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    New York Examiner News
    Home»Film»What Happened To The Money
    Film

    What Happened To The Money

    By AdminJuly 14, 2022
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    What Happened To The Money


    WARNING: Spoilers for Den of Thieves.

    Directed by Christian Gudegast, and currently available to stream on Netflix, 2018’s Den of Thieves ends with a major twist that reveals the film’s true criminal mastermind, so here’s the Den of Thieves ending explained in full. The finale doesn’t necessarily explain why a group of criminals would betray their comrades, or how they were able to flee with millions. The key to understanding Den of Thieves ending is really to pay very close attention.

    Den of Thieves initially appears to subvert the good guys vs. bad guys premise. Early on, Detective Nicholas “Big Nick” O’Brien (Gerard Butler) arrives at a Los Angeles crime scene and offers up a heavy dose of toxic masculinity. Sure, his acquaintances don’t quite like him, but his inner circle of “regulators” are fiercely loyal, evidenced by a party sequence in which they kidnap and question a local bartender named D0nnie Wilson (O’Shea Jackson Jr.). Big Nick declaratively states that he and his crew are the real bad guys, and forces Donnie to give up information about his criminal associate Ray Merrimen (Pablo Schreiber). The primary conflict in Den of Thieves involves Big Nick trying to figure out the scope of Merrimen’s next heist. As it turns out, the Los Angeles Branch of the Federal Reserve is the crew’s next target. Specifically, Merrimen plans to steal $30 million of “unfit” money (currency with no serial numbers) before it’s shredded.

    SCREENRANT VIDEO OF THE DAY

    Related: Den Of Thieves: The Most Brutal Reviews

    Merrimen’s Den of Thieves crew consists of Donnie, Levi (50 Cent), Bosco (Evan Jones), and Mack (Cooper Andrews). Crucially, Merrimen doesn’t explain why he knows so much about the inner workings of the Federal Reserve, but everyone trusts him because of their military and high school sports connection (which Gerard Butler‘s Big Nick identifies during his investigation). Meanwhile, Merrimen uses his own girlfriend and Donnie to feed Big Nick information about a planned target in Montebello, but that’s just one part of a larger plan. Here’s that plan and the Den of Thieves ending explained in detail.


    What Happens In Den Of Thieves’ Ending


    At Pico Rivera Savings & Loan, Big Nick expects to arrest Merrimen’s crew but quickly realizes that something is different about this particular heist. For one, the crew threatens to kill civilians, which isn’t part of their usual operating procedure. Still, Big Nick waits it out after Merrimen seemingly blows up a bank vault while waiting for his demands to be met. Big Nick then realizes that the crew has escaped, and that he’d been tricked.

    Next, Merrimen’s crew executes the Federal Reserve heist they’d been preparing for all along (more on that below). But after escaping, O’Shea Jackson Jr.’s Donnie is detained by Big Nick and gives up the rally point. Meanwhile, Merrimen drops communication with Mack after learning about Donnie’s detainment, and attempts to escape with Bosco and Levi. Den of Thieves’ climax builds to a massive shootout during a traffic jam, culminating with the deaths of Merrimen, Bosco, and Levi.


    Den of Thieves ends with Big Nick’s discovery that the stolen Federal Reserve money was all shredded. He also realizes that Donnie somehow managed to escape. Big Nick then pays a visit to Ziggy’s Hafbrau, the “neutral place” where he initially confronted Donnie earlier in the film. After taking a look around and reflecting about past conversations, Big Nick realizes that Donnie was indeed the true mastermind. A brief montage reveals that Donnie had been collecting information on napkins for an extensive period of time, and then approached his former Marine pal, Pablo Schreiber’s Merrimen, with a heist plan. The final seconds of Den of Thieves’ ending explained that Donnie is now working in London and apparently plotting to rob a nearby diamond exchange.


    Related: How Money Heist: Korea Connects To The Original Show

    Merrimen’s Federal Reserve Heist Plan


    Pablo Schreiber in Den of Thieves

    On the surface, Merrimen’s Federal Reserve heist goes as planned. He creates a distraction at Pico Rivera Savings & Loan and successfully escapes through a sewer system. Merrimen and Levi then gain access to the Federal Reserve “nerve center” by disguising themselves and faking a money drop, using the stolen armored vehicle from earlier in the film and money from a rave heist. From there, Merrimen and Levi dump a money tub containing Donnie, who gains access to the count room after Bosco cuts the power. Donnie then locates the unfit money before it’s shredded, and makes sure to drop the bag into a garbage truck that will leave the building.


    Using intel from Mack (played by The Walking Dead season 7’s Jerry actor, Cooper Andrews), Donnie begins his plan’s masterstroke. After he successfully escapes, he locates a boxed meal that he hid earlier while making a fast-food delivery. Now pretending to be a deliveryman, Donnie manages to get past security on his way out before getting detained by Big Nick. Meanwhile, Merrimen reaches the junkyard rally point while Bosco hijacks a garbage truck carrying the money (the driver is revealed to be one of Donnie’s friends).

