George Clooney heads a stellar cast in the remake of the 1960s classic "Oceans Eleven." Clooney plays Danny Ocean, a con man with big ideas. He's recently released from prison and meets up with fellow partner, Rusty (Brad Pitt). Ocean has come up with a heist and needs Rusty's help as well as team of eight, highly specialized experts to pull it off. They plan to rob the bank vault of three Las Vegas casinos owned by Terry Benedict (Andy Garcia). Besides the lucrative payoff to pull off this big job, Ocean wants to win back his ex-wife, Tess, who is now Benedict's girlfriend. With an incredibly elaborate plan to penetrate the security system and stage the robbery, you see this impressive group of men go into action. That's what makes this movie work. You've heard the cliched term on-screen chemistry used over and over again. But in this case it really exists, and you can't avoid it. Clooney and Pitt look so natural working together; it doesn't look forced. The banter is great. Even though Ocean's gang are technically breaking the law, you end up rooting for them. Benedict is really the bad guy in this movie, not Ocean and his friends. You want them to stick it to Benedict and "acquire" the $150 million payoff. One of the great scenes of the movie is rounding up the gang as well as recruiting the new guy, Matt Damon who's a skilled pickpocket. They gather together as Ocean explains the level of security surrounding the vault. Of course it's tighter than Fort Knox, but Ocean and Rusty are cool as cucumbers and confident that it's doable. It doesn't matter that it's highly improbable to pull off a heist such as theirs. You spend money on a ticket to be entertained, and this movie does the job in spades!