An ensemble comedy intertwining different tales. From: IMDb.com
Directed by: Elizabeth Banks, Steven Brill, Steve Carr, Rusty Condieff, James Duffy, Griffin Dunne, Peter Farrelly, Patrik Forsberg, James Gunn, Bob Odenkirk,
Brett Ratner and Jonathan van Tulleken
Starring: Emma Stone, Stephen Merchant, Richard Gere and others
It had been a while since I had either seen Richard Gere, Susan
Sarandon or Tim Roth in anything noteworthy but to my own surprise,
this was being a solid thriller, with truly some great performances by
its cast.
It is absolutely true that without its cast this would had been a very
formulaic, standard, average, little thriller. As a matter of fact, it
more feels like an extended "Law & Order" episode. The characters and
developments aren't anything surprising but the movie truly gets made
interesting by its cast, who also help to make this a convincing and
effective thriller.
I have never even been a too big fan of Richard Gere but he simply was
absolutely great in this! He mostly carries this entire movie and he
does this by playing a sort of despicable character. So it's a real
accomplishment by him that he still managed to turn the main character
into a still likable enough one, that you never lost interest in. He
doesn't make the right choices throughout the movie but that's what
keeps his character interesting and helps to let the movie move along,
even during its slower moments.
It's the sort of thriller in which everything starts to go from bad to
worse for its main character, when his lies and actions only get him in
more and deeper problems and drags those close to him down, along with
him.
But really, it remains a far from perfect thriller and still does
plenty of things wrong. It does a poor job at handling some of its
characters for instance. For example, it heavily under uses the Susan
Sarandon character, who could had given the movie a whole other
dimension and some more depth with her character. After all, she plays
the main character's wife, who has certain knowledge about things that
don't come into play until very late into the movie, when things are
already starting to wrap up. The whole dynamic between her and the Gere
character had much more potential really and I thought it was a real
shame this didn't get explored any further and better. Also, I would
had loved to have seen more of Susan Sarandon, since she gave away a
great performance.
That's a bit of a problem with this entire movie; it just doesn't know
how to handle and what to do with certain characters. The Tim Roth
character also definitely feels a bit underused. When he shows up you
think he is going to play a big and important role for this movie but
in fact there are large portions of the movie in which his character
plays no role at all. I absolutely loved his scene with Richard Gere
and I was hoping for more moments like that, which unfortunately just
never came.
I still really enjoyed this thriller and at times was even loving it.
It's definitely a better than average genre attempt, despite still
having a very standard and familiar type of premise and story in it. So
in essence, nothing surprising but it's all still very well made and
acted out by its impressive cast, which already is worth the price
alone.
A troubled hedge fund magnate desperate to complete the sale of his trading empire makes an error that forces him to turn to an unlikely person for help. From: IMDb.com
Directed by: Nicholas Jarecki
Starring: Richard Gere, Susan Sarandon, Brit Marling and others
(Review originally written at 16 November 2008) The movie has the right intentions and the right talent is also definitely involved but yet it all does not work out as completely successful as it could had done. Perhaps you can wonder if this movie wasn't a little over-ambitious. It tries to put way too much into the movie and its filled with many different supernatural things and elements. It's a bit incoherent and you can often wonder what the one thing has to do with the other. This is also because a lot of things within this movie remain unexplained. It works out good for the mystery and overall atmosphere of the movie but when none of it reach a satisfying enough conclusion it starts to work against the movie. The movie is in constant motion but it doesn't feel like it's progressing. At the start of the movie we know and understand just as much what happened as we do at the end of the movie. Still its story and concept in particular is good enough to keep your intention till the end and director Mark Pellington is obviously a capable director, who knows to handle the genre but just didn't really knew to keep control of the movie its story. The story should had made some more choices but instead it decides to have a little bit of everything in the movie, with as a result that just nothing works out as well as it all could had done. It's not really the type of movie you would normally expect to see Richard Gere in but he fits the part really well. It was good to not see him for a change in a middle-age chick flick, or overly moralistic themed and dramatic movie. It's not necessarily a 'typical' Richard Gere movie. He's real good and convincing as the movie its likable main 'hero', you can also care about. The movie also features some fine other actors but they get more pushed to the background of the movie because of the reason that the movie its story is so overfull with all kinds of things. All in all, yes it's a watchable enough movie for when you're bored or for on a rainy night but the movie is just not as great as it potentially really could had been. Genre fans will probably still enjoy it best. 6/10 Watch trailer