    Merrimen essentially lives by the gun and dies by the gun in Den of Thieves. Like Gerard Butler’s high kill-count-boasting Big Nick, he stays true to a specific code of conduct but doesn’t anticipate that Donnie would betray him by manipulating the plan to his advantage (more on that below). In terms of storytelling, Merrimen and Big Nick share similar qualities: they are two masculine men with supreme belief in their skills. Ultimately, they’re merely pawns in the game, which theoretically sets up the premise for Den of Thieves 2: revenge and justice.


    How Donnie Ends Up With The Money In Den Of Thieves


    O'Shea Jackson Jr. in Den of Thieves

    In Den of Thieves, Merrimen’s plan is actually Donnie’s plan. Evidenced by the final montage, Donnie orchestrated the entire Federal Reserve heist by collecting information while bartending at Ziggy’s Hofbrau. Of course, he couldn’t execute the plan alone, so he reached out to a military acquaintance, Merrimen, while secretly plotting with his old sports buddies — Mack, Alexi (Oleg Taktarov), and Bas (Max Holloway, who has also appeared in CBS’s Hawaii Five-0).

    Related: Army Of The Dead: Is There A Timeline Where The Heist Succeeded?

    Once Donnie gains access to the Federal Reserve count room, he keeps the money for himself in a secret bag. It’s ultimately revealed that Bas was the driver who left the Federal Reserve with different bags of money and that Alexi had the unfit and un-trackable heist money sent to Panama. Early in Den of Thieves, Donnie makes a telling statement while bartending kitty-corner from the Federal Reserve: “I’m in complete control of my environment, and people don’t even know.” The final scene in Den of Thieves shows Mack, Alexi, and Bas drinking at a London pub while Donnie bartends and plans the next job, which could presumably inform the story of Den of Thieves 2.


    What Den Of Thieves Gets Right About Real Bank Robberies


    Den of Thieves 2

    Den of Thieves may seem unbelievable at times, but Gudegast did indeed try to make it feel authentic. For a technical advisor, he reportedly hired L.A. robbery expert Bill Rehder — the author of Where The Money Is — and also used sources from the LAPD, the military, and a former leader of Hell’s Angels [via Bustle]. The film’s narrative can be easily and conveniently picked apart by critics, and the focal star (Butler) certainly isn’t known for being one of cinema’s finest actors. Still, the blend of reality and fantasy is what makes Den of Thieves so intriguing and popular amongst general moviegoers. According to Den of Thieves director Christian Gudegast, “Truth is not only stranger than fiction, it’s much more fascinating than fiction.”

    Den Of Thieves Ending Song Explained


    Gerard Butler Den of Thieves

    To fully assess the Den of Thieves’ ending, it’s also worth making note of the song used at the end of the film: “Legendary” by Welshly Arms. Given how well the song fits into the movie’s final events, it’s easy to wonder whether “Legendary” was composed specifically for Den of Thieves. However, the song actually came out two years prior to the film’s release. Not only does the song set an effective tone, but its lyrics also help underscore some of Den of Thieves’ biggest themes. In particular, the lines “Been dreaming of the payoff/Through the struggles and the trade-offs/ Fighting tooth and nail on the way up” parallels the thieves’ motivations, while “Eventually they’re gonna know who’s right/To make a stand, you’ve got to win the fight” and “You gotta live without a compromise” encapsulate Gerard Butler’s hardboiled movie character. Such synchronicity is hard to find, but “Legendary” ends Den of Thieves on a defiant note.


    Where Den Of Thieves 2’s Story Goes Next


    Gerard Butler in Den of Thieves

    Gudegast unveiled the plot for Den of Thieves 2 way back in April 2018 for a Screen Rant exclusive. Over two years later, it’s still unclear when the sequel will be released, but the film will apparently take place all over Europe: London, Belgium, Marseilles, the Cote d’Azur, and Montenegro. In Den of Thieves 2 — according to Gudegast — Big Nick will track down Donnie, who’s part of an international network of jewel thieves called the Pink Panther mafia. Gudegast also revealed that Big Nick won’t just be portrayed as a cop seeking justice and vengeance, but rather as an L.A. detective who an unknown organization is tailing. As the saying goes, Den of Thieves 2 will seemingly be “bigger and better.”

    Next: Why Den Of Thieves Failed Despite Ripping Off A Perfect Movie

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    About The Author


    Q.V. Hough
    (1895 Articles Published)

    Q.V. Hough is a senior writer at Screen Rant. He’s also the founding editor at Vague Visages, and has contributed to RogerEbert.com and Fandor.

    More From Q.V. Hough





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