Billie Morin
This movie feels like it was made purely to piss off people who want good shows
Lidia Draper
Great example of an old-fashioned, pure-at-heart escapist event movie that doesn't pretend to be anything that it's not and has boat loads of fun being its own ludicrous self.
Frances Chung
Through painfully honest and emotional moments, the movie becomes irresistibly relatable
Delight
Yes, absolutely, there is fun to be had, as well as many, many things to go boom, all amid an atmospheric urban jungle.
Leofwine_draca
THE LAST HEIST is a B-movie mix of the horror and thriller genres, with a plot involving a bank heist that takes place at the very same time a notorious serial killer happens to be visiting said bank. Don't you just hate it when that happens? The film's visual aspects work against it; this is one of those cheap, greyed-out, single location movies which appears to be shot in a gloomy warehouse with an obvious small set featuring plasterboard walls and the like. However, the narrative is certainly fast-paced and involved, and there's a great deal of conflict taking place throughout, which is always a good thing. Henry Rollins' mild-mannered businessman type is an effective antagonist, and there's certainly plenty of violence to keep you watching.
sh_abady
I literately, wasted my time. The worst movie ever. It is bad acting. Period.
mtthwvrnr
It's like a Die Hard knock off, but Bruce Willis is a serial killer. These reviewers discount the effort a good Die Hard rip-off takes. Henry Rollins is John McLane (sic, maybe) with air vents included. Alas, we don't see him crawling through with witty one- liners but you get the idea. If you've seen the New World/Corman produced heist flicks from the 1990's you know what you've got here. One star reviewers need to get off their cinematic high horses and stop taking cinema so seriously. This was a great waste of time. Better than an episode of Criminal Minds!
Argemaluco
After the excellent Big Ass Spider! and the tedious TV movie Lavalantula, director Mike Mendez changed the road with The Last Heist, a hybrid of criminal thriller and visceral horror which, inside the modest niche of "B-Movies", fulfills with the minimum requirements of coherence and violence in order to keep us moderately entertained without making us feel we wasted our time. However, The Last Heist suffers multiple problems which darken the experience. Some action scenes feel too ambitious for the limited resources Mendez had to work with; the locations are bland and ordinary; and there are technical fails which end up being too distracting (example: the digital flashes of the guns; I could almost see water springs falling from the cannons). Fortunately, we have a slightly original premise compensating that to some point; we have seen uncountable bank robberies out of control, but the addition of a serial killer breaks the monotony. Sure, we have to swallow the huge coincidence of both things happening the same day (the robbery and the killer's visit), but it's appropriate as a catalyst of the story. Oh, and when the killer is played by Henry Rollins, we can be sure that he will exude intensity and threat. So, in conclusion, The Last Heist is a mediocre film, but it made me have a moderately entertaining, even though not lacking of frustration, time, and I can give it a slight recommendation specially to followers of "B" cinema who can appreciate a film mainly for avoiding the capital sin of this cinematographic niche: being boring. The Last Heist wasn't so, and that was enough to validate my time.