Bank of Dave 2: The Loan Ranger
- 2025
- 1 घं 44 मि
IMDb रेटिंग
6.3/10
2.4 हज़ार
आपकी रेटिंग
अपनी भाषा में प्लॉट जोड़ेंThis sequel to Bank of Dave sees Dave Fishwick taking on a new and more dangerous adversary: The Payday LendersThis sequel to Bank of Dave sees Dave Fishwick taking on a new and more dangerous adversary: The Payday LendersThis sequel to Bank of Dave sees Dave Fishwick taking on a new and more dangerous adversary: The Payday Lenders
फ़ीचर्ड समीक्षाएं
Bank of Dave 2: The Lone Ranger is an unexpected sequel that actually finds a worthwhile story to tell and its greatest strength lies in putting the best aspect mostly front and centre this time. It's hindered by an extremely cliché romantic subplot and it seriously jumps the shark towards the end but it always remains entertaining, enhanced by the continued celebration of a genuinely kind and thoughtful person.
Rory Kinnear is easily the best thing about these thanks to his endlessly loveable presence and the increased screen time only improves his performance by giving him more to work with and his accent is faultless yet again. Chrissy Metz and Amit Shah do a good job making the weakest element work as well as it can since their budding romance is cute enough to almost warrant every diversion taken for it.
Returning director Chris Foggin brings a workmanlike quality to proceedings so it's all solidly constructed without anything in particular standing out. Generally, it's very blunt in what it's doing and a lot of the dialogue really lacks subtlety as it makes grand statements in the broadest and most generic fashion possible, especially when it comes to the songs implemented through karaoke.
Rory Kinnear is easily the best thing about these thanks to his endlessly loveable presence and the increased screen time only improves his performance by giving him more to work with and his accent is faultless yet again. Chrissy Metz and Amit Shah do a good job making the weakest element work as well as it can since their budding romance is cute enough to almost warrant every diversion taken for it.
Returning director Chris Foggin brings a workmanlike quality to proceedings so it's all solidly constructed without anything in particular standing out. Generally, it's very blunt in what it's doing and a lot of the dialogue really lacks subtlety as it makes grand statements in the broadest and most generic fashion possible, especially when it comes to the songs implemented through karaoke.
STAR RATING: ***** Brilliant **** Very Good *** Okay ** Poor * Awful
Following his successful battle with the big banks, Dave (Rory Kinnear) now he faces a new adversary: Pay Day Loan Lenders, who are targeting the poor and vulnerable, offering financial lifelines before charging exorbitant interest rates. When the top companies are identified, it is discovered that they are just subsidiaries of financial companies based in the U. S., headed by the shady Carlo Mancini (Rob Heaney.) Dave calls in the help of U. S. based expert Jessica (Chrissy Metz) and shy accountant Oliver (Amit Shah) to help in his battle against them.
2023's Bank of Dave obviously made enough of an impression that this hastily delivered sequel has arrived early in the new year, perfectly understandable as times remain tough, and many people are struggling to get by and see their standard of life declining, even though this film actually charts events that now occurred over ten years ago, concerning the regulation of pay day loans. But the present situation was the result of gradual design, and so it's worth a look in.
Director Chris Foggin returns to directing duties, and pretty much repeats the formula of his previous film, basically aiming for a feel good true life tale, in the midst of hard financial times, but while the novelty of this might have seen it by the first time, this time the cracks are a little harder to cover over. While it's portraying no doubt fundamentally honest, salt-of-the-earth working people, it feels over sanitised, lacking the raw, gritty feel of a true, working class area, and suffering as a result. All the gang from before have returned, but it's on a bigger scope now going stateside, leading to an unnecessary and distracting subplot involving an awkward romance between Oliver and Jessica.
If you particularly enjoyed the first one, there are more rich pickings for you here, with Kinnear back on form as the earthy, modest Dave, and a strong supporting cast, just a script that doesn't do the most with the potential at hand. ***
Following his successful battle with the big banks, Dave (Rory Kinnear) now he faces a new adversary: Pay Day Loan Lenders, who are targeting the poor and vulnerable, offering financial lifelines before charging exorbitant interest rates. When the top companies are identified, it is discovered that they are just subsidiaries of financial companies based in the U. S., headed by the shady Carlo Mancini (Rob Heaney.) Dave calls in the help of U. S. based expert Jessica (Chrissy Metz) and shy accountant Oliver (Amit Shah) to help in his battle against them.
2023's Bank of Dave obviously made enough of an impression that this hastily delivered sequel has arrived early in the new year, perfectly understandable as times remain tough, and many people are struggling to get by and see their standard of life declining, even though this film actually charts events that now occurred over ten years ago, concerning the regulation of pay day loans. But the present situation was the result of gradual design, and so it's worth a look in.
