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Chris Knipp
04-02-2008, 06:24 PM
Robert Luketic: 21 (2008)

Dross into dross, for fun and thrills

Review by Chris Knipp

Luketic (Legally Blonde, Monster-in-Law) provides a few thrills and some pretty mindless fun in this more or less reality-based story about a half-dozen college students involved in a risky but successful get-rich-quick gambling scheme supervised by their MIT math professor. Interest is provided by the contrast between the dour snow-covered Boston area setting of the Ivy League school and the flashily-photographed glitter of Vegas. Kevin Spacey plays the manipulative, larcenous prof who masterminds the scheme and Laurence Fisburne is his old hood nemesis, protecting casino interests. It's slumming for such good actors to indulge in this sort of shallow diversion, but they add tone to the proceedings. A movie like this that skips over details like fine-tuned dialog, character development, or intelligent exposition cuts little ice with critics but is catnip at the box office in this winter-release dead time. Younger viewers can if they choose enjoy the images of honor roll kids grabbing quick money at the Blackjack tables in a world of danger and romance; gambling freaks may fantasize on sequences wherein players beat the tables for hundreds of thousands. The risk factor is real: "counting cards" may not be illegal in playing "21," as Spacey's character says, but a team working the tables in a coordinated operation using secret signals is the best possible way to get casino goons on your tail.

The weaknesses of 21 are many; nothing works too well unless you watch with your brain on hold. The young characters have no depth. Spacey and Fishburne are on hold too. Spacey, whose classroom talk predictably has precious little to do with MIT-level mathematics, is never anything but a bossy and threatening smart aleck. Fishbourne is a tough and relentless meanie, about whom we know only that he's soon to retire without benefits and that he once knew Spacey as a Blackjack ace long ago. The details of the game and the counting are mushed up. The pleasant enough, mildly cute young English actor Jim Sturgess as Ben, the brilliant new recruit of Prof. Micky who becomes the team's big player, is about as lackluster and generic as a young lead could be. As his sidekick on the team and erstwhile girlfriend Jill, the (also) cute, stylish-looking Kate Bosworth is another actor whose talents are debatable and whose character is so underwritten as to be nonexistent. For "color" we get one Asian guy, Choi (Aaron Yoo), who adds a few lines and a head of wacky, Basquiat-like hair. The real-life Asian identity of most of the MIT team has been dropped.

An online discussion (http://www.bearcave.com/bookrev/bringing_down_the_house.html) gives evidence that the fictionalized true story 21's based on, Bringing Down the House: The Inside Story of Six M.I.T. Students Who Took Vegas for Millions by novelist Ben Mezrich, is a page-turner, but itself shallow and poorly written--and possibly exaggerated as to the amounts of cash involved. A weakness of the plan in the movie version is that the team members don't use disguises until after they think they've been spotted. They don't ever change their signals, and the key one is ridiculously obvious. It's doubtful that Ben could come in as a high roller, win big, and then just move to another nearby table; the real life team had to win often but small--and in many other places besides Vegas. Ben also violates the rules of winning by card-counting by being flashy and getting on a first-name basis with doormen as well as staying at deluxe comp suites with Jill--another gauche attention-getter. He would have been spotted and barred. The team's partying a lot and going on shopping sprees when they win big are two other obvious no-no's. Are they trying to get caught? And the depiction of the tables action is simple, one scene hard to distinguish from another. Director Luketic and his writers Peter Steinfeld and Allan Loeb don't know how to make card play compelling and specific. The prof, Micky Rosa (funny name for somebody teaching non-linear algebra at MIT, but real name of an actual Blackjack ace--is a story-splice showing?) is accompanying the kids to Vegas and getting half their take, but what follow-up supervision is he providing? No wonder that when Ben succumbs to hubris--AKA emotion--and messes up big time and Micky dumps him they decide to proceed on their own. The movie provides a level of violence the real life account lacks. Counters are usually barred, not beaten. The movie nemesis Cole Williams represents a whole team in real life, shown here as giving way to computerized devices; in reality both high tech and human elements are used to protect casinos from being wiped out. But in general the movie has, by the evidence, dumbed down and simplified an already low-IQ book.

The movie's narrative framework is as mildly clever but shallow as the whole. Ben is being interviewed for a full scholarship at Harvard Medical School where he's been accepted and the interviewer tells him to get this special prestigious all-expenses "Nelson" award he needs to exhibit "startling" attributes and tell a story that "leaps off the page." This is that story. Only trouble is, he's trying to raise the $300,00 he needs for Harvard throughout the narrative. "Did that leap off the page?" Ben asks the interviewer at the end, who responds with a dumb look. We're supposed to respond to all this with dumb looks too. Ben is provided with a naive mom who offers her limited life savings to put him through Harvard Med. He also has two stereotypically nerdy MIT best buddies working on a science robotics contest whom he drops when the excitement starts and then touchingly reunites with thereafter. Neat, and dumb. Movies have been known to spin weak books into gold; not this time though. Luketic & Co. have spun a book with an interesting story to tell into a down-time diversion that rated only a 48 on Metacritic. But in spite of all this, the movie isn't a total loss: it still has some entertainment value.

