile, Harry\'s aim is to get hold of Eddie\'s father\'s bar. The story goes that Eddie\'s father, JD, was in a game of cards with Harry, who intentionally kept on playing to put JD further and further into debt, thus putting him in trouble for "a very long time". It looked hopeless for JD (Harry had a hand of three Aces) when he showed his cards at the end, and he drew three 3s, the best possible hand. The shock of this occurrence caused Harry to have a heart attack. Though JD contends that he is not responsible for his son\'s gambling losses, he indicates to Harry\'s collector that he will give up the bar if Eddie does not make good on the debt by Sunday. Of note: the film is narrated by Alan Ford, who plays Alan, a bartender at JD\'s bar.
At the same time, Gary and Dean receive an offer from Barry (on Harry\'s request) to get him two extremely valuable antique shotguns. They steal the guns in question (and some others) from their current owner. However, during the break in, they are shot at by one of the occupants of the house, with the antique shotguns. This means that the shotguns were out of the gun cabinet and out of secrecy Barry had only specified that he wanted the guns from the cabinet. Gary and Dean give him the modern ones, while the antique ones are considered to be unwanted and sold to Nick the Greek.
U.S. poster for the filmMeanwhile, Dog, who lives next door to Eddie and who is the leader of an extremely violent but small time gang, plans to rob an illegal drug laboratory, run by the four rather peaceful and unarmed \'botanicals\', lead by Winston. Plank, a long-time client of the laboratory as well as a member of Dog\'s gang, provides the necessary information. Accidentally Eddie and his friends overhear Dog\'s plans through a wall. They decide to ambush Dog and his associates at his flat once they return from the job, and take all the stolen money and drugs. They contact Nick the Greek, offering to sell him the marijuana that they plan to obtain. Nick sells them the guns that they will need for the ambush which, of course, turn out to be the two antique shotguns in which Hatchet Harry was interested.
Gary and Dean return to Barry with the guns they had raided from the house. Barry realizes that the antique shotguns are missing and demands that the two buy the guns back from Nick the Greek. Gary and Dean attempt to buy them back from Nick but are told they\'ve already been sold. They then call Barry and realize that the job they were doing was actually for "Hatchet" Harry. Harry threatens them to get the guns or else their family is "bang in trouble". Terrified, they call back Nick and demand the address of the owners of the guns.
Dog and his gang, as planned, carry out the raid at the laboratory. During the raid one of the botanicals is almost murdered, another gets his foot shot off, and one of the members of Dog\'s gang is killed with his own weapon (a WWII era Bren machinegun) by the girlfriend of the marijuana growers, but everyone else involved survives. While transferring the money to a getaway van, one of Dog\'s gangmembers knocks out a traffic warden who was about to give him a ticket and throws him in along with the money. The raid is otherwise successful and the gang returns home with the money and drugs, only to find Eddie and his friends (all wearing masks) waiting for them. They take all the loot and leave. After dropping the goods off at Eddie\'s flat, the friends go out to celebrate.
Meanwhile, Dog is beside himself with fury. In anger he throws Plank against the wall; unexpectedly the wall breaks down, to reveal Eddie\'s apartment and numerous microphones that were used to overhear Dog\'s plans. Having recovered the money and most of the marijuana, Dog sets an ambush in Eddie\'s flat.
At the same time, Nick the Greek tries to sell the stolen marijuana to Rory Breaker. Unfortunately, the laboratory was actually Rory\'s, and when he realises that Nick is trying to sell him his own goods, he is less than pleased. Terrified, Nick gives away Eddie and his friends as the source of the drugs. Rory immediately gathers his gang and leaves for Eddie\'s place along with Winston, the leader of the Botanicals, to punish the supposed robbers (remarking that he "wants the grey skies of London illuminated" and "the house painted red"). They burst in only to encounter Dog\'s ambush. In the subsequent gunfight everyone, except for Winston and Dog, is killed. Dog flees through a window, grabbing the two guns, only to run into Big Chris, whom Harry has sent to remind Eddie about the debt. Chris, who recognises the guns that Dog is holding as something that his boss might be interested in, surprises him and takes the guns and the money to Harry. Winston, meanwhile, hears the last two shots as Rory Breaker and Plank simultaneously shoot each other. Realising everyone is dead, he steals Rory\'s van and drives away.
