Given that The Score's motto seems to have been "been there, stole that," it's hard to imagine why it would interest the likes of De Niro, Norton and Brando. Perhaps the determining factor was the prospect of working with one another. Couldn't be the rather pedestrian and obvious story and script credited to Kario Salem, Lem Dobbs, Scott Marshall Smith and Daniel E. Taylor, which is a basic rehashing of everything from Sexy Beast to The Thomas Crown Affair. See, De Niro's safecracker wants to retire and live happily ever after with main squeeze Angela Bassett. Lo and behold, longtime partner-in-crime Brando offers De Niro the chance of a lifetime: steal a 16th-century French scepter from a Montreal customs house and live like a king. The catch? The inside man is the brash, disrespectful and untrustworthy Norton. De Niro hates risks. Working with Norton represents a risk. Risks land you in prison, he tells Norton. So, naturally, De Niro takes the risk we expect him to take. Too bad the risks offer little in the way of intrigue or surprise.