Welp, maybe theDen of Thievesmovies aren’t for me.Christian Gudegast’s 2018 proof that he’s seenMichael Mann’sHeathas generated a cult following over the years I don’t quite understand. That befuddlement continues withDen of Thieves 2: Pantera, Gudegast’s European double-dip into the original’s well of ideas.Den of Thieveshas a significant runtime problem at 140 minutes, and the sequel is just as exhausting at 144 minutes.Gudegast’s film feels almost artificially programmed in its adherence to criminal caper tropes, unable to steal our hearts with the bromantic charms of cops and robbers with boundary issues.

What Is ‘Den of Thieves 2: Pantera’ About?

Gerard Butlerreturns as Nicholas “Big Nick” O’Brien, the recently divorced LA County Sheriff’s Department boozehound who can’t let the Federal Reserve job die.O’Shea Jackson Jr.‘sthief Donnie Wilson is still out there, but he’s gone international. Nick’s persistence leads him to Nice, France, where Donnie becomes embroiled in another robbery scheme connected to the Panther mafia. Donnie, Jovanna (Evin Ahmad), Slavko (Salvatore Esposito), and the rest of the crew plot to infiltrate the world’s largest diamond exchange — unless Nick can intervene. Who needs jurisdiction when you’re “Big Nick” O’Brien?

Gudegast’s follow-up isn’t as colorful or chaotic.It’s selling what’s on the tin, but the product is marginally stale.Den of Thieves 2: Panterapresents a bunch of sophisticated heist tropes with a French accent, which becomes exceedingly tedious as the film lurches towards its inevitable milestones. Nick’s hot on Donnie’s heels in Nice out of nowhere, companions doublecross their allies, mob bosses threaten punishments should their valuables not reappear — you’ve seen this picture before. Which, frankly, isn’t a deathblow.The Town,The Italian Job,andeven thatRick and Mortyepisode aimed at heist tropes follow the same rules. What sets them apart? The devilishness of their details.

Gerard Butler and O’Shea Jackson Jr on the poster for Den of Thieves 2: Pantera.

Gerard Butler and O’Shea Jackson Jr. Can’t Elevate This Crime Thriller

Den of Thieves 2: Panteradepends on Butler and Jackson Jr.’s adversarial dynamic with a shrunken ensemble, which is a shocking hurdle. Nick’s bad-boy edge has softened, and Donnie’s upgrade to chief “antagonist” diminishes the character’s prior strengths.The two castmates lack magnetic attraction, a substantial concern in a buddy-rival thriller.Butler and Jackson Jr. are talented performers, yet Nick and Donnie share multiple scenes where their line reads are pedestrian, like they’re pushing through conversational motions. The duo feels less enthusiastic in theirDen of Thievesroles, extrapolating into an overall complaint that encompasses the entire experience.

Although, Gudegast clearly understands how to shoot smash-and-grab suspense. Cars go vroom as high-speed shootouts take place on unmonitored mountain highways. You’ll hold your breath as thieves shimmy over rooftop gaps on nothing but a steel pole.Den of Thieves 2: Panteraboasts cinematography fromTerry Staceythat stands up to most subgenre comparisons, even if crisp visuals don’t match excitement levels. Porsches, stacks of cash, and fancy suits flash the extravagant side of illegal professions, while the “low technology” countermeasures used to deactivate security systems niftily use gelato containers as detection blockers.Everything looks like it should in a film about dangerous risks for massive paydays, but beauty is only skin-deep.

Gerard Butler smoking a cigarette in Den of Thieves: Pantera.

‘Den of Thieves: Pantera’ Only Works About Half the Time

Or, beauty is in the eye of the beholder. The same people who cheered throughDen of Thieveswill probably be smitten by the coolheaded charms ofDen of Thieves 2: Pantera. When Nick and Donnie get sloshed at a nightclub and trauma dump over shawarma, the film’s rigidness melts. When plans meet challenges,the comfortable ease of objective completion becomes excitingly unknown.The hype is real for the 50% ofDen of Thieves 2: Panterawhere Gudegast colors money-green outside the lines. But for the other 50% as we’re dragged across the finish line, unfazed by blasé burglary antics in swanky duds? It’s like Gudegast draws inspiration from “101” booklets about Action Hero Zingers, Heist Drama Angles, and Crime Team Dynamics.

It’s a shame.Den of Thieves 2: Panterastruts the strut but ruins the illusion when it talks.Butler and Jackson Jr. can’t shoulder the story’s weight, nor does character development allow supporting players to assist. Like I said aboutDen of Thieves, if this sequel were a tight 100 minutes, maybe my review would have a different tone. As is, and considering the issues highlighted above,Den of Thieves 2: Panterais a painfully overlong continuation that will probably need to find the same second lifeDen of Thievesdid on Netflix. Perhaps streaming it as a background distraction will yield better results with less attentive audiences.

den-of-thieves-2-panterra-poster.jpeg

Den of Thieves 2: Panterais now playing in theaters.

Den of Thieves 2: Pantera

Gerard Butler and O’Shea Jackson Jr.’s French heist thriller isn’t a fanciful feast of criminal excitement since Gudegast runs into pitfalls new and old in this underwhelming Den of Thieves sequel.

In the thrilling sequel, Big Nick pursues Donnie across Europe, entangled in the perilous realm of diamond thieves and the notorious Panther mafia. As tensions rise, they confront the formidable challenges of a colossal heist targeting the world’s largest diamond exchange, setting off an intense battle of wits and resources.

instar50359570.jpg

Get tickets

instar49969303.jpg