![the vault film the vault film](https://i.pinimg.com/736x/e4/b2/41/e4b241a18255d4ace20ae9b34e5f212d.jpg)
Nobody’s ever managed to break into the bank: Its safe, built over 100 years ago, has no blueprints, and its security system includes an underground river that floods the safe room if breached. Koppel and Rafa Martínez, “The Vault” follows Thom (Highmore), a genius engineering graduate who yearns for excitement and whose interest is piqued by the Bank of Spain. Written by Rowan Athale, Michel Gaztambide, Borja Glez, Santaolalla, Andrés M. Japan and Australia are still in discussion and will be sealed during the AFM, Sabine Chemaly, TF1 Studio EVP international sales, told Variety. India (Lionsgate India) and Singapore (Shaw Renters) have also closed. It just goes to show how technology changes in a 25-year timespan.Saban Films’s acquisition comes as TF1 Studio closed further key territories on “The Vault,” with Eagle Pictures snagging Italy, and U.K. After seeing the light in Mission: Impossible 1 it is almost comical to see the huge light in Topkapi. In Mission: Impossible 1, Ethan has a much smaller light attached to his head. Finally, In Topkapi, Giulio has a very large light attached to his head.
![the vault film the vault film](https://image.tmdb.org/t/p/original/j03f6mK6mOUz7OgcGZp8569bha1.jpg)
Both films also have the rope slip and the robber just misses hitting the floor, which would sound the alarms. In both Topkapi and Mission: Impossible the robber then spins and goes from head-first to a horizontal suspension in the air. In Mission: Impossible, Ethan is lowered in headfirst via cable. In Topkapi, the robber (Giulio played by Gilles Ségal) is lowered headfirst from the ceiling using ropes. The other key elements from Topkapi’s heist have to do with how they enter the robbery area. However, in the vault itself, there is very little dialogue and noise. In the Mission: Impossible heist, there is more background noise in the scenes interspersed with William Donloe’s “stomach problems”. Topkapi’s heist, on the other hand, is mostly silent, but there is some brief dialogue between the robbers. Who has silence for almost 30 minutes in a non-silent movie? And it works…wonderfully. It also caused some buzz when the film was released as it was a very novel way to put a scene like that together. This really added to the tension of the scene. There are whatever natural noises appear in terms of footsteps and the like. In Rififi, the heist takes up almost 30 minutes of film time and not a word is spoken, nor is a score played. One of the most noticeable ideas used in all 3 films is the lack of a score and almost total silence during the 3 heists. All 3 of the heists have the robbers coming into the area from the ceiling.
#THE VAULT FILM HOW TO#
All 3 films have lengthy planning discussions around how to deal with the alarm and how sensitive the room is to sound, and the floor is to touch in the case of Topkapi and Mission: Impossible. The heist scenes in these two films have key ideas which are used in the heist in Mission: Impossible. He also directed the 1955 heist film Rififi (He won Best Director at the 1955 Cannes Film Festival for this film). He received two Academy Award nominations for this film. Dassin was the director of the 1964 heist film, Topkapi.
![the vault film the vault film](http://i.ytimg.com/vi/5eFjJFIdQjo/hqdefault.jpg)
This scene is obviously modeled after the work of Jules Dassin.
#THE VAULT FILM MOVIE#
I can’t think of a movie that has a high-tension scene like this one that doesn’t have the “we almost blew it” part added to it. It even has the “oops, I almost fell” part where Kreiger lets the rope slip. Tom Cruise does this scene himself and is my favorite scene in the movie. They decide that the only way to get to the computer with the file is to enter the vault from above, have Ethan be lowered into the vault without him touching anything, except the keyboard. The room or vault where the computer lives is very heavily protected (sound, touch, temperature sensors) which requires a gutsy heist in order to get the file. The NOC List is a file on a computer at CIA Headquarters in Langley, Virginia in the US. It is only 2 minutes of the 11 and a half minutes of this scene in the film. This clip shows Ethan Hunt entering the vault to copy the NOC list. Although Mission: Impossible is a spy movie, 11 and a half minutes of it are a heist.