Tower Heist (2011) Poster

(2011)

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7/10
Average, but not necessarily bad
bowmanblue25 February 2015
Tower Heist is Ben Stiller's latest comedy where he plays the building manager of a New York high rise tower block. He regrettably invests him and his staff's pension money with a smooth-talking crook who lives in the top floor penthouse. Naturally, the crook wastes their money and they're left without a cent.

Therefore, Ben and a few other disgruntled employees, enlist the help of small time crook Eddie Murphy to break into the penthouse and steal back their money.

It's a decent enough premise and, again, all the cast to a decent enough job. There you have it - it's a decent film. Not quite funny enough to be a comedy through and through. Not quite dramatic enough to be a straight drama. It even throws in a bit of a high speed car chase into the mix to add an element of 'action' into the genre.

It's a bit of a mixed bag. If you go into it without any expectations, you should find it an okay watch.

Not great, but not bad either. Fans of Stiller and Murphy should find extra things to enjoy about it.
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7/10
A Very Entertaining Way to Pass the Time
Shelly_T7 November 2011
I didn't expect too much from this movie after watching the trailer. Judging from the cast and the trailer I thought that it would be at the very least a little entertaining or just an okay movie. It is actually very entertaining and the performances from the entire cast are solid. I laughed a lot and more than I expected. It also has quite a few twists and turns which I wasn't expecting and which should keep you interested. The chemistry between Ben Stiller and Eddie Murphy is very good too and they both provide a couple of very memorable scenes. If you are looking for something to pass the time this movie would be a very good choice.
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7/10
Comedy and capers in the skyscraper
SimonJack9 November 2014
"Tower Heist" is a fun comedy, action and crime thriller. It's a chess game of life. The opponents are a band of employees who run a high-class apartment building in the heart of Manhattan, and the pent-house tenant who takes their pensions and savings to the cleaners. But, one caper deserves another, and the employees are on the rebound after the FBI get into the picture.

It's all about decorum, money, position, working for a living, trusting others, greed, fraud, getting even and justice. That may not sound like the elements of comedy, but they all add ;to a very good and entertaining movie. Ben Stiller is the lead character. Eddie Murphy, Alan Alda, Judd Hirsch, Tea Leoni and a host of other actors add to the fast action, bedlam and smiles in this film.

Most adults should enjoy this film. Just be prepared for city street language and some vulgarity. The end is an especially nice surprise.
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Breezy and acceptable fluff
Wizard-826 April 2012
"Tower Heist" is a movie that's never going to win awards. But if it's playing on your television during a rainy day, you will find it is an acceptable way to pass the time. And you'll find the movie has some positive features. Alan Alda makes for a good slimy villain, and Ben Stiller, Eddie Murphy, and Matthew Broderick (as well as their co-stars) make a likable bunch of people with a goal that you hope they will be able to reach. The actual heist has some unexpected twists as well as some genuine suspense. Certainly, the movie is not perfect. There are some parts of the movie when the movie seems to be missing footage, especially at the end where not all the plot points are resolved (though the two alternate endings on the DVD have this missing material that was for some reason removed from the theatrical print.) While I wouldn't say this is a movie to seek out, if you stumble upon the opportunity to see it, it will probably give you an acceptable amount of entertainment.
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7/10
A rarity, a Hollywood comedy that is actually funny
julian-mumford4 August 2012
Josh Kovaks (Ben Stiller) is the perfect employee. Managing a high end apartment skyscraper in New York, his team look after and cater for all the foibles of their rich charges.

Living in the penthouse suite with a rooftop swimming pool emblazoned with a Dollar Bill mosaic is Arthur Shaw (Alan Alda), a wealthy financier with Steve McQueen's Ferrari in his living room.

How did it get up there, they took it apart and moved it piece by piece, subtle this is not.

Josh plays online chess with Arthur, likes him and entrusts the employees pension fund to him to "double their money", unbeknown to his work colleagues.

With a story ripped from recent headlines, Shaw is soon in trouble with the FBI, notably pretty detective (Tea Leoni). Subsequently, the employees are left searching for their lost pension funds turning the movie into a "let's get even" escapade.

Josh is largely loyal but when rattled he can and does takes matters into his own hands, vintage car aficionados should look away.

Following subsequent events, we are left with a larcenous but incompetent gang of six. Likable and nominally in charge Josh, Charlie (Casey Affleck) who is not much good at anything but has a pregnant wife and extreme motivation. New boy Enrique (Michael Pena) who is not the brightest bulb, Slick (Eddie Murphy) supposed criminal mastermind but none of the above. Odessa, a chambermaid with a bizarre Jamaican accent and a handy sideline in safe-cracking (Gabourey Siibe) and lastly, Mr Fitzhugh (Matthew Broderick), depressed, straitlaced, crumpled ex-banker and ex-apartment owner.

