The first "Den of Thieves" escaped me back when it was first released in 2018; only once it inevitably hit Netflix years later did I see it. And it was alright, but I couldn't really tell you what happened; in fact, star Gerard Butler was all I could remember. Well, seven years later comes the sequel, subtitled "Pantera," for some reason, and it is equally forgettable. I certainly enjoyed my time on my local theater's crappy, antiquated cloth seats, but here I am, mere hours later, only really able to recall that, again, Gerard Butler stars.
Writer/director Christian Gudegast collects all the usual ingredients, with exotic locations (such as Nice, France), alcohol, tobacco, fast cars, big guns and women with even, eh let's not finish that thought. Gerard returns as, checks internet, Nick, a gruff, chain-smoking LA detective who, still burnt from the events of the first film, is obsessed with finding Donnie (O'Shea Jackson Jr.).
Can't remember what happened in the last one? Neither did I! Thankfully, this pedestrian film reminds us of what happened during its equally pedestrian predecessor: Donnie was able to rob the Federal Reserve without any money showing up as missing. It takes Nick about halfway through the sequel for him to figure out the events of the first one!
Anyway, is chase leads him to Europe, where Donnie meets up with Jovanna (Evin Ahmad), the leader of a group of thieves who are planning their next hit: diamonds.
Nick smokes and drinks his way to Donnie, telling him that he wants "in" on the mission, or else he takes him into custody. But there's a catch, to get into diamond exchange (you know, to learn the ins-and-outs of the building), he needs diamonds, and whoopsie, Donnie robbed them from the mafia. But whatever, it's hardly a plot point until it is. (And then it isn't, then it is, etc.) The narrative is unexciting, overly complex and, quite simply, silly.
What I liked about "Den of Thieves 2: Pantera" is how the caper is done, the preparation, setup, execution and, yes, the few bumps that always happen here (some pesky employee always unknowingly enters a room the crooks didn't expect). These scenes are tense, filled with class and style by Gudegast; the few shootouts and vehicle chases are equally well done. But as a writer, he fails to give us people to root for- his script is populated personalities, not people.