Chancers: The Great Gangster Film Fraud
Chancers: The Great Gangster Film Fraud
| 24 January 2016 (USA)
Chancers: The Great Gangster Film Fraud Trailers

Documentary about a bankrupt Jordanian entrepreneur and an unemployed Irish actress who hatch a plan to scam £2.5m off the British taxman by faking the production of a £20m movie. But they are found out, arrested and then bailed. While out on bail, they decide to prove their innocence by actually making a film. They hire a former nightclub bouncer, now a self-made micro-budget gangster film director. In 2011, Paul Knight makes their movie for under £100,000 with a cast of soap and gangster movie stars including Danny Midwinter, Marc Bannerman and Loose Women's Andrea McLean. The film's title is A Landscape of Lies. But the cinematic alibi does not convince the jury when the trial runs in 2013. The producers are convicted of tax fraud and given long sentences.

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Reviews
l_rawjalaurence

The subtitle of this documentary: "The Great Gangster Fraud" is a bit of a misnomer. Ben Lewis's film focuses on a group of small- time rogues - a bankrupt Jordanian financier, an Irish actor and would-be tycoon, a Manchester-based architect and two of their acolytes - as they concoct an ambitious plan to make a £20m. film with big stars, fabulous locations, and all the publicity trimmings.There are only a few snags: they haven't any money, their publicity materials are shoddy (with spectacular spelling errors such as writing Michael Caine's name as Michael Kane), and they haven't the first clue how to film a script. What they do possess, however, is a certain chutzpah which enables them to obtain £80K. out of Britain's government through fraud. The HM Tax Office spends the next two or three years pursuing them in an attempt to recover it.Narrated as a would-be gangster flick by Tony Carling, we are led to believe that these fraudsters see themselves as latter-day Krays, bucking the system and leading the high life. They engage an Essex- based director (Paul Knight) with experience of working within that environment. Yet their strategies are so inexplicably amateurish that we end up wondering how they got away with it in the first place. Perhaps the subject-matter would have been better suited for a remake of late Fifties Rank comedies such as TOO MANY CROOKS (1959).The material has a certain macabre potential, but the documentary is at least half an hour too long, with too much time given over to testimonies from those associated with the entire misbegotten project. Perhaps director Ben Lewis might have been better advised to treat the whole affair as a black comedy.

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paul2001sw-1

The adage says, to make a small fortune, start with a large one. Bashir al-Issa came from a rich family and started out in property development: his first business deals were worth tens of millions of pounds. After he went bankrupt, he tried making a smaller number of millions by claiming tax credits and VAT refunds from the British government as a film producer, although in fact he was producing nothing. When the authorities got wind of his exploits, he tried covering his tracks by actually making some movies, albeit extremely low budget efforts. It didn't work and he was convicted of fraud. 'Chancers: The Great Gangster Film Fraud' tells this story, which is entertaining but the documentary makes some odd choices. Bashir was Iraqi, his chief co-plotter was a Northern Irish actress. But the film presents the tale as if it was a story of London gangsters. Now, the film that Bashir actually made was about London gangsters, and some of the people who actually made the movie had connections to this world. But they had nothing to do with the criminality here, which was entirely a white collar crime executed by people whose backgrounds were anything but Cockney. Secondly, while the story is both amusing and shocking in its own way, the sums involved were small compared with the fortune that Bashir had already lost in his first career. The story of how someone with no track record gets to attempt to undertake multi-million pound development projects is arguably more interesting than the story of how, having failed, he then attempt to scam the Inland Revenue. The story of how low budget films get made is interesting: but that's only linked to the criminality by happenstance. Ultimately, there's interesting material here, but this is a lazy documentary.

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