A brutally comic tale about a group of London friends who find themselves deep in debt to an East End tough, LOCK, STOCK AND TWO SMOKING BARRELS is quick-paced, stylized, and highly entertaining. In his debut feature film, director-writer Guy Ritchie weaves a tangled web of shady, blithely eccentric characters and several storylines, all of them coming together in a gleeful explosion of murder and mayhem. When streetwise charmer Eddy (Nick Moran), the son of steely bar owner JD (Sting), botches a gambling scheme with his dad's nemesis, porn king Hatchet Harry (P.H. Moriarty), he's got one week to come up with 500,000 pounds or he loses his fingers--and so do his friends Tom (Jason Flemyng), Bacon (Jason Statham), and Soap (Dexter Fletcher). While the pals scheme to make the money, Harry indulges his penchant for valuable antique shot guns, stolen for him by a couple of inept burglars. Soon the missing guns, a paranoid group of marajuana growers, a mean-spirited debt collector (Vinnie Jones) and his young son, and a violent bunch of thugs, are all thrown together in this tightly-woven, genuinely funny story that takes its inspiration from old British comic gangster flicks like THE LEAGUE OF GENTLEMEN and more recent films like RESERVOIR DOGS and THE USUAL SUSPECTS.
LOCK, STOCK AND TWO SMOKING BARRELS is a kineticly comic tale that follows a group of Londoners who find themselves in over their collective heads after a sour card game. Luckily for them--or so they think--they discover that their neighbors are plotting a robbery, a perfect opportunity for the lads to stumble into some payback money. So the scams begin to pile....
Filming began on November 6, 1997, at Repton Boxing Gym in East London, a notorious haunt of the infamous real-life gangsters, the Kray twins.
Typical freezing, rainy London weather plagued the crew, who sent runners back and forth all day long to a 24-hour bagel shop for hot tea and bagels.
The sleazy feel of the converted East End buildings and interior sets were inspired by old photos of London's formerly red-light district, Soho (now an art gallery and night club stronghold).
Sting's wife, Trudie Styler, was the executive producer of the film, and for Guy Ritchie's following movie, SNATCH. The couple introduced Ritchie to his wife, pop singer and actress Madonna, at a luncheon at their home during production of LOCK, STOCK AND TWO SMOKING BARRELS.
Ritchie was previously a music promo and commercial director. He completed his first short, THE HARD CASE, a few years before LOCK, STOCK.
"Personally, I would rather imply violence, anyway, we've seen it all before and I'm not interested in spilling the claret,"--Ritchie said of his decision to not make LOCK, STOCK into a visual blood-bath.
The short [mentioned in the media links row], LOCK STOCK AND FOUR STOLEN
HOOVES, is the pilot for the British television series, LOCK STOCK AND TWO
SMOKING BARRELS, based on the film.
Excerpt: "Piss off, y'nonce!"--Big Chris's young son, and criminal-in-training, Little Chris (Peter McNicholl)
"You have a better idea how to get 500,000 pounds, in the next few days...let us know!"--Eddy (Nick Moran) to his friends when he tells them of his robbery plan
"You're JD's son,"--Hatchet Harry (P.H. Moriarty) upon meeting Eddy
"Sorry, I don't know your father."--Eddy.
"You will if you keep that attitude up."--Hatchet Harry
"There is one more thing. It's been emotional."--Big Chris (Vinnie Jones)
DVD Features:
Region 1
Snap Case
Dual Layer
Anamorphic Widescreen - 1.85
Full Frame - 1.33
Audio:
Dolby Surround - 5.1 - English
Subtitles - French, Spanish - Optional
Additional Release Material:
Featurette: Production Featurette
Trailers:
1. US Trailer
2. UK Trailer
Text/Photo Galleries:
Cast & Crew Biographies
Cockney Dictionary
Director of Photography
Tim Maurice-Jones: CINEMATOGRAPHER
Review 1:
Rating: A - Recommended
Source: Entertainment Weekly
p.133 08/20/1999
Review 2:
"...Brash, ebullient direction....The punchy little flourishes that load this English gangster film with attitude are perfectly welcome....A fine feat of macho gamesmanship..."
Source: New York Times
p.E22 03/05/1999
Review 3:
"...LOCK, STOCK is fun....It has an exuberance....It's alive..."
Source: Chicago Sun-Times
p.31 03/12/1999
Review 4:
"...Stylised wildly at every turn..."
Source: Sight and Sound
p.46-7 09/01/1998
Review 5:
"...[An] exhilarating, showy cinematic style....[With] multiple cackles and head rushes..."
Source: Premiere
p.30 03/01/1999
Review 6:
"...It's bursting with enough cheekiness and hustle-bustle to attract a cult. It's obvious Ritchie has talent..."
Source: USA Today
p.6E 03/05/1999