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The Vault, titled Way Down in various regions, [a] is a 2021 Spanish heist action thriller film directed by Jaume Balagueró. [1] The film stars Freddie Highmore , Àstrid Bergès-Frisbey , Sam Riley , Liam Cunningham , Luis Tosar , Axel Stein , José Coronado and Famke Janssen . [ 2 ]
The Vault is a 2017 American horror film directed by Dan Bush, written by Bush and Conal Byrne, and starring Francesca Eastwood, Taryn Manning, Scott Haze, Q'orianka Kilcher, Clifton Collins Jr., and James Franco.
The Vault, a fandom wiki-based open source website for the Fallout video game series; The Vault, the bonus store in the video game Guitar Hero: Aerosmith; The Vault, a term used to refer video games included on the EA Access subscription service; The Vault, a 2011 novel by Ruth Rendell; The Vault, a history blog of Slate (magazine)
Vault is a 2019 American crime thriller film directed by Tom DeNucci, written by Tom DeNucci and B. Dolan, and starring Theo Rossi, Clive Standen, Samira Wiley, and Chazz Palminteri. It was released on June 7, 2019.
Vault (Marvel Comics), a prison for super-villains in the Marvel Comics universe Vaults (Fallout), underground nuclear blast shelters in the Fallout video game series Vault, a sculpture by Ron Robertson-Swann
The Vault is a British game show based on the original Israeli version called HaKassefet Hebrew: הַכַּסֶפֶת) that aired on ITV from 11 May 2002 to 24 August 2004. It was first hosted by Davina McCall in 2002, then hosted by Melanie Sykes from 2003 to 2004 and finally hosted by Gabby Logan who stepped in for Sykes for the latter half of 2004 when Sykes went on maternity leave.
[7] [9] Mistrust is sewn by the production by revealing that one contestant is a millionaire and using divide-and-conquer tactics, such as singling people out to receive Vault offers. [7] Judy Berman of Time said the program was edited to portray meritocracy: in this view, each contestant is equal and their choices determine their success ...
The Vault is a novel by British crime-writer Ruth Rendell, published in 2011. The novel is the 23rd in the Inspector Wexford series. It is a sequel to her previous standalone novel A Sight For Sore Eyes. [1] The novel is the first sequel Rendell has written, and the first to feature Wexford in retirement.