We are all set for a decent farce with elements of drama, however the movie is set for fun and mostly delivers.

This a rare Hollywood comedy that is actually funny. Whether the group are planning their heist using Lego, getting distracted with Female Sexuality issues or breaking off mid heist to walk a residents pet dog.

Overall of course it's all very silly and preposterous but it is good to see Eddie Murphy funny again, his sequence with Odessa, as she teaches him the in's and out's of safe-cracking is well done. Stiller largely plays the straight-man, allowing the others to bounce their comedic lines off him. Matthew Broderick is perhaps the standout, managing to make Mr Fitzhugh both sad and funny at the same time, Broderick's comedic timing used to great effect.

It is good to see Judd Hirsch on the big screen, getting a few good scenes as the overall building boss. Alan Alda also lifts the film with his considerable talents bought to bear on the smarmy Mr Shaw.

Like any comedy caper, the tone needs to be right and the project is very much a light soufflé but Director Brett Ratner manages to pull off the various elements, to make this a fun night in.

Summary

That rare event, a Hollywood comedy that manages to both entertain and provide a light sprinkling of social commentary.

The film is largely designed to be a crowd pleaser and largely fulfils that role admirably http://julesmoviereviews.blogspot.co.nz/
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7/10
entertaining and enjoyable
blanche-224 September 2015
Ben Stiller, Eddie Murphy, Casey Affleck, Alan Alda, Matthew Broderick, Judd Hirsch, Tea Leoni, Stephen Henderson, and Gabourey Sidibe star in "Tower Heist" from 2011.

It's a caper movie, and it's a light and fun one. Stiller as Josh Kovaks manages an exclusive apartment building, The Tower (like Trump Towers). He finds out that he and the other employees have fallen victim to a Ponzi scheme orchestrated by a tenant, Arthur Shaw (Alan Alda). After Josh nearly destroys the incredibly expensive car that Shaw has on display in his apartment, he and everyone else are fired.

Determined to take Shaw down, they learn that he kept about $20 million mad money and decide it's in his safe. They decide to rob him. Kovaks recruits a thief he knows, Slide (Eddie Murphy) to help. Meanwhile, the FBI, in the person of Tea Leoni, has arrested Shaw but it looks as if they might have to drop the charges.

Caper movies seem to be a dime a dozen these days, but there's always room for one more good one. The cast here is super talented and while it's not the most original script, there are some fun things in it.

Matthew Broderick, Gabourey Sidibe, and Eddie Murphy are especially funny. It's a shame Eddie Murphy's career took a nose dive; he's no less talented than he used to be.

With the Macy's Day Parade, particularly Snoopy in the background, Matthew Broderick hanging by a rope, Gabourey Sidibe running her trolley into a guard and knocking him out, you'll have a good time. Just don't expect Citizen Kane.
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6/10
Fun but a little flat
djensen15 December 2011
Not as dull as its title suggests, but still somewhat flat caper flick. It has a consistent string of laughs, but never quite hits the heights. Brockerick's down-and-out businessman is a good start but lands few jokes, and the plotting seems to meander. Stiller is a highlight, and Affleck and Murphy are good solid, but Aldo is a standout.

With that much star power, you'd think the comedy would make itself, but the actors feel confined. Weirdly, I think the movie could have been better if it had foregone the heist and explored the Stiller character and his buttoned-down-but-flexible managerial style. More tower. Less heist.
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6/10
A Popcorn Movie
pvmpro11 February 2012
Great Cast , and direction. Eddie Murphy shined in this movie even though his frame-time was less when compared to Ben Stiller. Still I would've thought you could've made the plot even more

interesting by adding a car chase/action sequence which could've put the cherry on the top. Since the movie was shot in New York , one could've added cameos by the icons of New York like Donald Trump , Diddy , Jay z etc .One other thing that is lacking is the spontaneity in the Movie , This movie could learn somethings from movies like Ocean's Eleven Franchise where the pace is never dropped . I would say the lack of pace was easily masked by the dialog delivery of Stiller and Murphy. On the whole , your money is well spent nevertheless.
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4/10
Average fare; will fade out your memory in minutes
ssvikas12 November 2011
Heist movies have hit the screens with regularity in every language and generation. You know how it all ends: the smart thieves get their booty despite all odds and twists. But, very few are actually smart and slick enough like an 'Italian Job' or an 'Oceans Eleven'. On a comparative rating, 'Tower Heist' doesn't even get close.

