Posts tonen met het label american hustle. Alle posts tonen
Posts tonen met het label american hustle. Alle posts tonen

dinsdag 18 maart 2014

Today's (Semi)Review: American Hustle

Wrote this one as an informative piece for Filmhuis Alkmaar, but since at this point it's the question whether this title will make it for release in that arthouse-theater for various reasons, I might as well post it here on my blog, and save me the effort of writing it again in English (though in that case it would have been longer and more detailed). Considering it's kind of a puff piece and there's no room for exploring the movie's downsides - you want to entice people to go see the movie by pretending there's nothing to hold against it after all; you're basically performing a con yourself, so to speak - I can't honestly describe it as the most balanced of reviews. That said, I found little to be wrong with this movie, save for the ending which, like most movies dealing with hustles and con artists, typically leaves something to be desired in terms of credibility. We're led to believe the situation is what it is, until it suddenly makes a 180 degree turn and things happen to fit together quite differently, stretching the limits of how much we're willing to swallow. However, the strong personalities and terrific performances of the cast, coupled with delicious production design and gorgeous costumes and make-up, make it all the more acceptable for us to be conned as hard as we turn out to be. American Hustle is worth checking out on those accounts alone.




American Hustle: ****/*****, or 8/10

'Sommige van het volgende is echt gebeurd', is de boodschap waarmee American Hustle opent. Het is zoveel eerlijkheid als je gaat krijgen van regisseur David O'Russell (The Fighter, Silver Linings Playbook), die geen overdreven historisch accurate pretenties koestert in deze bewerking van de FBI's Abscam-operatie aan het einde van de jaren zeventig. Voor dit luchtige misdaad-drama bewijst O'Russell eens te meer een uiterst bekwaam acteursregisseur te zijn, die het beste uit zijn hoofdrolspelers haalt om zijn verhaal over de oplichterspraktijken van hun personages te vertellen. Zijn alle acteurs immers niet bedriegers?

American Hustle vertelt over het duo 'con artists' Irving Rosenfeld (Christian Bale) en Sydney Prosser (Amy Adams) die na een mislukte poging tot fraude door FBI-agent Richie DiMaso (Bradley Cooper) ingezet worden in een heimelijke operatie om mogelijk corrupte politici uit de tent te lokken. Een neppe zakendeal met een Arabische sjeik die wil investeren in Amerikaanse projecten moet beelden vastleggen van burgemeesters en senatoren die smeergeld aannemen en zo als omkoopbaar aan de kaak gesteld kunnen worden. Het is een gewaagd plan dat Irving en Sydney slechts onder dreiging met een gevangenisstraf kunnen aannemen. Onder druk van het onvoorspelbare gedrag van Irvings vrouw Rosalyn (Jennifer Lawrence) en zijn onverwachte vriendschap met hun eerste slachtoffer, de energieke burgemeester Polito (Jeremy Renner) van Atlantic City, wordt de zwendel steeds uitgebreider en moeilijker in toom te houden. Als vervolgens ook nog de maffia bij het stiekeme schandaal betrokken raakt heeft de operatie zo'n grootscheepse omvang aangenomen dat het onmogelijk lijkt het geheel nog tot een goed einde te brengen. Kunnen Irving en Sydney zich het vege lijf nog redden in deze schijnbaar totaal uit de hand gelopen situatie?



O'Russell begreep wel dat hij een sterk staaltje geschiedenis in handen had dat door zijn publiek met een flinke korrel zout genomen zou worden. Het maakte hem er slechts vastberadener op American Hustle te serveren als een sterk verhaal dat de kijker diverse keren op het verkeerde been zet, met een juiste balans tussen drama en humor om de bizarre aspecten van de Abscam-zeepbel te onderstrepen. Zijn grootste troef blijkt echter zijn fabuleuze acteursensemble dat elkaar bijkans van het scherm af probeert te spelen in veelal geïmproviseerde scènes, waarin ze het meer van hun gevoel als begenadigde acteurs moesten hebben dan van een script dat hun dialoog netjes op een rijtje zette. De acteurs en hun personages vullen elkaar uitstekend aan, met Bale als de ervaren maar voorzichtige oplichter met overgewicht; Adams als zijn partner-in-crime en stiekeme liefde van zijn leven; Lawrence als het secreet van een echtgenote, volstrekt egocentrisch en onverantwoordelijk: Cooper als de gedreven maar overambitieuze FBI-agent; en Renner als de sympathieke en gepassioneerde burgemeester met maffiabanden. Dat Bale, Adams, Lawrence en Cooper allen beloond werden met een Oscarnominatie blijkt geheel terecht en bewijst dat ze O'Russells beproeving moeiteloos doorstaan hebben. Het sublieme acteerwerk maakt de film een feest om naar te kijken.




