cinemabon
06-09-2007, 05:17 PM
Ocean’s Thirteen – a film by Steven Soderbergh
In a season of tri-quels, my new name for the third film in a series and the fourth such offering in the last five weeks, I finally get to see one that works. Not only is “Ocean’s Thirteen” fun to watch, but director Steven Soderbergh even pokes fun at the series’ characters during one sequence when Rusty (Brad Pitt) and Danny (George Clooney) second guess each other’s comments and responses, neither one gets a line out. I paraphrase:
R: “Do you remember…” D: “But of course…” R: “Well, I always thought…” D: “Who wouldn’t…” R: “Yes, but do you think…” D: “Why wouldn’t I…” and so on.
The timing is perfect and the entire sequence is hysterical, with both men pulling off the double entendres. During this sequence we learn Gould’s character is the one that gave them all a first break, hence their loyalty and motivation in helping him later.
While Clooney seems as fresh as ever, it is the younger Pitt that time has not been kind to, as evidenced in his close ups. I don’t imagine he had much sleep last year during the time this was shot, shuttling across the globe with Angelina and shooting two other films. He kids Clooney at one point, saying: “If we ever do this again, try to keep the weight off in between.” However, the rest of the original cast shows up refreshed, minus Tess (the script tosses her character off due to an argument in the opening). Also included in the cast is the first film’s villain, Terry Benedict, deftly played by Andy Garcia, showing up in a surprising scene. Comedian Eddie Izzard is thrown in for good measure, though he actually plays a somewhat dramatic part, then pounces on a visual laugh later.
Thank goodness, Soderbergh returned the film’s location to colorful Las Vegas, where the stakes are enormously high once more for Danny’s crew to pull off another casino caper. Oddly enough, Soderbergh keeps throwing in little tributes here and there to this film or that icon. The deal between Gould and Pacino that goes sour is based on a Frank Sinatra handshake (“When you shake Sinatra’s hand, it makes you part of the brotherhood of Vegas.”). Elliot Gould first reminisces about the good old days with Danny, and then against advice, enters a partnership with villain Al Pacino, who then stabs him in the back. Al definitely does not look too good; but then he hasn’t for many years. He did not age gracefully, as they say. He and Ellen Barkin, his evil sidekick, open a casino in the heart of the strip intent to put others out of business (Don’t they all?). Each cast member performs a short choice, usually humorous scene. This film gets a huge laugh during the worker’s strike in Mexico (the payoff punch line is even funnier).
Most of “Ocean’s” cast is long overdue for the actor’s home except for Matt Damon, Clooney, and Don Cheadle. Damon must have held his collective breath when he had to do the lovemaking scenes with Barkin, unfortunately too old for her part. One could say, “She looks good for her age!” So does the constitution. I kept thinking Carl Reiner would expire any moment! Of all the cast members, he is the only one that really remembers the so-called ‘golden’ years with the pack rat.
Director Soderbergh pulls out all the tricks, using split screen, snappy dialogue filled with great gag lines, lots of color, pretty girls, and a track that sounds distinctly like Vegas during the 1950’s. The editing is fast paced. The camera is everywhere, from soaring over the current strip with Pacino’s new ‘Bank’ casino carefully painted into the sepia-toned aerial scenes to the vigorous use of hand held in the huge sets that create the casino’s interior. Yes, “Ocean’s Thirteen” is predictable in one sense that we know Danny will come out all right in the end. However, the producers have thrown enough laughs and adventure along the way to make the ride enjoyable for one evening. Recommended.
In a season of tri-quels, my new name for the third film in a series and the fourth such offering in the last five weeks, I finally get to see one that works. Not only is “Ocean’s Thirteen” fun to watch, but director Steven Soderbergh even pokes fun at the series’ characters during one sequence when Rusty (Brad Pitt) and Danny (George Clooney) second guess each other’s comments and responses, neither one gets a line out. I paraphrase:
R: “Do you remember…” D: “But of course…” R: “Well, I always thought…” D: “Who wouldn’t…” R: “Yes, but do you think…” D: “Why wouldn’t I…” and so on.
The timing is perfect and the entire sequence is hysterical, with both men pulling off the double entendres. During this sequence we learn Gould’s character is the one that gave them all a first break, hence their loyalty and motivation in helping him later.
While Clooney seems as fresh as ever, it is the younger Pitt that time has not been kind to, as evidenced in his close ups. I don’t imagine he had much sleep last year during the time this was shot, shuttling across the globe with Angelina and shooting two other films. He kids Clooney at one point, saying: “If we ever do this again, try to keep the weight off in between.” However, the rest of the original cast shows up refreshed, minus Tess (the script tosses her character off due to an argument in the opening). Also included in the cast is the first film’s villain, Terry Benedict, deftly played by Andy Garcia, showing up in a surprising scene. Comedian Eddie Izzard is thrown in for good measure, though he actually plays a somewhat dramatic part, then pounces on a visual laugh later.
Thank goodness, Soderbergh returned the film’s location to colorful Las Vegas, where the stakes are enormously high once more for Danny’s crew to pull off another casino caper. Oddly enough, Soderbergh keeps throwing in little tributes here and there to this film or that icon. The deal between Gould and Pacino that goes sour is based on a Frank Sinatra handshake (“When you shake Sinatra’s hand, it makes you part of the brotherhood of Vegas.”). Elliot Gould first reminisces about the good old days with Danny, and then against advice, enters a partnership with villain Al Pacino, who then stabs him in the back. Al definitely does not look too good; but then he hasn’t for many years. He did not age gracefully, as they say. He and Ellen Barkin, his evil sidekick, open a casino in the heart of the strip intent to put others out of business (Don’t they all?). Each cast member performs a short choice, usually humorous scene. This film gets a huge laugh during the worker’s strike in Mexico (the payoff punch line is even funnier).
Most of “Ocean’s” cast is long overdue for the actor’s home except for Matt Damon, Clooney, and Don Cheadle. Damon must have held his collective breath when he had to do the lovemaking scenes with Barkin, unfortunately too old for her part. One could say, “She looks good for her age!” So does the constitution. I kept thinking Carl Reiner would expire any moment! Of all the cast members, he is the only one that really remembers the so-called ‘golden’ years with the pack rat.
Director Soderbergh pulls out all the tricks, using split screen, snappy dialogue filled with great gag lines, lots of color, pretty girls, and a track that sounds distinctly like Vegas during the 1950’s. The editing is fast paced. The camera is everywhere, from soaring over the current strip with Pacino’s new ‘Bank’ casino carefully painted into the sepia-toned aerial scenes to the vigorous use of hand held in the huge sets that create the casino’s interior. Yes, “Ocean’s Thirteen” is predictable in one sense that we know Danny will come out all right in the end. However, the producers have thrown enough laughs and adventure along the way to make the ride enjoyable for one evening. Recommended.