'The Tower' is a luxury high rise apartment (actually filmed at Trump International Hotel and Tower in Manhattan) where the hard working staff led by Josh Kovacs (Ben Stiller) make sure that its high profile tenants are pampered.

In the backdrop of difficult markets and people losing jobs including one of the Tower's tenants and Wall Street trader Mr. Fitzhugh (Matthew Broderick), FBI arrests the wealthiest tenant Arthur Shaw (Alan Alda).

Just then, Josh realizes that his pension along with that of his staff have been wiped out in Shaw's Ponzi scheme. To make matters worse, Josh and two others are fired for their outburst at Shaw. When the drunken FBI agent (Tea Leoni) reveals that Shaw could be having cash hoard in his penthouse, Josh resolves to steal it.

For all practical purposes, a film starring Ben Stiller cannot be an action flick. Thus, comedy is written into it. And Josh's conspirators aren't professional thieves, but a concierge, Charlie (Casey Affleck), an elevator operator, Enrique (Michael Pena), Fitzhugh and Odessa a cleaner (Gabourey Sidibe). So, they hire Slide, a small-time thief (Eddie Murphy) to teach them to do the job and Murphy adds a few laughs.

How the bunch of simple folk handle the heist forms the rest of the story. Contrary to other Heist flicks playing on the difficulty of the job or employ 'Mission Impossible' style technology or stylish actors, 'Tower Heist' tries to differentiate itself as a comedy where amateur thieves bungling up on something or the other. But, comedy is forced and feels as if someone is holding an 'Applause' or 'Laugh' board for the audience.

Going by the star power that 'Tower Heist' had, one would at least expect a decent comedy. But alas, such is not the case and you don't see concrete stuff till it gets to the end, which, in contrast to the rest of the movie is smartly written. Well, you won't mind watching it on Cable TV; but coughing up bucks for a movie ticket is a no-no.
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8/10
When 2 Legends meet
It's a magnificent comedy movie that picks up right after 25 minutes of the start. Both actors including Ben Stiller were excellent and the movie was amazing through out. Crime + Comedy + 2 great actors is definitely gonna be the thing you're looking for.
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An enjoyable film about getting back what should be yours
Gordon-1119 March 2013
This film is about a group of employees in a luxury apartment building who tries to take back what a rich financial guru in their building took from them.

"Tower Heist" tells a bunch of dedicate and hardworking people who lost their pensions because the financial guru lost all their money in a fraud. The subsequent heist may be funny and implausible, but the film is certainly watchable. Describing the greedy and unscrupulous behaviour of some people in the finance sector surely brings back memories of the financial collapse a few years ago. Getting revenge from them is likely to strike some heartstrings among the public. The action scenes include a rather cool elevator shaft scene, and a very scary scene involving aerial action which made me on edge throughout. "Tower Heist" is like a modern day Robin Hood story, with a heartwarming ending. I enjoyed it a lot.
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7/10
Standard recipe that still works neatly
LennyOO20 November 2011
Last Friday, we had Tower Heist for dinner. We went there without much expectations, as is so often the rule when it comes to sitcoms. One shouldn't expect a movie-making masterpiece, but that is not a problem anyway. Sitcoms do what they should: Give you a good and easy laugh! And it did. The old recipe of comedians (Ben Stiller, Eddie Murphy) can still put off some good laughs, I must admit!

But not always so, for the first half hour was very boring and regular. It is the standard introduction of the environment, in this case "The Tower", a gigantic skyscraper where the high and rich can spend their days embalmed in luxury and high quality service. We see Ben Stiller as its manager, the one to make sure everything is alright. I will not really use elements from the story, because you can also read a short introduction. These first touches are boring but necessary: They contradict what is about to follow when the sh*t hits the fan, the ricochet. Only, the problem was that this part of the film lasted just a little too long. But what followed made everything right, nonetheless.

The casting isn't special, but it works, an older formula with a new touch. Who doesn't know the comedy about businessmen whose life is about to get into serious sh*t? Trading Places, Liar Liar, anyone? Who doesn't know Eddie Murphy, always there to turn even the most serious and formal places into a mess. And don't forget Ben Stiller, who happens to take up a role much more serious than we're used to.

If I have made you think that this is just a comedy, well, not entirely. It has action in it, and some parts actually gave me the thrills (I have fear of heights). Comedy and action has also proved a very good combination, for example "The Hangover".

So far so good. It might seem like a cliché, which it actually is, but it's good. It's nigh impossible to think of an original comedy story, because there's an ungodly amount of them made every year. Elements of older comedies are used by the new ones, creating slightly different ideas every time. Think about it for a longer time and you'll see the simplicity in them, which you could... but... maybe you shouldn't. Why not? Because these movies aren't made for thinking, but laughing, enjoying.

