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Heist
Heist is
superbly acted, well plotted, and contains some of the
sharpest dialogue writer/director David Mamet has ever
written, yet it feels borrowed, and is ultimately
unfulfilling. He’s covered this territory before, in the splendid House
of Games and The Spanish Prisoner.
Heist is certainly as competent as those, and in
some cases better (Rebecca Pidgeon has come a long way,
that’s for sure), but due to the familiarity of the
material, it is unable to surprise.
It’s good, but unoriginal.
The story starts
with criminal mastermind Joe Moore (Gene Hackman) pulling a
daring morning robbery of a jewelry store with help from his
crew Bobby (Delroy Lindo, who needs to work more), Pinky (Mamet
regular Ricky Jay) and wife Fran (Mamet’s wife and therefore
regular Rebecca Pidgeon).
The problem is, the man who set up the deal, Bergman (a
deliciously sleazy Danny DeVito) is holding Joe’s piece of
the jewel heist hostage until Joe finishes another, much more
complicated job, involving Swiss gold.
Not only that, Bergman insists that his nephew Jimmy
Silk (Sam Rockwell) come along on the job.
Joe’s livid; he’s old, and was hoping to take his
boat and sail away after the jewel heist. Now, not only does he have to do One Last Job, he has to
babysit a greenhorn he doesn’t know and therefore doesn’t
trust.
What’s fun about
Heist is watching the setup.
The Spanish Prisoner showed the point of view of
the mark, the sucker who’s getting conned. Heist shows the plans behind the con, and the detail
is extraordinary, with seemingly innocuous comments and
encounters paying dividends days later.
It also helps that the group executing the con are
master thespians like Hackman and Lindo, and even then Ricky
Jay damn near steals the movie from them.
When talking about Hackman to Rockwell, Jay says “My
motherfucker is so cool, when he goes to sleep, sheep count him.”
Sam Rockwell, meanwhile, is getting a little too good
at playing the weasel. If
he doesn’t watch it, he’s going to become the Cary Elwes
of the ‘00s, which means he’ll get lots of work, but at a
huge cost.
And yet, despite
all the movie has going for it, Heist is unable to
shake that feeling of the familiar. When a double cross takes place, only to be followed by
triple and quadruple crosses, it is only natural to assume
that another cross is around the corner.
The success of these movies lies in their ability to
deceive the audience, and when the audience no longer feels
fooled, the final payoff and overall impression of the movie
is diminished.
Still, for those
who have not seen either of Mamet’s previous crime movies, Heist
is worth the trip (though House of Games is still his
best work). Mamet
junkies, however, will dig the dialogue and acting, but will
likely find the overall experience lacking.
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