Het sterke spel van zijn acteurs is niet het enige dat American Hustle tot een valse maar toch geslaagde cinematische vertelling van het Abscam-schandaal maakt. O'Russell doet de late jaren zeventig ook voortreffelijk herleven dankzij het visueel schitterende productiedesign. Ook hier vormen de acteurs het stralend middelpunt dankzij de nauwgezette reconstructie van de uitgebreide mode en weelderige haarstijl uit die periode. Maar ook de tijdsgeest waarin zij vertoeven, de auto's en technologie van weleer, wordt met de nodige flair nieuw leven ingeblazen, en weet zich daarbij gesteund door een hippe soundtrack die met een vette knipoog naar het Amerika van destijds refereert. Het geheel sleurt de kijker volledig mee in de deceptie, maar de relativerende humor die het absurdistische van het schandaal onderschrijft zorgt er doeltreffend voor dat de toeschouwer gepaste afstand houdt met het wel en wee van de oneerlijke personages als hun zwendel op een gevaarlijk kookpunt dreigt af te stevenen. Hoe grotesker de uitkomst, hoe leuker voor ons.

O'Russell maakt er geen groot geheim van dat hij ons diverse keren op het verkeerde spoor zet en ons bedriegt door het niet zo nauw te nemen met de historische feiten. Zijn hervertelling van de Abscam-operatie is letterlijk zowel te bizar als te mooi om waar te zijn, maar met een prachtig eindresultaat als American Hustle maken we daar geen enkel moment bezwaar tegen.


maandag 3 maart 2014

Oscars 2014: the results



Well, the Academy has finally held its annual ritual, so let's see how many Oscar winners I guessed right. Or expertly deduced correctly, if you prefer.

Best Picture: correct! It seems the time was right for a movie directed by a coloured man to win in this category. This is the Age of Obama after all. Too bad he didn't also win Best Director, but let's not push things, right?
I have yet to see 12 Years a Slave.

Best Actor: incorrect. Matthew McConaughey seems to have been on a roll last year with Mud, The Wolf of Wall Street and the movie he won for, so he was really actively pushing for that Oscar, and successfully so it appears. Though I won't deny him his prize, I feel kinda sad for both Bruce Dern and Chiwetel.
Second choice: also incorrect.
I have yet to see Dallas Buyers Club.

Best Actress: correct! This one just seemed a given. Blanchett deserved a Best Lead win for a change, Best Supporting Actress is good, but just not as good. Woody Allen's recent sex scandal hasn't hurt Blanchett for starring in his film.

Best Supporting Actor: incorrect. I should have known the Academy wouldn't go for a first-time actor, no matter how impressive his performance. Jared Leto proved a more conservative winner, despite him playing a transsexual.
Second choice: also incorrect.

Best Supporting Actress: incorrect. Jennifer Lawrence got her spotlight moment last year and she tripped over her dress while walking the stairs... never again! Plus, 'twas all white folks winning acting awards so far, so this evens the score a little.
Second choice: correct.

Best Director: incorrect. Considering all the technical stuff, I didn't see this one coming. The Academy has a tendency to overlook such aspects of filmmaking when it comes to this particular category, in favor of more trite but true apporaches. No more it seems. Apparently all the technical stuff was just too groundbreaking to ignore for a change.
Second choice: also incorrect.

