USA TODAY US Edition

Duo plays dumb in ‘Mastermind­s’

The co-stars happily play dumb for their comical crime caper

- Bryan Alexander @BryAlexand USA TODAY

You don’t have to be a genius, or even smart, to glean life lessons from the dumb criminals of Mastermind­s.

Zach Galifianak­is and Kristen Wiig, who star in the movie that opens Friday, learned a lot from portraying the dim duo who in 1997 helped pull off one of the largest cash robberies in U.S. history before getting busted.

“Check for security cameras,” Wiig says sagely, sitting next to Galifianak­is in a suite at the London West Hollywood. “Or just don’t do bad things.”

“The lesson is don’t rob a bank,” says Galifianak­is, pausing. “Or is it rob a bank and Hollywood will make a movie about you? It’s all confusing.”

There’s plenty of foreheadsl­apping confusion in the moronic high jinks of the Jared Hessdirect­ed comedy. Embellishe­d for laughs from a true story, the movie follows David Ghantt (Galifianak­is), a trusted supervisor for Loomis, Fargo & Co. in Charlotte, who is lured into a harebraine­d scheme to rob the cash-filled vault by a former employee he had a crush on, Kelly Campbell (Wiig), and her “mastermind” friend and small-time criminal Steve Chambers (Owen Wilson).

Ghantt hauled out more than $17 million but overlooked the bank’s video footage — just the beginning of the poorly laid plan’s unraveling, which included Chambers living large on stolen money and sending a hit man to Mexico to knock off Ghantt.

“There are a lot of dumb criminals out there, but I’d say (these guys) are pretty low,” Wiig says.

North Carolina-born Galifianak­is, 46, had no problem stepping into the accent and even had friends in common with the reallife Chambers, who visited the set. Galifianak­is provided the ’do, having bangs cut from his mop of “14th-century-prince hair” just before shooting. No, that’s not a wig.

“My wife is used to me coming home with terrible looks. She was just pretty depressed about it,” Galifianak­is says. “But it’s practical for a good shampoo — the bangs keep soap out of your eyes.”

Wiig rocked the big-wig-withbangs as femme fatale Campbell, pulling out era-appropriat­e highwaiste­d jeans. Mastermind­s turned out to be a preview of sorts for Ghostbuste­rs, with Leslie Jones playing an FBI agent and Kate McKinnon playing Ghantt’s odd fiancée. ( Mastermind­s was shot before Ghostbuste­rs was cast, but the movie’s release was delayed a year when distributo­r Relativity Media went bankrupt.)

Love rivals onscreen, Wiig and McKinnon tangle in a department store dressing-room brawl. “There were body slams, and she was throwing mannequin arms at me, just hurling them,” Wiig says.

Ghantt, who was sentenced to seven years in prison, was a constant and genial presence on the North Carolina set. An official film adviser, he was thrilled to be the subject of a Hollywood movie, even one poking fun at him.

“David said to me that this movie is a combinatio­n of humor and comedy,” Galifianak­is says as he and Wiig buckle over in laughter. “He made me laugh so hard. I said that we should use that on the poster.

“I don’t think there’s any substitute for those many years (of freedom) being taken away,” he adds. “But from David’s point of view, this is a happy ending.”

“There are a lot of dumb criminals, but I’d say (these guys) are pretty low.” Kristen Wiig

 ?? ROBERT HANASHIRO, USA TODAY ??
ROBERT HANASHIRO, USA TODAY
 ?? GLEN WILSON, RELATIVITY MEDIA ?? A bank robbery goes amusingly bad for cohorts David (Zach Galifianak­is) and Kelly (Kristen Wiig).
GLEN WILSON, RELATIVITY MEDIA A bank robbery goes amusingly bad for cohorts David (Zach Galifianak­is) and Kelly (Kristen Wiig).

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