Conclusion: I can recommend this movie to anyone looking for some nice and easy sitcom fun. That's what you want, that's what you'll get. I promise, you will not be disappointed. This movie is nothing special compared to its other comedy counterparts, but neither are they. This is everything a comedy SHOULD be: Fun. [8/10]
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7/10
Gets you to the top but what about getting down?
aslett1 April 2012
Just to let you know where I'm coming from: As usual I avoided reading anything about the movie before seeing it. A film is ALWAYS better if it's like a book by an unknown author that you picked up off a bookstall as you were heading to the airport. Seriously, why do film companies essentially blurt out a film story's secrets that will take any surprises out of the first hour of a film? Maybe this is why I enjoyed the first half so much compared to other reviewers. It's a good yarn that is not as obvious as some would have you believe. Ben Stiller doesn't go too far from his safety zone playing Josh Kovacs, a reliable, serious, not-exactly-happy-but-putting-up-with-it manager of a ritzy apartment block. You like him. He's decent, loyal and almost a slave to the wealthy, privileged tenants who hold a great sense of entitlement to the things the majority of us don't have. Here's the subtext. He's like most of us today who live in a society that is convinced those less well off should get the "trickles" that come down from government payouts to our betters (BTW, didn't anybody in power look up the word "trickle" before okaying this?). And Stiller does it very well. He's getting older and greyer. He's fit and precise but a shade weary, repressed by a life of looking after the wishes and feelings of others and foregoing his own. (Probably coincidence but an almost interesting one: Kovacs backwards is Scavok. Sciavo in Italian is 'slave'). Alan Alda is the initially affable Arthur Shaw, a big guy on Wall Street. You like him too. He's friendly, avuncular and a man of the people. Director Brett Ratner gives us a sharp and snappy whirl through the characters and milieu with Dante Spinotti's strong and glossy cinematography hitting all the right notes. There's a great support cast of workers of an ethnic rainbow who we already like from their film histories that include Michael Peňa and Gabourey Sidibe, rising sufficiently above their paper stereotypes to just about forgive the cynical choices in creating them. Matthew Broderick is overly convincing as a crushed and ruined investment banker, a personality that exhausts your patience but must have seemed a good idea at the time. Casey Afflek shows a great talent for comedy timing as Josh's unreliable brother in law and Eddie Murphy steals scenes by his observations on "Lesbian titties" or by simply smiling. The romantic interest is FBI agent Tea Leoni, who is invariably wonderful in anything and doesn't fail here, giving depth to words that are sometimes as thin as the ink they were written in. She's not a twenty-something anymore and the camera irritatingly avoids real close ups. Ah well. That voice. I'd be happy just to listen to her but would have preferred if they didn't worry so about showing the forty-ish female lead as anything less than airbrushed. Like Eddy Murphy she ultimately seems grossly underused. I'm not giving much away in an IMDb review to say that Alda's Shaw turns out to be a Bernie Maddoff character callously looking to get away with ripping off thousands of investors and cheating justice as well. The pensions and savings of tower staff look to be lost and when Josh sees first hand Shaw's indifference to the plight of his fellow workers he gathers a team of unlikely robbers to regain the usual 'hidden stash' in the penthouse apartment. So we come to the big flaw of a film that needed one last rewrite: the director and the script writers get us to the top of the building, but they don't know how to get us down safely. They are altogether deft and efficient up to this point but run scared when presented with the job of bringing all the threads of action and personality to their just ends. We get resolution without closure. I understand there are other versions of the ending. As is now becoming familiar perhaps the DVD will be the finished product, where we are allowed to have several alternatives mingle into a whole and satisfy us beyond the clean-cut simplicity of the screen version. (nb. There is yet another reference to a chess game between villain and hero that like dozens of others in recent times sounds like the writers' knowledge comes from a single Wikipedia article. Enough with the chess motif!)
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7/10
" If you must steal something, do it in broad daylight "
thinker16913 October 2012
Brett Rather directs this hilarious story of Josh Kovaks (Ben Stiller) an uptown high rise apartment, manager who's principal tenant is Arthur Shaw, an unscrupulous multi-millionaire (Alan Alda). Greedy, callous and artificially sympathetic the rich guy attempts to flee the country, but is thwarted by the U.S. government which arrests him for securities fraud and tax-evasion. Although the F.B.I. is holding him, they are unable to recover his hidden fortune, which is closer than anyone imagines. When Kovac's discovers his hotel employees are also victims of Shaw's schemes, he assembles an amateur group of would-be thieves with the task of stealing from the rich and giving back to the poor, not realizing the difficulty of designing an elaborate robbery. With top actors like Eddie Murphy, Casey Affleck and Matthew Broderick the film becomes a comedic romp through uptown New York during the annual Macy's Day Parade. A good film, but one wonders if this movie isn't just another version of 'Ocean's Eleven.' All in all, it's still a fun time at the theater. ****
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7/10
Entertaining, but not memorable...
kgmarra5 November 2011
It's not just a robbery. It's payback. "Tower Heist" is filled with an all-star cast, which includes Ben Stiller, Eddie Murphy, Casey Affleck, Alan Alda, and Matthew Broderick. Josh Kovacs (Stiller) is the manager of The Tower, an extremely wealthy apartment building with a penthouse, which Arthur Shaw (Alda) has lived in for the past decade. Shaw is a humble billionaire who is respected by most.