Best Original Screenplay: incorrect. Poor American Hustle got snubbed good! A story about man and his increasingly accepting mentality towards anthropomorphizing non-human machinery fit right in with appreciating Cuaron's technical stuff. The Academy has finally learned to embrace the digital age then.
Second choice: correct.
I have yet to see Her.

Best Adapted Screenplay: correct! There just had to be a few more wins for 12 Years a Slave to go with that Best Picture win. Right before Gravity took all the rest.


The Academy clearly didn't take a hint from Gravity's tag line.


Best Animated Feature: correct! When Disney gets good again, all other animation is silenced. Like it or not. Let it go.

Best Foreign Film: correct! It just had to be, considering all the raving critical acclaim. Its competitors just didn't stand a chance.
I have yet to see La Grande Bellezza.

Best Cinematography: correct! Duh!

Best Editing: correct! See above.

Best Production Design: correct! Gatsby may not have felt like a great movie, but it sure looked like one.

Best Costume Design: correct! Same.

Best Make-Up: correct! The performances of McConaughey and Leto were undoubtedly stirred to great heights thanks to the way they looked.

Best Music: incorrect. Despite all the innovations, a grand picture still needs a solid soundtrack. Gravity got one.
Second choice: also incorrect.

Best Song: correct! The Academy, too, let it go. Good for them!

Best Sound Mixing: correct! It didn't matter that in space, nobody can hear you scream. For your information.

Best Sound Editing: correct! *insert second joke about the uneasy relationship between space and sound here*

Best Visual Effects: correct! The most obvious winner of the bunch, courtesy of the year's most jaw-dropping sights.

Best Documentary: incorrect. This unexpected pick is the one I take umbrage with the most. There's this hugely unsettling, daringly executed, effectively engaging shock doc about Indonesian genocide, and the Academy opts for a bunch of singing people instead. I'd say they 'let it go' a little too much in this case.
Second choice: also incorrect.

Correct: 14
Second choice: 5-2.
Incorrect: 7

Last year's results: 6 correct, 5 second choices correct and 9 blatantly wrong. There's some personal improvement there!
Most of the choices in the "lesser" categories were just glaringly obvious this year. It was an easy year in that regard. However, the 86th Academy Awards ceremony just proved once again how fickle Academy members can be when it comes to the acting categories. And also just how much the Academy likes to compromise. Then again, American Hustle received 10 nominations and ended up completely empty handed... Maybe because we once again didn't see Jennifer Lawrence's boobs? Oh well, let it go.



zondag 19 januari 2014

Oscars 2014: My list of predictions

The long and dreary road to this year's Oscars has been put into motion, and no doubt people will want to know what I expect this year's winners to be. Not that I tend to care all that much about the Acadamy Awards or the whole dull press circus in the first few months of the year that accompanies it. It's just one big ritual going through all the usual motions. I much prefer to focus on the quality of these films on their own merits, without the huge buzz that surrounds them. Nevertheless, here's my list of guesses (which honestly is what they are, since you can analyze all you want but the Academy still has a habit of surprising you in the choices it makes, and often not pleasantly). I am not ashamed to say that in many cases I just go with what my gut tells me, something most critics are not prepared to admit.




Best Picture:

First choice: A tough one, as always. I can tell you which movies it won't be for sure, but as to the winner, for me it's a toss-up - as these events usually revolve around two very promising films with the results being about even, just as with the recent Golden Globes - between 12 Years a Slave, American Hustle, while possibly The Wolf of Wall Street has a shot as well. For now, my money is on 12 Years a Slave, which by itself must make up for the lack of other "black" pictures in these nominations, like The Butler and Fruitvale Station, which were lobbying for an award but didn't get very far apparently.
Second Choice: American Hustle.

Best Actor:

First Choice: Chiwetel Ejiofor, 12 Years a Slave. Same reason as above really. Plus, Chiwetel is a damn fine actor and though a first time Oscar nominee, he has already five Golden Globe nominations on his resumé. It's about time he won something.
Second choice: Bruce Dern for Nebraska.

