The Opportunists

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The Opportunists
File:Poster of the movie The Opportunists.jpg
Official poster
Directed by Myles Connell
Produced by <templatestyles src="Plainlist/styles.css"/>
  • Tim Perrell
  • John Lyons
Written by Myles Connell
Starring <templatestyles src="Plainlist/styles.css"/>
Music by Kurt Hoffman
Cinematography Teodoro Maniaci
Edited by Andy Keir
Production
company
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  • Eureka Pictures
  • Prosperity Pictures
Distributed by First Look International
Release dates
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  • August 11, 2000 (2000-08-11) (United States)
Running time
90 minutes
Country <templatestyles src="Plainlist/styles.css"/>
Language <templatestyles src="Plainlist/styles.css"/>
  • English
  • Polish
Box office $584,054[1]

The Opportunists is a 2000 British-American crime drama film, written and directed by Myles Connell, and starring Christopher Walken, Cyndi Lauper, Donal Logue, and Vera Farmiga. The film takes place in the urban setting of Greenpoint, Brooklyn, in New York City. It was released in United States theaters on August 11, 2000.

Plot

The film's protagonist is Victor "Vic" Kelly (Christopher Walken), a struggling auto mechanic with a safe-cracking past and a lot of debt. When a supposed cousin from Ireland visits Vic, the alleged cousin sabotages one of Vic's auto repair jobs, to ensure Vic's desperation and participation in the robbery scheme introduced to Vic by neighborhood resident Pat (Donal Logue).

Vic is too stubbornly proud to accept a loan from his bar-owner girlfriend Sally (Cyndi Lauper), who offers Vic money that she was otherwise planning to use to renovate and remodel her neighborhood bar. Vic agrees to the robbery scheme, and goes to the armored courier service posing as a potential customer.

Given a view of the facility, including being shown the triple combination-lock vault, Vic then goes to work on practicing his safecracking skills for the big day. The auto mechanic takes one last shot at the lucrative robbery with his Irish cohort to pay off his debts. We find out the cousin is not really a cousin. Vic becomes locked in the vault, while the fake cousin takes a bag of cash and makes his escape from the scene.

The Irish cohort has a change of heart and returns with a bag of cash taken from Vic at the scene at the crime. Vic can now afford to keep his elderly aunt in her retirement home. There's enough money for Vic to be a good guy and give a cut to the two guards, who were in on the robbery with Vic, and had gotten fired. And Vic buys a juke box as a gift for his girlfriend's remodeled bar.

A second bag of cash is taken from the vault by the armoured-courrier service owner, who will report all the cash missing, and make false insurance and IRS claims. To protect his own scheme, the owner refuses to press charges against Vic. Vic finally experiences a bit of good luck for once in his life. The movie ends with Vic walking back to his girlfriend.

Cast

Reception

Box office

It its opening weekend in the United States, The Opportunists made $46,967 from 5 theaters, giving a per theater average of $9,393.[2] The film made a further $537,087 for a total domestic gross of $584,054.[1]

Critical response

The Opportunists received mostly positive reviews from film critics. On Metacritic, the film currently holds a 71 rating based on 24 critical reviews.[3] Review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes gave the film a weighted average of 52% based on 27 reviews.[4] Elvis Mitchell of The New York Times wrote: "Myles Connell, who wrote and directed the picture, gives it the sleepy pace of a late fall day when the biggest event turns out to be waiting to see if the sun will break through the gray haze. The film has the ambience of a real neighborhood, but Mr. Connell can't seem to give it substance. Sometimes it seems to be fading away in front of your eyes."[5]

Roger Ebert of the Chicago Sun-Times wrote: "Crime movies always seem to have neat endings. There's a chase or a shootout, a trial or a confession. "The Opportunists" is messier than that. It is less a matter of the big payoff than the daily struggle. In the movies, most safecrackers are egotistical geniuses who do it for the gratification. In life, I imagine they're more like Victor Kelly, and they're in it for the money. Not much money at that."[6] Owen Gleiberman of Entertainment Weekly, gave a mixed review, writing: "The Opportunists is skillfully made, yet the film would have been better if it had tapped a bit of that Walken madness to bust out of its drab, poky little-people symmetries."[7]

Accolades

Year Award Category Recipient Result
2000 Casting Society of America Best Casting for a Feature Film – Independent Kathleen Chopin Nominated
Gotham Award Open Palm Award Myles Connell Nominated

References

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External links