Excerpts from the book (http://www.dicedealer.com/bringing_down_the_house.htm) .

oscar jubis
04-03-2008, 12:35 AM
There are many films in theatres right now, some who've been reviewed in our venerable FilmLeaf, that I feel no compulsion to run out and watch:
MARRIED LIFE, STOP-LOSS, DRILLBIT TAYLOR, 21, FUNNY GAMES, VANTAGE POINT, JUMPER, CLOVERLEAF, etc.
I'll probably end up watching Stop-Loss, made by a woman who grew up down here and made a really good first movie several years ago. Who knows...

I really enjoyed HORTONS HEARS A WHO! and THE BANK JOB. UNDER THE SAME MOON wasn't bad but don't run out and see it on my account. THE OTHER BOLYEN GIRL is probably not better than the films I listed to begin the thread but it seems like something I'd enjoy. If I wasn't busy finishing up my MIFF thread, I'd preobably review the very charming French/Lebanese film CARAMEL (anyone seen it?).

i am definitely interested in 3 movies currently playing:
PARANOID PARK
SNOW ANGELS and
Scorsese's STONES doc.

There's a Japanese Masters Retrospective at the Cosford that includes screenings of 35 mm. prints of Kenji Mizoguchi's UGETSU and SANSHO THE BAILIFF, both of which I've seen multiple times and will watch many times over in the future.

Perhaps I'll rewatch the outstanding 4 MONTHS, 3 WEEKS AND 2 DAYS if I find the time. Blew me away...

I'm sorry I missed THE DAY MY PARENTS WENT ON VACATION and THE BAND'S VISIT. Both had runs which coincided with the MIFF.

Chris Knipp
04-03-2008, 12:56 AM
There are many films in theatres right now, some who've been reviewed in our venerable FilmLeaf, that I feel no compulsion to run out and watch:
MARRIED LIFE, STOP-LOSS, DRILLBIT TAYLOR, 21, FUNNY GAMES, VANTAGE POINT, JUMPER, CLOVERLEAF, etc.And I've seen them all! Pity poor me! Actually, though, I would not have missed Cloverleaf; as a fan of Haneke, I had to see Funny Games (and it stayed with me and still does); and like you, I also felt obligated to watch Stop-Loss, from which at first I had high expectations. And since Married Life was part of the New York Film Festival, I saw that as a matter of course--but I would not advise you to waste your time on it.

Paranoid Park is a must. Snow Angels is interesting, despite its abundant weaknesses. I love Scorsese and the Stones (have not seen, missed the preview). I am not a big fan of 4 Months, 3 Weeks, and 2 Days, another NYFF selection, too earnest for me, but it is well done, and something Americans not to mention western Europeans of a certain stripe want to see. I have actually thought of rewatching it myself to see for one thing what I think about the long interruption.

The Band's Visit is unique, but I found it hard to sit through. Like you I also missed The Day My Parents Went on Vacation. I am not rushing out to see Under the Same Moon. New perhaps more interesting mediocrities are coming.

Somewhere Clooney's Leatherheads is opening this week, and also the typically beautiful My Blueberry Nights, which I have seen in a press screening. Somewhere Hou's The Flight of the Red Balloon (NYFF, and fine) is also opening.

Here is a Metacritic ranking of many current movies that I compiled for my own use:

83 Paranoid Park
73 The Duchess of Langeais
69 The Bank Job
67 In Bruges
67 Snow Angels
65 Married Life
63 Miss Pettigrew Lives for a Day
62 Spiderwick Chronicles
62 Stop-Loss
59 Definitely, Maybe
58 Planet B-Boy
57 Under the Same Moon
53 CJ7
52 Be Kind, Rewind
52 Doomsday
50 StepUp2
50 The Other Boleyn Girl
50 Flawless
49 Penelope
48 21
47 Semi-Pro
46 Roscoe Jenkins
41 Drillbit Taylor
40 Vantage Point
40 Funny Games
40 Shutter
39 Never Back Down
35 Jumper
34 10,000 BC
29 Fool's Gold

oscar jubis
04-03-2008, 09:31 AM
I watched Flawless. Again, not bad, but not good. Not as fun as The Bank Job to me.
Also missed In Bruges, Definitely, Maybe, Charlie Bartlett, Spiderwick, and Be Kind, Rewind (all of which seem to me to merit a rental so if there's a thread for any of them I'll comment back in 3 months or so).
I assume you didn't see Caramel. We don't get a lot of movies set in Beirut and this is a good one. Not a "must see" though.
Huge fan of David Gordon Green, especially the films preceding Undertow. I don't like the fact that this is his first film not set in the South. But I think he's supremely talented; more so than other young Americans with "auteur" reputations. Again, only my opinion.
BTW, I've already seen about 5 films that belong in my 2008 Foreign Top 10. My Blueberry Nights and Flight of the Red Balloon are highly anticipated.

