When a seemingly straight-forward drug deal goes awry, XXXX has to break his die-hard rules and turn up the heat, not only to outwit the old regime and come out on top, but to save his own skin...
Daniel Craig
XXXX
Sienna Miller
Tammy
Tom Hardy
Clarkie
Colm Meaney
Gene
George Harris
Morty
Sally Hawkins
Slasher
Kenneth Cranham
Jimmy Price
Jamie Foreman
Duke
Michael Gambon
Eddie Temple
Ben Whishaw
Sidney
Dragan Mićanović
Dragan
Stephen Walters
Shanks
Louis Emerick
Trevor
Dexter Fletcher
Cody
Tamer Hassan
Terry
Jason Flemyng
Larry - Crazy
Nathalie Lunghi
Charlie
Rab Affleck
Mickey
Burn Gorman
Gazza
Steve John Shepherd
Tiptoes
Daniel Moorehead
Dizzy
Francis Magee
Paul
Philip Howard
Nightclub Drinker
Darren Sean Enright
Criminal
James Dodd
Principal Dancer
Kelly-Marie Kerr
Cocaine Girl
Nick Thomas-Webster
Serbian Security
Don McCorkindale
Albert Carter
Budge Prewitt
Golf Host
Neil Finnighan
Troop
Ben Brazier
Kilburn Jerry
Ivan Kaye
Freddie Hurst
Darren Healy
Junkie 1
Matt Ryan
Junkie 2
Paul Orchard
Lucky
Marvin Benoit
Kinky
Garry Tubbs
Brian
Dimitri Andreas
Angelo
Marcel Iureș
Slavo
Brinley Green
Nobby
Peter Rnic
Serbian Gangster (uncredited)
Kerri Kravin
Couple Having Sex (uncredited)
Director
Matthew Vaughn
Novel, Screenplay
J.J. Connolly
April 27, 2015
9
I'm not a gangster, just a businessman. And my commodity happens to be cocaine.
With a considerable amount of cash saved from his, ahem, dealings. A London drug dealer is all set to retire abroad and start a new life. However his mob boss Jimmy Price has two jobs for him to do immediately...
Layer Cake is directed by Matthew Vaughn. Vaughn is more well known as Guy Ritchie's producer on his early British gangster genre forays. Suffice to say he had some insight into what made those films {Snatch et al} hugely popular with the watching British public. How pleasing it is then to say that Vaughn, by showing restraint and an unfussy approach, has crafted a film that's more than equal to the best of Britain gangster faves, and actually sets new parameters for toning a film. By focusing more on mood and atmosphere over bombastic scenarios, Vaughn, aided by a superlative Daniel Craig as the nameless dealer, lifts the film above its conventional plot arc. In what could have been a standard tale of a man doing one last job before going straight, we, along with Craig, find that all roads are blocked, it's as if there is some higher force at work here.
Layer Cake also scores high for its more easy on the eye filming of London, this is no destitute capital where tower blocks loom like monsters over the characters. This London is thriving, vim and vitality, the place to be, seediness is far from the ebullient crowd. Ben Davis' photography perfectly complimenting the engrossing score from Lisa Gerrard & Ilan Eshkeri, both of which serve to make London an extra character in the story. The film however is not perfect, at 105 minutes it's actually too short, something that only becomes apparent when all the plot strands come crashing together in a rushed last quarter. Yet in spite of that failing, the ending delivers a jolt to the system, to crown, what to me at least, is one of Britain's finest and tidiest gangster offerings. 9/10