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| Original Title |
Good Thief, The |
| Director |
Neil Jordan |
| Genre |
Crime, Drama |
| Released |
2002-09-6 |
| MPAA Rating |
Rated R for language, sexuality, drug content and some violence. |
| Rated |
6.8 |
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| Set against the glitzy backdrop of the French Riviera, aging gambler Bob Montagnet is about to gamble it all on the casino heist of a lifetime; a spectatcular sleight of hand--two heists, one real, one not, but which is which? Under the watchful eye of Roger, a policeman who would as soon save his longtime opponent as arrest him, Montagnet assembles a team that consists of partners Paulo and Raoul, technical mastermind Vladimer, former-drug-dealer-turned-informant Said, Anne, a young Eastern girl Montagnet rescued from prostitution, and the perfect complement to a double theft--identical twins Albert and Bertram. |
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| Nutsa Kukhianidze as Anne , Ouassini Embarek as Said , Marc Lavoine as Remi , Nick Nolte as Bob , Tchéky Karyo as Roger , Gérard Darmon as Raoul , Saïd Taghmaoui as Paulo , Patricia Kell as Yvonne , Julien Maurel as Philippe , Emir Kusturica as Vladimer , Roland Munter as Kozinski , Warren Zavatta as Petit Louis , Théo Trifard as Bill , Sarah Bridges as Philippa , Nicolas Dromard as Luigi |
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A nice turn from Nolte, and Jordan returns to solid ground...
The Good Thief
Bob (Nick Nolte) is a gambling and heroin addict who has just lost his last
dime in Paris. Caught in a downward spiral that's sure to end in a prison
sentence, Bob is propositioned by an old friend to pull off a rare painting
heist in a large casino located in Monte Carlo. Sensing that this is his
last chance for success, Bob quits both his habits cold turkey and focuses
on the complicated burglary plans. While pulling together a ragtag group
(including filmmaker Emir Kusturica) to handle the details, Bob keeps his
eye on the local cop (Tcheky Karyo, `The Core`) who's tailing him, and Anne
(Nutsa Kukhanudze), a teenaged Russian girl who can't be trusted with the
secrets that every man wants to willingly give her.
Heist pictures are a dime a dozen recently, but Neil Jordan's `The Good
Thief' (a remake of the 1955 film `Bob le flambeur') sets itself apart from
the pack with its colossal grittiness. This isn't a film about slick, well
dressed young men running around pulling off confidence games with the
latest in high-tech gadgets. `Thief' is about small time losers, whores, and
former heroin addicts who have hit rock bottom, and have no other choice but
to believe in the big score. `Thief' isn't a film based around twists and
turns either. While they do play a part in the story, Jordan keeps the games
to minimum. He's more interested in the procedural tones of the heist, and
the characterizations of the participants. Jordan himself has been on an
unlucky streak with a handful of well-intentioned, but financially
disappointing projects (`In Dreams, ` The Butcher Boy`). `Thief' certainly
doesn't represent Jordan's heart, but it does showcase his gift for telling
a tall tale.
`The Good Thief' crackles with tension and delight as Jordan writes his
characters in a heightened manner. The dialog is quick and playful, which
can be a detriment when it comes into contact with the picture's global cast
(who, at the very least, attempt to speak English), and Nolte's own brand of
pure, uncut mumble. Jordan also forgoes typical slickness with this picture.
He bathes the cast in such incredible shadows and grain, that you almost beg
the screen to give you a close-up in which you can actually see a face
clearly. The goal is to lend a noir-ish feel to the proceedings, backed with
appropriate Leonard Cohen and Bono songs that set the mood nicely, and the
mission is accomplished, with the audience feeling Bob's underbelly journey
wholeheartedly.
`Thief' represents Nick Nolte's first role since his unfortunate arrest last
fall on drug charges. It's a little morbid that this role requires Nolte to
play an addict, and it should be no surprise that's he's great in the film.
Turning down the volume on his normal amplified rage routine, Nolte holds
`Thief' together with his first subtle performance in years. He's backed by
great cast, but the eyes always seem to find Nolte in every frame he's in
(that is until a cameoing Ralph Fiennes shows up to steal some
scenes).
Also of interest is Nutsa Kukhanudze as the Russian femme fatale. Though she
speaks in a dull Russian drone, and has peculiar bowl haircut for a man
killer, Kukhanudze radiates sexiness from every pore. She's the flame that
heats `The Good Thief' when the film becomes bogged down in details, and her
performance appears to come out of nowhere. Like Nolte, she attracts
attention by merely standing still. An interesting English-language debut
for the young actress.
The heist film genre is getting awfully tired, but here's `The Good Thief'
to show that there still is life is these dark corners of the gambler's
heart. ----------- 8/10
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