Chris Knipp
04-03-2008, 12:38 PM
I watched Flawless. Again, not bad, but not good. Not as fun as The Bank Job to me.To anybody, I'd think; not even a matter of debate. Metacritic: Flawless: 50, The Bank Job: 69. It's considerably more interesting, though Flawless is easier on the eyes.
I assume you didn't see Caramel. No, I did, actually. And my review of it is here (http://www.filmwurld.com/forums/showthread.php?threadid=2146) on this site, from Paris last fall. And Howard Schumann has just published a new review (http://www.cinescene.com/howard/everydaymagic.htm) of it on Cinescene.

I would have had to see In Bruges (which I did) because Martin McDonagh is a brilliant writer for the stage, and this is his first film. It's not up to his best plays (he thinks Pillow Man is his best and I'd agree) but it's beautifully done and Colin Farrell gives a very fine performance. Definitely, Mabye wasn't bad, very watchable, but I didn't get around to writing a review of it. Charlie Bartlett fits into a youth genre that I like and have followed especially since its heyday in the Eighties, but though not without charm it isn't up to things like Ferris Bueller or Igby, and quite a few others, maybe even Rocket Science. Be Kind, Rewind was a big disappointment, and I really agree with critics such as Anthony Lane who have concluded Gondry is much better when he is working from somebody else's script, as was evident with the brilliant collaboration with Charlie Kaufman in Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind. Spiderwick is the only one I haven't seen and I ought to see it.

I am also a huge, but unlike you a perpetually slightly disappointed, fan of David Gordon Green. He is an original, but no one of his films has seemed to me quite wholly successful, and I have just reviewed (http://www.filmwurld.com/forums/showthread.php?threadid=2251) his latest film on this site, as you know. There are very good things in it, particularly the delicately portrayed teenage love affair acted excellently by Michael Angarano and Olivia Thirlby. But readers of its novel source suggest that he has gotten its elements out of proportion, with deleterious effects. In particular I think he has lost the way the past is framed in the perspective of the present.

Metacritic isn't infallible but I do find it reliable certainly for judging the US critical response to a movie. The great gap between that response to the original Funny Games (72) and the new one (40) is interesting, since this isn't explained by and drop in the quality of the production and the acting. It's the different contemporary context--and the language--I'm sure.

oscar jubis
04-03-2008, 07:40 PM
I posted a comment about Caramel on your Paris thread.
Curious about where I placed David Gordon Green's previous movies in year end lists, I looked them up:
GEORGE WASHINGTON #6 (2001)
ALL THE REAL GIRLS #3 (2003)
UNDERTOW #19 (2004)

Haneke films
I loved: THE SEVENTH CONTINENT and CODE UNKNOWN.
I liked a lot: TIME OF THE WOLF
I liked: CACHE
Worth watching but not that good: BENNY'S VIDEO and FUNNY GAMES.
So I have no interest in a remake of the latter.

Chris Knipp
04-03-2008, 08:31 PM
Given that I admire Haneke and his reputation has soared, I felt that watching the remake of Funny Games was an obligation. I have not seen the original German version, by the way. Maybe eventually now I will. Watching the new one was not pleasant. But it is very well done, the acting generally impeccable, etc. From when I first saw the trailer it seemed like a weird misguided project to me though. As for The Seventh Continent how you can say you "loved" such a depressing flick is beyond me. I would rate Cache above Time of the Wolf; it doesn't stick in the mind as strongly as Cache. I haven't seen Benny's Video.

I thought at the time that I liked Undertow actually better than the other two, but in retrospect your ranking is probably right. We'll see how you like Snow Angels.

oscar jubis
04-03-2008, 09:18 PM
In case anyone is wondering what exactly we're talking about, here's my review of The Last Continent (http://www.filmwurld.com/forums/showthread.php?s=&postid=15869#post15869) and a subsequent post in which I agree with you when you call it depressing. I love bleak movies when they're brilliant.

Chris Knipp
04-04-2008, 12:53 AM
I forgot that it was his debut. And it deserves credit for being an original debut. I don't understand quite why you don't want to see the remake of Funny Games, which is also depressing, and brilliant.

oscar jubis
04-04-2008, 02:54 PM
Brilliant? It's surprising you say so since you write in your review: "He's really just creating a horror show, a high-class auteur playing at cheap genre tricks and pretending that because he does it, it will improve us--by not entertaining us."
You also say:
"Funny Games is a regression on the director's part to ideas that are clever but facile; it's a smaller, more purely pernicious piece of work"
I also think you'd agree that this is simply a sort of translation of the original not a rethinking of it . Having seen the original, I don't see why I'd want to watch the remake with American actors.

Chris Knipp
04-04-2008, 03:37 PM
I still think it's brilliant--in the sense of being very well executed, very effective, very polished, really perfection in that sense, however rfacile and hurt by cheap genre tricks. Not a rethinking, except insofar as completely remaking the film in English in an American setting is a rethinking (in practical, technical terns that is a considerable rethinking). Since he really made up this provocation originally as a provocation for Americans, it was only logical that he would redo it in an American setting when he gained the clout and funding and connections to be able to do so. It is brilliantly done. Something can be brilliant and still ultimately perhaps pointless. But is it pointless? Time will tell. But since it has been so poorly received, it may have turned out to be a waste of effort for all concerned. It's a brilliant failure. There are such things.