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Las experiencias de Dave Fishwick cuentan la historia cómo él, un hombre de Burnley de clase trabajadora y millonario hecho a sí mismo, luchó para establecer un banco comunitario.Las experiencias de Dave Fishwick cuentan la historia cómo él, un hombre de Burnley de clase trabajadora y millonario hecho a sí mismo, luchó para establecer un banco comunitario.Las experiencias de Dave Fishwick cuentan la historia cómo él, un hombre de Burnley de clase trabajadora y millonario hecho a sí mismo, luchó para establecer un banco comunitario.
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Opiniones destacadas
BANK OF DAVE is a classic British feel-good "underdog" movie, designed to offend no one, and please everyone. And, let's be fair, no one does underdog like the Brits! Rory Kinnear is especially appealing as Dave, the local businessman who woke up one morning with the quaint notion that the only way to beat the nasty-nasty banks at their own game was to actually become a bank. Against all odds, he pulled it off. The courtroom scenes are especially well done. Recommended. Not only do we need more banks that care about customers, we need more movies that care about viewers. ((Designated "IMDb Top Reviewer." Please check out my list "167+ Nearly-Perfect Movies (with the occasional Anime or TV miniseries) you can/should see again and again (1932 to the present))
British films have, historically, tended to stick to certain formulas. They are usually set in the 'grim' north and are about underdogs winning against the odds. But while 'Bank of Dave' does fit that synopsis, it manages to be fresh, funny, and relevant. It doesn't dwell on grime for grittiness - it actually shows how beautiful the north of England is, how friendly the people are, and it's a joy to watch the central character of a London lawyer fall for the northern charm. But that's just a side show to the main story which is an incredible true story I wasn't previously aware of, and one that needs to be told. My Netflix subscription is currently balancing on a knife's edge, but this film managed to save it from being cancelled this month. More like this, please!
Bank of Dave is a heavily fictionalised feelgood comedy drama about Dave Fishwick (Rory Kinnear.) A truck and minibus dealer in Burnley. After the financial crash of 2008 when banks got bailed out but stopped lending to those in need.
Fishwick wanted to start a not for profit bank that would give loans to the local community.
In his way is the elitist banking establishment determined that northerner like Fishwick will not get his bank off the ground. So he gets the help of a corporate lawyer Hugh (Joel Fry) from London to make the application for a banking licence.
Bank of Dave rightly takes a stick to the banking fat cats who took fraudulent risks, went bust, saved by a Labour government and the taxpayer. All so they could carry on regardless.
The movie is too formulaic. Northerners are the salt of the earth, Londoners are hissable villains. There is a romantic subplot involving Hugh and a NHS doctor.
There is a good performance from Rory Kinnear. Despite his father hailing from Wigan, his accent seemed to be more generic northern than Lancashire.
Director Chris Foggin knows which buttons to push to give it a warm glow. The songs help as well as an appearance from Def Leppard.
Fishwick wanted to start a not for profit bank that would give loans to the local community.
In his way is the elitist banking establishment determined that northerner like Fishwick will not get his bank off the ground. So he gets the help of a corporate lawyer Hugh (Joel Fry) from London to make the application for a banking licence.
Bank of Dave rightly takes a stick to the banking fat cats who took fraudulent risks, went bust, saved by a Labour government and the taxpayer. All so they could carry on regardless.
The movie is too formulaic. Northerners are the salt of the earth, Londoners are hissable villains. There is a romantic subplot involving Hugh and a NHS doctor.
There is a good performance from Rory Kinnear. Despite his father hailing from Wigan, his accent seemed to be more generic northern than Lancashire.
Director Chris Foggin knows which buttons to push to give it a warm glow. The songs help as well as an appearance from Def Leppard.
This is a true gem of a film. A sort of feel good comedy with a bit of romance and some social comedy thrown in . With the banking sector being the bad guys , what's not to like.
The acting is great all the way through . There are a couple of laugh out load moments a background romance.
I thought Joel Fry played his part magnificently as the slightly confused southerner thrown into the north of England.
The story of Dave Fishwick is described at the beginning as True(ish) as there is clearly a lot of artistic licensing going off. But at its heart is a man who just wants to give something back to his community.
Joyful film cant recommend enough.
The acting is great all the way through . There are a couple of laugh out load moments a background romance.
I thought Joel Fry played his part magnificently as the slightly confused southerner thrown into the north of England.
The story of Dave Fishwick is described at the beginning as True(ish) as there is clearly a lot of artistic licensing going off. But at its heart is a man who just wants to give something back to his community.
Joyful film cant recommend enough.
Everything you'd expect from a UK based film, pulled heartstrings, decent soundtrack, good character acting and a nice story, well told.
Joel Fry is excellent and stakes a claim for the next slightly nervy, slightly cute, slightly awkward leading man that all UK based comedies/love stories need. Rory Kinnear rapidly becoming a mainstay too, justifiably so despite the questionable accent that tended to wander around the Northern Shires throughout the film but this didn't take anything away from the decency of his character.
Lots of top names appear throughout the film, that'll have you pausing it and trying to remember what you last saw them in.
I enjoyed the film a lot, and it's message is worth remembering; that good people DO exist, but you don't always notice them.
Joel Fry is excellent and stakes a claim for the next slightly nervy, slightly cute, slightly awkward leading man that all UK based comedies/love stories need. Rory Kinnear rapidly becoming a mainstay too, justifiably so despite the questionable accent that tended to wander around the Northern Shires throughout the film but this didn't take anything away from the decency of his character.
Lots of top names appear throughout the film, that'll have you pausing it and trying to remember what you last saw them in.
I enjoyed the film a lot, and it's message is worth remembering; that good people DO exist, but you don't always notice them.
¿Sabías que…?
- TriviaDave Fishwick appears in the council meeting scene at the beginning of the movie.
- ErroresIn the court the magistrate has a gavel. These aren't used in British courts.
- ConexionesFollowed by El Banco de Dave 2 (2025)
- Bandas sonorasHere I Go Again
Written by David Coverdale and Bernie Marsden
Published by EMI Music Publishing () Ltd and Warner Chappell Music Ltd
Performed by Rory Kinnear
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Detalles
- Fecha de lanzamiento
- País de origen
- Sitios oficiales
- Idioma
- También se conoce como
- Bank of Dave
- Locaciones de filmación
- Leeds, Yorkshire del Oeste, Inglaterra, Reino Unido(on location)
- Productoras
- Ver más créditos de la compañía en IMDbPro
Taquilla
- Total a nivel mundial
- USD 630,943
- Tiempo de ejecución
- 1h 47min(107 min)
- Color
- Mezcla de sonido
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