Eddie and his friends arrive home to find a dozen dead bodies instead of the money. In a state of shock, Eddie calls Harry in a desperate attempt to buy more time; inexplicably to the four friends, Harry has the money - but he demands that Eddie immediately pay him a visit concerning the pair of shotguns. Eddie and his friends, realising that they are no longer in danger, obey. Meanwhile Gary and Dean have followed Chris with the guns. Not knowing that Chris actually works for the same boss as Barry, they decide to burst in and take the guns. Dean recognises Harry prior to being shot by him; Gary, seeing his friend\'s death, shoots Harry; Barry, sitting behind him, throws a hatchet into his back; turning around, Gary shoots Barry; having recognised each other they both utter the phrase \'What the fuck are you doing here?!\' as their last words. Eddie and friends arrive at Harry\'s place only to find yet more dead bodies. They take the money and leave; Tom delays, as he wants to recover the shotguns.
Meanwhile, Dog, having recovered, follows Chris and, threatening to kill his son (Little Chris), demands that Chris returns the money. Chris agrees and drives to Harry\'s, but there he runs his car into Eddie\'s car that is parked at the entrance. The crash stuns Eddie, Soap and Bacon sitting in their car. Chris kills Dog in perhaps the most infamous and violent scene in the film. Chris repeatedly and brutally slams Dog\'s head in the car door, shouting and swearing numerous times. The music and POV cinematography of the scene make it one of the more memorable deaths in the film.
Chris then notices that one of the friends is holding a bag with money which, as he knows, belongs to Harry; he takes it to Harry\'s apartment, where he encounters Tom who is holding the shotguns. Tom knows that the guns aren\'t loaded, so they both leave the apartment peacefully through different doors, Chris keeping the money and Tom keeping the guns.
The friends are of course arrested, but luckily they are cleared of all charges when the traffic warden who had earlier been knocked out by Dog\'s gang identifies the deceased gangmembers as those responsible for the spate of robberies and murders. The only evidence that could connect them to what has happened is the two antique shotguns. The friends, sitting in the bar and celebrating, are sure that the guns have been disposed of by Tom; however, Tom confesses that he kept them. The friends send Tom to throw them away in the river. Meanwhile, Chris comes to the bar and returns the bag; he mentions that he has taken some money for himself and his son, as with Harry\'s death he has lost his employer. Opening the bag, the friends see that it is empty, save for a parcel. Opening the parcel, they find an antique guns auction catalogue and learn that their shotguns are worth between a quarter of a million pounds and three hundred thousand pounds a piece. They rush to call Tom.
Tom, meanwhile, has made it to the bridge but has managed to drop the guns onto a ledge just below the walkway rather than into the river. So as not to lose his phone, he puts it into his mouth and climbs off the bridge, holding on with one hand. With the other hand he reaches down and grabs the guns. The final scene of the film ends up as a cliffhanger of Tom on the bridge, one hand on the antique guns which are now hanging over the river, his other hand preventing him from falling off, as the phone in his mouth starts ringing...
| Soundtrack from the Motion Picture Lock, Stock and Two Smoking Barrels | |||||
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| Soundtrack by various artists | |||||
| Released | |||||
| Genre | Rock Pop Brit pop Reggae |
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| Length | 62:54 (UK) 43:32 (US) |
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| Label | Island Records (UK) Warner Bros. (US) |
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| Professional reviews | |||||
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| Guy Ritchie film soundtracks chronology | |||||
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The soundtrack to the film was released in 1998 in the United Kingdom by Island Records. A release in the United States in 1999 omitted nine tracks from the UK release.
1. Gordon\'s unnamed associate - beaten to death with a golf club
2. Gordon - killed with a Chef\'s knife sharpening steel by Dog
3. Smithy Robinson - bludgeoned to death with "a 15-inch black rubber cock" by Harry (Technically killed the earliest, but his demise is revealed later, via a flashback sequence.)
4. Mickey - shot by Gloria
5. Paul - killed in the shootout at Eddie and Bacon\'s place
6. John - killed in the shootout at Eddie and Bacon\'s place
7-10. Rory Breaker\'s 4 henchmen - killed in the shootout at Eddie and Bacon\'s place
11. Plank - shot several times, until finally killed by Rory Breaker
12. Rory Breaker - shot by Plank
13. Dean - shot in the chest by Harry
14. Harry Londsdale - shot several times by Gary
15. Gary - killed with a hatchet to the back by Barry
16. Barry - shot in the stomach by Gary
17. Dog - crushed by a car-door by Big Chris
Wikiquote has a collection of quotations related to:
Lock, Stock and Two Smoking Barrels
| Films directed by Guy Ritchie |
|---|
| The Hard Case (1995, short) • Lock, Stock and Two Smoking Barrels (1998) • Snatch (2000) • Swept Away (2002) • Revolver (2005) • RocknRolla (2008) |
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