Ocean's Eleven 5/14 @ 12:30 PM ET

No, I missed that. I’ll have to check it out later.

OMG, the scene with Matt Damon and Bernie Mac is HYSTERICAL!

The best package moment is coming up soon. Basher covering his.

“No cameras in this room.”

Clooney knows how to deliver a line.

Cracker!! :smiley:

Aw, dream date.

Nothing more romantic than watching two well-muscled men pummel each other. :slight_smile:

The Amish Superweapon! :eek:

How’s the wife?

Pregnant again.:frowning:

Package check!

Am I ahead? They just blew the door.

I’ve got them in the revolving room

ETA Benedict in the security room :slight_smile:

$80 million in hundreds, divided between six bags.

Each bag would weigh about 300 pounds.

And three people are carrying two each?

Including one guy who weighs under 100 pounds?

The mind boggles. :eek:

The camera only adds 10 pounds.

BTW, Talos: You’re cuter than Andy Garcia

The remote control van is priceless!

That’s what I thot. :smiley:

fraggledance

Oh, come on, Tess. You’re attractive and all, but you’re hardly worth more than $160 million. :stuck_out_tongue:

The “pinch” that Basher uses to knock out Las Vegas’s power is based on a device called the z-pinch, which creates a burst of energy (mostly x-rays) by using a magnetic field that “pinches” a column of charged gas particles. However, the movie departs from science in several ways: first, a real z-pinch is much too large to fit in the back of a van; second, a pinch can’t create energy out of nowhere, and would need a power source much greater than Basher’s “score of car batteries” or anything that would fit inside a van; third, even with such a power source, the electromagnetic pulse (EMP) generated by a real z-pinch is barely powerful enough to knock out an electronic device across a room. In fact, under current science, the only thing capable of generating a city-wide EMP is a genuine nuclear explosion.

During the scene where the gang is watching the Bellagio fountains, the lake that the fountains perform in was actually drained on one side and a rail/bar was constructed there so that there would be room for each person to walk away, rather than turn and walk straight into the street.

It’s not the money. It’s the lack of hesitation…

The scene of everyone standing around watching the Bellagio fountain and leaving was somewhat improvised, Steven Soderbergh wanted Rusty, Brad Pitt, to leave first. The other actors were told to line up and depart in whatever order felt natural.