Den Of Thieves __FULL__
In DEN OF THIEVES, career thief Merrimen (Pablo Schreiber) leads his crew in a heist to steal an armored car. But something goes wrong, and they wind up in a shoot-out with the cops. This attracts the unwanted attention of the Los Angeles Sheriff's Department, led by "Big Nick" Flanagan (Gerard Butler). Nick's men manage to pick up Merrimen's regular driver, Donnie (O'Shea Jackson Jr.), and use him to learn more about Merrimen's next job. What Nick doesn't know is that the robbers actually plan to break into the "unrobbable" Federal Reserve. The thieves have cooked up a complex plan that requires many elaborate steps and will allow them to get away with cash that was earmarked for shredding (meaning it's free and clear). Can Nick foil their plans, or will the thieves get away with millions?
Den of Thieves
In this long, dull, repetitive heist movie, the thieves are somewhat likable and the good guys are largely repulsive. And it doesn't even seem intentional; it's more like a wrongheaded attempt to be cool. Making his directorial debut, screenwriter Christian Gudegast (London Has Fallen) serves up Butler as a creepy, disagreeable "good guy" who bullies people and questions suspects in hotel rooms filled with booze and strippers. At his worst, Big Nick harasses and intimidates his wife and her friends after she's filed divorce papers against him. Gudegast seems impressed by his character's irreverence, but it's really just distasteful.
On one of your adventures into the town of Dortmund you hear some nice gossip going around. They say the tunnel under the mountain is finally finished and open for business. Not one to miss out, you decide to go check it out for yourself. Upon arrive you see quite a few toll workers, yet all signs read that the toll is optional. You decide not to spare any change until you see what was built and on that note you stepped inside. Within the cold walls are various travelers and surprisingly, a large amount of thieves. Too many for your taste as you can feel your gold grow lighter. You decide to find out who runs this tunnel system and head for the office. When you arrive you come face to face with the notorious thief, Jumpsteady. Now realizing you stumbled on nothing more than the thief stronghold you fled as fast as you could from this place.
The day of the heist comes. Merrimen and his crew invade the bank and take hostages. Nick and his guys are outside as the chaos unfolds. The Chief of Police calls and speaks to the bank's branch manager on behalf of Merrimen. To prove they are serious, Merrimen has one of his guys take a hostage to a back room and shoot her. Merrimen tells the manager to tell the chief that they want their large sum of money and a chopper. The thieves then blow the vault open and escape through a hole in the floor before Nick and his guys come in. They also find that the hostage they supposedly shot is still alive, but terrified.
A corrupt cop named Nick O'Brien attempts to bring down a team of thieves led by Ray Merrimen before they plan to rob the Federal Reserve Bank of Los Angeles. With the help of Merrimen's driver Donnie, Nick gets more info on the heist.
Den of Thieves is a side quest available in Chapter 10 of Baldur's Gate: Siege of Dragonspear. It is obtained from General Stonehand, who asks Gorion's Ward to try and root out the budding black market in the Coalition Camp that she is certain has been the work of a thieves guild. She suggests starting by questioning the halfling merchant Waizahb.
Firstly, the player can threaten her by demanding she stop the thievery or pay the price. She will agree. The player can either attack her (she vanishes), ask for a cut of the profits (she will reveal the existence of a cache in the Underground River), or demand that the guild assist the Coalition during the battle against the Shining Crusade (thieves make an appearance as allies during the Siege of the Camp quest).
What are some of the thieves at work in our lives? It can be any sin or weight (not a sin but something that comes before/interferes with our relationship with Jesus). For instance, there may be a situation which required a person to forgive another. That person may have made the decision to forgive, but still struggles with emotions that cause him to wonder, if indeed, forgiveness was given. Another example would be a person who was wounded in his childhood, rebelled in his teenage years, then received Jesus as Savior and Lord in early adulthood. He knows his sins are forgiven but struggles in his relationship with Jesus because he has not dealt with the wounds that resulted in the rebellion in his teenage years. In both examples, condemnation sets in causing these people to shrink back from intimacy with Jesus. 041b061a72