Skip to main content
Loading market data...
‘You have to be serious’: Macron criticises Trump’s mixed messages about Nato and Iran · Starmer calls on Reform to sack Simon Dudley after ‘everyone dies’ Grenfell comments · ‘Weak and pathetic’: why is the EU not using its leverage to stop Israel? · One killed and buildings damaged as magnitude 7.4 earthquake strikes Indonesia · Ukraine war briefing: Russia responds to Zelenskyy’s Easter truce offer with drone attack · Unregulated chatbots are putting lives at risk · AOC vows to block future US military aid to Israel, including for defensive systems · Republican senators McConnell and Tillis break with Trump on Nato withdrawal · UK food inflation ‘could hit 9%’, trade body warns as Reeves meets retail chiefs · SpaceX confidentially files to go public at $1.75tn, reports say · Three hospital doctors’ groups threaten to coordinate strike action in England · ‘Overwhelmed’ Prevent at risk of missing threats as referrals rise, UK counter-terror chief says · ‘People need hope’: Greens court voters in battle for north-east council seats · Your Party to focus local election efforts on backing independent candidates · ‘Payment expected within seven days’: New Zealand doctor invoices US embassy for rising petrol costs · ‘You have to be serious’: Macron criticises Trump’s mixed messages about Nato and Iran · Starmer calls on Reform to sack Simon Dudley after ‘everyone dies’ Grenfell comments · ‘Weak and pathetic’: why is the EU not using its leverage to stop Israel? · One killed and buildings damaged as magnitude 7.4 earthquake strikes Indonesia · Ukraine war briefing: Russia responds to Zelenskyy’s Easter truce offer with drone attack · Unregulated chatbots are putting lives at risk · AOC vows to block future US military aid to Israel, including for defensive systems · Republican senators McConnell and Tillis break with Trump on Nato withdrawal · UK food inflation ‘could hit 9%’, trade body warns as Reeves meets retail chiefs · SpaceX confidentially files to go public at $1.75tn, reports say · Three hospital doctors’ groups threaten to coordinate strike action in England · ‘Overwhelmed’ Prevent at risk of missing threats as referrals rise, UK counter-terror chief says · ‘People need hope’: Greens court voters in battle for north-east council seats · Your Party to focus local election efforts on backing independent candidates · ‘Payment expected within seven days’: New Zealand doctor invoices US embassy for rising petrol costs
Culture

Fuze review – Theo James and Aaron Taylor-Johnson face off in head-spinning London heist

Diamonds might not be forever in a film centred around a massive, ticking bomb on a building site, which is equal parts violent and silly

Guardian Staff
Guardian Staff

April 1, 2026 · 1 min read

Share
Fuze review – Theo James and Aaron Taylor-Johnson face off in head-spinning London heist

Fuze review – Theo James and Aaron Taylor-Johnson face off in head-spinning London heist

There are some lively if borderline ridiculous shenanigans in this London heist thriller from screenwriter Ben Hopkins and director David Mackenzie, brazening out its innate silliness with chutzpah, heavily researched police and army lingo and athletic plot contortions. It’s a violent affair of double-cross and triple-cross that ups its narrative game in the final act for the massive reveal: a head-spinning story of diamonds, some fake … yet also … some real. And it also deploys the classic thriller moment, popularised by TV’s The Night Manager: the three-second bank transfer of millions of illicit dollars, which you can tensely monitor on your smartphone in real time. Oh my God, will the money go through OK? (You’ll need solid wifi or 5G.)

Aaron Taylor-Johnson plays Major Will Tranter, a bomb disposal officer called in when what looks like a gigantic unexploded second world war device is discovered in a London building site, making a worrying ticking noise. The police are under the direction of the Met’s chief superintendent; this is a dull role with none of the juiciness of the guys’ parts, played deadpan by Gugu Mbatha-Raw. She shuts off the electricity in the whole area for fear of the bomb igniting power cables, then evacuates and cordons off the entire zone – not realising a crew of bank robbers is in there, led by Theo James and Sam Worthington, who are now able to work without fear of being discovered by some pesky member of the public as they tunnel through a wall into a safe-deposit vault from a neighbouring basement.

They are like a much younger, sexier version of the geriatric geezer-thieves who in 2015 famously drilled their way into a strongroom in London’s Hatton Garden. Meanwhile Tranter’s corporal (who does everything but bark “Sah!”) reckons the bomb looks too modern to be from the war. Have these robbers set up the biggest diversionary tactic in criminal history? It all rattles along watchably enough, taking in more locations than just boring old London, though you’ll find your credulity stretched almost to breaking point.

• Fuze is out on 3 April in the UK, 16 April in Australia, and 24 April in the US.

Tagsfilm