When Shaw is arrested for stealing all of The Tower staff's money, Josh is determined to get all the money back, regardless of the consequences. Josh puts together a team that is made up of former employees (Affleck & Michael Peña), a former guest at The Tower (Broderick), and a criminal (Murphy). Broderick plays a middle-aged father who used to travel first class, but now is being kicked out of his home. Murphy plays the criminal who the team feels is a "professional criminal" because he's been to jail several times.

This movie is absolutely hysterical. Broderick and Murphy bring the most laughter to the audience. However, much of the heist is nonsensical and completely impossible. It isn't difficult to spot the flaws in the plot. But the craziness and absurdity of the heist does make it more comical.

The acting of everyone besides Broderick is satisfactory. Playing a nerdy coward seems to work for Broderick, even though he's infamously known for his role of rebellious Ferris Bueller.

The story seems to be missing something. It's a little too simple and a little too short. I expected it to have more action, but overall, it's really just another comedy with well-known comedians.

I give "Tower Heist" a 7 out of 10 for being hilarious and extremely entertaining, but less than what I expected. Not very memorable.

PS – I am an extra in this movie! See if you can find me
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7/10
Better-than-average, lighthearted caper movie
longcooljolie30 December 2012
Sometimes it's fun to make a topical movie out of fodder from the current headlines. While not naming names, Tower Heist makes light- hearted fare out of a nasty situation in the financial world, where a certain somebody in New York made millions scheming movers, shakers, and celebrities.

So someone said "What if the little people fought back?" and we now have the movie "Tower Heist."

While not a critical success and barely breaking even at the box office, it's a fun movie to watch and watch again. The script has been criticized as "unfunny" and "illogical" but the tangled web characters weaved by the writers is outstanding and well-thought. The best example of this happens when Josh Kovacs, the "Tower" manager confronts Shaw, the master schemer, after the jolly doorman Lester, has attempted suicide. Shaw says "Of course I care what happens to Lester." Josh replies "Well how come you haven't asked whether he lived or died?"

Overlooked in the discussion about the movie has been the character Mr. Fitzhugh, played by Matthew Broderick. His character is the flip side of Shaw, as he was once a financial field high-flyer brought down to earth by possible bad decisions and bad luck. Yet even he is initially reluctant to join Josh Kovac's gang until he hears about Lester. Later, he has some of the funniest lines in the movie, and when he wrestles a gun away from the rogue Slide, does a hilarious attempt at trying to be a bada**.

Speaking of Slide, the Eddie Murphy character, this is Eddie Murphy getting back to his roots. The "Slide" character hearkens back to Reggie Hammond from 48 hours, 25-30 years later. Yes, it's a somewhat stereotypical character, but Eddie plays it well. His best scenes happen when Josh (Ben Stiller) bails him out of jail to ask for his help with the "Tower Heist." Slide: "Soooo, seizure boy wants to try to steal something. What you trying to steal?" Josh: "Twenty million dollars." Slide double takes and says "Let's go get something to eat!"

The producers originally wanted Robert Redford to come out of semi- retirement and play Shaw the schemer. Yet Alan Alda was a great choice and one of the high points of the movie. By and large he has always played good guys in his career, but his Hawkeye on MASH, the role for which he is most well-known, always had an edge. He shows that same talent in fleshing out Shaw, who tells chess match anecdotes to drive his points home.