Best Actress:

First Choice: Cate Blanchett for Blue Jasmine. An Oscar favorite that really needs a Lead Actress win, as opposed to a Supporting Actress take a decade ago. All the other female performances are impeccable, but this one just stands out supremely.
Second choice: Any Adams for American Hustle.

Best Supporting Actor:

First Choice: Barkhad Abdi for Captain Phillips. A stellar performance from a first time actor, holding his own opposite a veteran like Tom Hanks. You don't see that every day.
Second choice: Michael Fassbender for 12 Years a Slave.

Best Supporting Actress:

First Choice: No truly safe bets here, so I'll go with Jennifer Lawrence, since everybody likes her and so do I. Yes, that's also how this game sometimes works.
Second choice: Lupita Nyong'o for 12 Years a Slave. Same reason as Barkhad Abdi, except she has done slightly more.

Best Director:

First Choice: Steve McQueen for 12 Years a Slave. Again, same reason as why 12 Years a Slave is on this list of mine most of the times (though also because I haven't yet seen it so I can't underscore my argument in more detail). A black director winning an Oscar, doesn't happen often enough. Call me a racist if you must, but remember the b(l)acklash not so long ago when there weren't so many coloured people even nominated despite their considerable contribution to otherwise hugely nominated movies. Yes, they can!
Second choice: Martin Scorsese for The Wolf of Wall Street. Because it's about friggin' time this man took home another statue, considering how often he gets nominated but leaves empty handed.



Best Original Screenplay:

First Choice: American Hustle.
Second choice: Her.

Best Adapted Screenplay:

First Choice: 12 Years a Slave.
Second choice: The Wolf of Wall Street.

Best Animated Feature:

First Choice: Frozen. Apart from The Wind Rises, the other nominess are nothing remarkable (and poor Pixar simply got ignored this year, which was a long time coming really). However, that film seems too controversial, plus it's foreign material too. Frozen is a safer bet, as it carries all the good traits of a typical Disney movie, but shows the Mouse House is finally flowing with the times a little.
Second choice: The Wind Rises.

Best Foreign Film:

First Choice: La Grande Bellezza. This year's smash hit in arthouse theaters.
Second choice: Jagten. Better late than never, but not in time for a win. This movie is like 18 months old by now!

Best Cinematography:

First Choice: Gravity. The finest, most groundbreaking and impressive camera work I've seen in many years.
Second choice: Inside Llewyn Davis.

Best Editing:

First Choice: Gravity. Cuaron and his team once again make fabulous use of his trademark long takes, and the trick is you don't even notice the cutting.
Second choice: American Hustle.

Best Production Design:

First Choice: The Great Gatsby. Spectacularly lavish, the main reason to watch this film, which leaves something to be desired in terms of story and character. But it looks flawless.
Second choice: Gravity.

Best Costume Design:

First Choice: The Great Gatsby. Like I said, it all looks grand (characters included), it just doesn't feel it.
Second choice: American Hustle.

Best Make-up:

First Choice: already an uproar has commenced due to American Hustle being wrongfully snubbed in this category. Dallas Buyer's Club therefore seems the most eligible choice left.
Second choice: The Lone Ranger.

Best Music:

First Choice: Her. It needs to win something after all.
Second choice: The Book Thief. There's scoring, and there's John Williams.

Best Song:

First Choice: Frozen. Let it go, Academy! Let it gooooohooo!!
Second choice: Mandela: Long Walk to Freedom.




Best Sound Mixing:

First Choice: Gravity.
Second choice: The Hobbit: The Desolation of Smaug.

Best Sound Editing:

First Choice: Gravity.
Second choice: All is Lost.

Best Visual Effects:

First Choice: Gravity. I rarely experienced a movie that deserved this honour so badly. If Gravity loses, I call shenanigans on the Academy! Wouldn't be the first time though.
Second choice: The Hobbit: The Desolation of Smaug. The dragon looked badass, though I admit some other things in the film didn't appear nearly as stunning.

Best Documentary:

First Choice: The Act of Killing. Very disturbing but equally intriguing. May not be the Academy's cup of tea though.
Second choice: Dirty wars.

The first week of March will tell me how wrong, or maybe how right for a change, I just happen to be.