Lock, Stock and Two Smoking Barrels (1998)

This iconic British crime-comedy follows four friends—Eddy (Nick Moran), Tom (Jason Flemyng), Soap (Dexter Fletcher), and Bacon (Jason Statham)—who get caught up in a dangerous and hilarious chain of events. Eddy, a card-sharp gambler, loses a high-stakes poker game against a ruthless mobster named Harry “The Hatchet” Lonsdale. Left with a crippling debt of £500,000, the friends have one week to pay or face deadly consequences.


Desperate and resourceful, the group decides to rob a gang of criminals next door who are planning their own heist. What follows is a tangled web of deception, mistaken identities, and a chaotic clash between drug dealers, mobsters, and small-time crooks, all culminating in a wild, bullet-ridden showdown.


Lock, Stock and Two Smoking Barrels launched Guy Ritchie’s career and set the gold standard for stylish crime films.

Packed with razor-sharp dialogue, clever twists, and unforgettable characters like the menacing enforcer Big Chris (Vinnie Jones), the film is a masterclass in storytelling and dark humor.