Tea Leoni is almost unrecognizable as a brunette but does a competent turn as a tough FBI agent assigned to Shaw's case. Casey Affleck and Michael Pena round out the major cast as a whiny expectant father and a slightly flaky electronics school dropout, respectively. They all work together to make "Tower Heist" a fun way to spend an hour and a half at the movies.
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3/10
Unimaginative Heist only makes off with your ticket money.
st-shot19 November 2011
This sloppy and heavy handed comedy caper quickie with a couple of comedy heavyweights and a decent supporting cast hired to stand around make faces and spew stale dialog gets jammed between floors fast. Other than it's Bernie Madoff villain played by Alan Alda walking around in cuffs most of the film it has an antiquated implausibility that gives it a 70s look and feel.

Ben Stiller is Ben Stiller, the caring look out for the underdog guy he's played in his last twelve pictures over the past three years. These days he's working at a lavish Manhattan hotel caring for guests and managing an underdog group of employees that constitute a small UN. When the unctuous Madoff like Ponzi schemer loses the money of the hotel staff Josh Kovacs (Stiller) and his employees respond harshly getting themselves fired in the process. Determined to even the score they devise a plan that looks like it was masterminded by a twelve year old.

From it's disheveled and fragmented construction you get a visceral feeling of contempt for the audience by the makers of Tower Heist. The plan lacks detail, the comedy punch and the suspense a degree of tautness to release it from it's torpor. Director Jeff Ratner known for his noisy Batman films is working with a smaller pan to bang on here but still manages to annoy in different way by getting Eddie Murphy to revise his 80s SNL Mr. Rogers neighborhood character, Stiller's one note and a pathetic Matthew Broderick to stand around looking wide eyed and medicated. Tower Heist belongs in the basement.
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8/10
Great Movie, better than I expected!
jdemo20088 April 2012
I hadn't seen a good Eddie Murphy movie in some time and when I saw the trailer I thought it was going to be a very predictable story line. But on the contrary...it was fresh and very entertaining! The beginning kept me guessing how the plot was going to set up. Then, when it all came together, their plan started to unravel...It was nice to see Matthew Broderick acting again and in full quirk mode...He played a great nerd! Alan Alda was a joy to hate as the bad guy and Ben Stiller was his usual perfect lead man! The casting was perfect and the music kept the excitement going until the end! If you are looking for a fun, "feel good" movie with good acting, then this is a must see! Long live Robin Hood!!!
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7/10
Senior Actors
steven-anthoni13 June 2012
I think this movie was interesting because we can watch the acting from senior actors like Ben Stiller and Eddie Murphy. In this movie, Ben Stiller acted as Josh Kovacs. as a manager who have responsible to manage the employee and Eddie Murphy acted as Slide, a thieves.

The plot from the movie is unexpected, many scenes are unexpected and this movie have little joke and perhaps serious scenes. Actually, i think because this is Ben Stiller's movies, this film have many humorous scenes, but in this film you can't find many humorous scenes, but i think the serious scenes more than humorous scenes.

if you want see the new acting from Ben Stiller and Eddie Murphy, you can watch this movie ^^
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5/10
It's not a great heist movie...But it's somewhat watchable
KineticSeoul9 January 2012
I had very low expectations for this movie and maybe that is the reason why. But this wasn't as terrible as I thought it would be, I mean it ain't a good heist movie either but it's watchable. The humor isn't very well written though and I didn't find myself chuckling except maybe once. But the direction is very unoriginal and most of the stuff that happens isn't surprising at all. This movie seems like a mess at times and all the cast that seems to be bringing something to the table end up as nothing much. Some of the characters sort of maybe seem like they are going to be build up to something cool and just goes flat. The build up including the training montage isn't all that good and the main heist isn't very well crafted or believable. But the movie just wasn't as terrible as I thought it would be and it's probably worth seeing it at a dollar theater.

5.8/10
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Cookie-Cutter Action-Comedy
colinrgeorge4 November 2011
Everyone's excited for the new Brett Ratner movie, right? Jonesing for another marginal action-comedy in the vein of Rush Hour 2? You're in luck! Tower Heist fits the bill, and despite its allusions to 2011 Wall Street turmoil, the familiar flick feels very much of that era. The Rat-man's latest is cookie-cutter entertainment at its most transient, but everyone likes cookies. Right?

In Tower Heist, Ben Stiller plays subservient chief of staff at a ritzy Central Park apartment complex — but when a tenant (Alan Alda) swindles him and his workforce out of their pensions, it's no more Mr. Nice Josh. He masterminds a robbery with the help of his concierge (Casey Affleck), an elevator operator (Michael Peña), a downtrodden former resident (Matthew Broderick), and a Jamaican cleaning woman (Gabourey Sidibe). Unschooled as they are in the art of the steal, Josh also employs the aid of petty criminal "Slide," (Eddie Murphy) who gives the crew a crash course in crime.

