Charlie Croker pulled off the crime of a lifetime. The one thing that he didn't plan on was being double-crossed. Along with a drop-dead gorgeous safecracker, Croker and his team take off to re-steal the loot and end up in a pulse-pounding, pedal-to-the-metal chase that careens up, down, above and below the streets of Los Angeles.
Charlie Croker pulled off the crime of a lifetime. The one thing that he didn't plan on was being double-crossed. Along with a drop-dead gorgeous safecracker, Croker and his team take off to re-steal the loot and end up in a pulse-pounding, pedal-to-the-metal chase that careens up, down, above and below the streets of Los Angeles.
The film's central narrative focuses on a revenge-driven heist to recover stolen gold, emphasizing apolitical themes of betrayal, elaborate planning, and personal retribution rather than promoting any specific political ideology.
The movie features a visibly diverse cast in its ensemble, though it does not include explicit race or gender swaps of traditionally white roles. The narrative primarily focuses on a heist plot and does not critically portray traditional identities or feature strong, explicit DEI themes.
The Italian Job (2003) does not feature any identifiable LGBTQ+ characters or themes. The narrative focuses on a team of thieves planning a gold heist, with character relationships and motivations centered around heterosexual dynamics and professional rivalries. Consequently, there is no LGBTQ+ portrayal to evaluate within the film's storyline.
The film features Stella Bridger as the primary female character, who is a skilled safe cracker and driver. While she participates in high-stakes action sequences, her role does not involve direct physical combat or martial arts victories against male opponents. No other female characters engage in such combat.
The 2003 film is a reimagining rather than a direct remake, introducing new characters. No established character from the 1969 original is portrayed as a different gender in the 2003 version.
The 2003 film is a remake that introduces a largely new ensemble of characters. While some roles are inspired by the original, no specific character who was canonically established as one race in the 1969 film was portrayed as a different race in the 2003 version.
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