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The theater I was in was happily rolling-along, audience laughing heartily with the silly antics. Everything is bright lights and pop songs, all while our protagonists see themselves as 'good guys' as they plot a heroic heist of a library and its priceless books. The style of young adult alive and frantic. The film itself grows-up as we go, as we open with a sense of style and editing that is snappy and fast-paced. Rather, this film is about nihilism, and growing-up in just about the scariest way possible. Spearheaded by spectacular leading performances by Barry Keoghan and Evan Peters, this film is not about a heist. The thing that sets this film apart from the others in its genre is just how REAL everything becomes by the time we watch these college kids, all aimless and without a clue, try to chase the American Dream through the most devious way possible. In a way, I would call this film the unholy love-child of "Ocean's Eleven", "The Social Network" and "Ferris Bueller's Day Off". What makes this concept so captivating and so unique compared to other legendary heist films like 'Ocean's Eleven', 'The Italian Job' and others is that this film revolves around both a certain sense of nihilism and adolescence. I can't say I've ever seen any heist film like this one, though. One about growing-up, friends, young adulthood.oh, and robbing a library of books worth millions of dollars.That little detail, too. "American Animals" follows a pretty simple story.