The cast of Tower Heist, anchored by Stiller, Alda, and the under-appreciated 'other' Affleck, is its greatest asset. Gabourey Sidibe pulls a Melissa McCarthy in a similar big girl supporting role, and as for Eddie Murphy — it's good to know that there's still a funny guy beneath the Norbit prosthetics. Granted, nobody's working with AAA material here, but their comic chemistry makes for some laugh out loud moments.

Conceived and written by Ted Griffin of Ocean's Eleven and Matchstick Men, Tower Heist strictly adheres to caper convention. Assemble the team, unfurl the plan, set said plan into motion, and wait for it all to come undone. It's a tried and true formula, which is ironic considering the risk its characters incur. There's even a heavy-handed chess metaphor about sacrificing one's Queen, but Griffin is a decidedly defensive player.

Then there's the Rat-factor. Poor Brett's an easy guy to hate. Called "Hollywood's Ad Impresario" by Businessweek, he's the dude who wants to make a Guitar Hero movie. He's a purely commercial filmmaker who's helmed competent but inferior follow-ups to beloved franchises like X-Men and Silence of the Lambs. And let's face it, he's kind of ugly. With Tower Heist, the director isn't flexing any artistic muscles, but he's got the mechanics down pat.

Plus, he's got the good sense to hire performers who probably don't need much direction. Guys like Stiller, Murphy, and Broderick are so well practiced that they're entertaining even when they're resting on their laurels. Similarly, Ratner's worked with cinematographer Dante Spinotti enough times to not have to concern himself with the visual aspects of filmmaking. Though the credits suggest otherwise, Ratner's role is nearer to producer than director.

Consequently, Tower Heist feels impersonal and even a bit disingenuous. After all, what could Brett Ratner, the privileged son of a Miami socialite turned blockbuster director, have in common with the working stiffs he portrays? It's easy to hate Ratner, but unfair to channel that negative energy at his work. With a good cast and decent material, Tower Heist is an amusing, inconsequential diversion that entertains and evaporates in the span of 100 minutes. And with a family friendly PG-13 rating, this cookie-cutter action-comedy is poised to make loads of dough.
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7/10
Hmmm
rudicantfail28 August 2022
Hmmm, yes well, "Tower Heist" is a comedy, with some action and crime thrown I for good measure. It is a story that has been played many times in the cinema world, the underdogs get even with the evil rich man. This movie has some good actors involved, such as the legendary Alan Alda {playing the rich bad guy}, Ben Stiller and Eddie Murphy {two of the great comedians} Judd Hirsch and the lovely Téa Leoni. The storyline is good, standard but not excellent, and it works well; until towards the end of the movie. For me the ending was weak, but as a movie, it is a good Sunday afternoon "something to watch" type of movie. Cheerful but not brilliant.
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7/10
Fulfills all of the requirements for a comedic heist genre, but not too much above & beyond that
chaz-284 November 2011
Tower Heist enjoys a coincidence of sorts in its choice of opening weekend. The Occupy Wall Street protest is alive and well not too far from where this film is set and hundreds of other Occupy protests are simultaneously happening around the world. Tapping into a particular segment of that angst, Tower Heist is about the blue collar vs. the mega rich; the staff (99%) vs. the penthouse owner (1%).

Arthur Shaw (Alan Alda) is a Bernard Madoff archetype who is put under penthouse arrest by the FBI for running a Ponzi scheme and defrauding his investors. His smallest investment account happens to be the pension funds of the staff that run the vast and luxurious tower he lives on the top floor of. Josh Kovacs (Ben Stiller) plays the tower's manager and trusted staff leader. Stiller tries his best to pull off blue collar and Everyman characteristics here even though he was paid $15 million to try and do that. It was Josh who convinced the rest of the staff to ensure their pensions to Arthur Shaw so he feels responsible when everything goes bust.

Josh is not going to go down without a fight though. He is in shock that a man as rich as Arthur would swindle the meager pensions of the very employees who cook his food, take out his trash, and open his doors. The film abruptly transforms Arthur from a nice and congenial billionaire into a miserly and insulting billionaire overnight. During his house arrest, he relishes reminding the staff of their lowly station in life and just how replaceable they are as part of the service industry. Whether or not a man in Arthur's position would alter his behavior like that in reality, the script requires it of him here to provide the requisite motivation for the upcoming heist.

Casing the hotel, Josh picks up a motley crew of robbers who have no business robbing a piggy bank let alone a high-tech penthouse. There is Josh's brother and hotel concierge Charlie (Casey Affleck), Mr. Fitzhugh (Matthew Broderick), a former tower resident and now bankrupt banker, Enrique Dev'Reaux (Michael Pena), the brand new elevator operator, and finally there is criminal and parolee Slide (Eddie Murphy). Josh knew Slide as a child; however, it takes awhile for Slide to remember Josh and when he does, he goes off on a not too funny rant on seizures.

