Snabba Cash (2010)

  • Year: 2010
  • Released: 15 Jan 2010
  • Country: Sweden, Germany, Denmark, France
  • Adwords: 4 wins & 1 nomination
  • IMDb: https://www.imdb.com/title/tt1291652/
  • Rotten Tomatoes: https://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/snabba_cash
  • Available in: 720p, 1080p,
  • Language: Swedish, Serbian, Spanish, English, German
  • MPA Rating: R
  • Genre: Action, Crime, Drama
  • Runtime: 124 min
  • Writer: Daniel Espinosa, Jens Lapidus, Fredrik Wikström
  • Director: Daniel Espinosa
  • Cast: Joel Kinnaman, Matias Varela, Dragomir Mrsic
  • Keywords: consignment,
6.7/10
75/100
86% – Critics
63% – Audience

Snabba Cash Storyline

When JW becomes a drug runner in order to maintain his double life, his fate becomes tied to two other men: Jorge, a fugitive on the run from both the Serbian mafia and the police, and mafia enforcer Mrado, who is on the hunt for Jorge.

Snabba Cash Play trailer

Snabba Cash Photos

Snabba Cash Torrents Download

720pbluray1.05 GBmagnet:?xt=urn:btih:F454D50F19D7AA1DD7E298AFCC66537082648A4C
1080pbluray2.01 GBmagnet:?xt=urn:btih:4E409E4477A5716E3928971176BEBAFD43B47913

Snabba Cash Subtitles Download

Chinesesubtitle Snabba.Cash.2010.720p.BluRay.x264-.cht
Englishsubtitle Snabba.cash.2010.720p.BluRay.x264.
Englishsubtitle Snabba.cash.2010.720p.BluRay.x264.
Greeksubtitle Snabba.cash.2010.720p.BluRay.x264.

Snabba Cash Movie Reviews

Reasonable

Easy Money is a reasonable foreign action flick.

I love Joel Kinnaman in “The Killing” and that’s mainly why I gave this film a chance, but I don’t think he really added much to it, being the main character. A lot of the time he was just there and the others around him gave the film life, Jorge and Sophie in particular. The plot was very good, even though I struggled a bit with the foreign dialogue and who was who. They needed to give JW more depth, with either a hell of a lot more lines or some monologue or narration, since he was often just standing there with blank looks. I also wanted more of Sophie, that interaction was pretty thin.

Vibrant, beautifully-shot Scandi crime

EASY MONEY is a highly effective slice of Scandi crime drama that blows the socks off the Hollywood competition. It’s a film responsible for introducing new talent to the international scene in the form of lead Joel Kinnaman (who went on to be the new ROBOCOP) and director Daniel Espinosa (who went on to direct the Denzel Washington thriller SAFE HOUSE on the strength of this).

The story is a complex but watchable one that tells of various competing criminal factions seeking to control the local drug supply. The mix of amoral characters is what makes this film feel unique; the hero is anything but heroic, merely out to save his own skin, and thus has a kind of vibrant realism missing from all those goody two-shoes in Hollywood flicks. Plus, Dragomir Mrsic’s Serbian hit-man is good enough to deserve a film all to himself, and really helps to add quality to the film.

Epinosa’s direction is another strength as he forgoes the typical dark and dingy look of a Scandinavian crime flick and instead creates a bright, colourful and beautiful look for the film. I had the pleasure of seeing this in high definition and it really looks a treat. EASY MONEY isn’t an action film or a thriller packed with suspense scenes, but the quality of the script and plotting mean you’ll be glued to the screen as if it were. Bring on the sequel!

Greed and Fear in a drug deal

JW (Joel Kinnaman) is a poor economics student who is dabbing in questionable money making schemes while faking a double life with his rich acquaintances. He falls for the rich Sophie (Lisa Henni). Jorge (Matias Varela) has just escaped from jail. JW and Jorge is working for the Albanian drug lord Abdulkarim who is trying to put together a big shipment. Meanwhile Mrado (Dragomir Mrsic) is a Serbian enforcer. The Serbian are going to war with Abdulkarim but Mrado has a new responsibility in his daughter and he’s planning a final score to get out of it all.

Mrado says that people start becoming greedy and scared. That’s what I love about this story. Everybody is a bastard. Nobody is safe. JW thinks he’s smarter than he actually is, and he never truly understands that he’s expendable. I love how Jorge breaks it all down for JW, and the two men’s complicated relationship. There are no angels here, just survivors.