Director Chris Foggin returns to directing duties, and pretty much repeats the formula of his previous film, basically aiming for a feel good true life tale, in the midst of hard financial times, but while the novelty of this might have seen it by the first time, this time the cracks are a little harder to cover over. While it's portraying no doubt fundamentally honest, salt-of-the-earth working people, it feels over sanitised, lacking the raw, gritty feel of a true, working class area, and suffering as a result. All the gang from before have returned, but it's on a bigger scope now going stateside, leading to an unnecessary and distracting subplot involving an awkward romance between Oliver and Jessica.
If you particularly enjoyed the first one, there are more rich pickings for you here, with Kinnear back on form as the earthy, modest Dave, and a strong supporting cast, just a script that doesn't do the most with the potential at hand. ***
I didn't enjoy this as much as the original Bank of Dave. It just seemed rushed, no character or plot development, things just seemed to happen. The romance between the CAB guy (Amit Shah) and journalist (Chrissy Metz) just didn't ring true. The acting wasn't top notch despite the cast who have done far better in the past- the female lawyer (Leila Farzadi) and Rory Kinnear were the 2 standout performers, (having seen the real Dave Fishwick, Rory actually makes the guy seem likeable) the guy who played the mobster wasn't at all menacing or believable, and the NJ cop looked like a homeless guy just off skid row. For an investigative journo the American lady had no go in her! Having Def Leppard appear was always going to be a bonus, but their part of the story seemed shoe horned in, for no real reason. The Dave asleep in the DL equipment box scene was just cringe. It filled an evenings watching, but it could have been so much better.
What more could you want. Good film based on true story in UK how one man helped change the UKs policies on the corrupt money lending business of credit loan sharks. Follows on from Bank of Dave which again was based on true story. Easy to watch with a true happy ending and involves the famous rock band Def Leppard. Always been a fan and listen to them today, was great seeing them do something like this one and the first one too and why not they are people after all.
Very enjoyable, nice that it was based on true story and that the actual Bank of Dave is still going strong today. Oh and it's got Def Leppard in it too if you missed that.
Very enjoyable, nice that it was based on true story and that the actual Bank of Dave is still going strong today. Oh and it's got Def Leppard in it too if you missed that.
Bank of Dave 2 takes the real life situation of Dave's campaign against Wonga payday loan company ( who created so much misery ) and as it says at the start of the film embellish's the facts with a fictional gangster story line and a romance.
The fact it did lead to change & demise of numerous evil payday loan companies warrants the film being produced.
If you understand finance the film is great and the embellishments make the film dramatic and humorous in many ways.
Personally I loved it then looked at what was real and what was not. I would recommend you do the same - watch it and enjoy the film then see how real it is.
Enjoy we both did and gave it a 9 out of 10 as we both enjoyed it.
The fact it did lead to change & demise of numerous evil payday loan companies warrants the film being produced.
If you understand finance the film is great and the embellishments make the film dramatic and humorous in many ways.
Personally I loved it then looked at what was real and what was not. I would recommend you do the same - watch it and enjoy the film then see how real it is.
Enjoy we both did and gave it a 9 out of 10 as we both enjoyed it.
क्या आपको पता है
- ट्रिवियाThe real Dave Is in the crowd at the football game. Bottom right.
- गूफ़A 'cease and desist' are not legal proceedings. They are also a civil matter, not a criminal one. In the film, Dave is having to appeal it in a criminal trial, when it is actually for those who are enacting the 'cease and desist' to take action to enforce it in a civil trial.
And, when entering the court, it was marked as a 'Magistrate's Court' but the presiding judge was dressed as a crown or high court judge and was not a magistrate, of which, there would normally be three.
Finally, judges in the UK do not use (or even have) gavels.
- कनेक्शनFollows Bank of Dave (2023)
टॉप पसंद
रेटिंग देने के लिए साइन-इन करें और वैयक्तिकृत सुझावों के लिए वॉचलिस्ट करें
विवरण
- रिलीज़ की तारीख़
- कंट्री ऑफ़ ओरिजिन
- भाषा
- इस रूप में भी जाना जाता है
- El Banco de Dave 2
- फ़िल्माने की जगहें
- लीड्स, वेस्ट यॉर्कशायर, इंग्लैंड, यूनाइटेड किंगडम(on location)
- उत्पादन कंपनियां
- IMDbPro पर और कंपनी क्रेडिट देखें
बॉक्स ऑफ़िस
- दुनिया भर में सकल
- $18,072
- चलने की अवधि
- 1 घं 44 मि(104 min)
- रंग
- ध्वनि मिश्रण
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