Now that the team is in place, it is very lucky the film chose to open with a sort of 'Day in the Life' of operating a luxury residence. Josh performs his morning checks of the staff and conveniently runs into an assortment of supporting characters each with their own specific quirk or skill which may or may not come into play during the heist at an integral moment. There are Miss Iovenko (Nina Arianda) who Josh reminds not to study for the Bar Exam during work hours; Odessa the maid (Gabourey Sidibe) whose skill will be revealed during the film; and there is Lester the doorman (Stephen McKinley Henderson) who is the tower's longest serving staff member.

Tower Heist was co-written by Ted Griffin (Ocean's Eleven) and there are quite a few similarities to Ocean's Eleven. This is a very large and recognizable cast. Frequently, I noticed the actor instead of the character which you never want to happen during a movie. Does anyone actually remember Brad Pitt's character from Ocean's Eleven? I only remember Brad Pitt the sidekick. The caper itself is extremely elaborate and requires precise timing and coincidences. Tower Heist follows all of the standard comedic heist film rules to cleanly fit inside of the genre.

There are not too many laughs here though. The only person who routinely cracks jokes and amusingly remarks about how inept everyone else can be is Slide. Eddie Murphy has decided to revisit the realms of his better roles from Trading Places and Beverly Hills Cop and shelve the utter garbage he routinely chooses to be a part of lately (Norbit, Meet Dave). The film works without the slapstick laughs though. The audience expects them because of the relentless previews; however, they have already seen the majority of the funny material from those brief shots. The set up scenes before the heist are the most effective, especially the back and forth banter between Stiller and Alda. They represent their respective economic worlds and do not want to back down from one another for fear of letting down more than themselves, but ideas and principles which embody their positions in life.

See Tower Heist for the behind the scenes staff life in the tower and some amusing bits during the heist, but don't expect Ocean's Eleven.
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7/10
Get The Money Back for the staff
bkoganbing11 November 2011
Tower Heist concerns the robbery of palatial skyscraper apartment of a Bernie Madoff like character who lives at the very top and lives quite well. Alan Alda plays the robbery victim in this case, although what's being done to him is nothing compared to what he's done to thousands of others.

Ever since MASH finally reached the end of the road, the former Hawkeye Pierce, one of the most sensitive souls ever created for the big and small screen, Alan Alda has played some of the nastiest no good SOBS around. In addition to Tower Heist check out his work in Murder at 1600 and The Aviator. Anyway as this ersatz Bernie Madoff, Alda is quite a piece of work.

And this piece of work also scammed the staff of his building out of their pension funds. A lot of people invested all their money with him and a lot of lives are ready to be broken. It's at this point that Ben Stiller conceives of the idea to rob the Alda penthouse to get at whatever hidden assets Alda might have salted away. And he recruits quite the staff to help with Casey Affleck, Michael Pena, Gabourey Sidibe, Stephen Henderson and most interestingly of all recently dispossessed tenant Matthew Broderick.

Who next to Alda has the most interesting character in Tower Heist. Broderick is also a former Wall Street player who didn't rise as high as Alda. In fact he's crashed and burned and can't wrap his mind around that concept. He's along for his expertise on hiding assets.

And this group of amateurs need a professional thief which is where Eddie Murphy comes in. He and Stiller are a pair of childhood acquaintances whose lives took divergent paths. But they do need him now. One of the best sequences in the film involves Murphy giving the rest an opportunity to make their bones as thieves in a mall.

Tower Heist is not a great film, but it's fast paced and funny and in these days who doesn't like seeing a Wall Street big-shot get what's coming to them? Let's say that Alda has chosen one interesting place to salt away his rainy day assets and what our intrepid band of thieves have to do get it out of the apartment provide most of the laughs in Tower Heist.
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1/10
Terrible script, acting, wrong music... One star at most
krupin17 March 2012
I had high expectations for this movie because of the cast. Boy, was I wrong.

The idea of the movie wasn't bad in general, but the script was terrible. This movie is neither a heist movie, nor a comedy, nor anything else. It's a set of expected dialogues for such an idea, nothing surprises or entertains you. The acting feels like they just wanted the filming to end, get it over with. Music was good, but out of context. Building up emotions when there's clearly nothing going on... partly because of poor actors' play.

I give this movie a 1/10. I hardly sat through the whole thing just to make sure I don't miss something interesting, at least one good joke. I wish I didn't, since it didn't come.
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