REEL CRITICS
‘Snatch’ aims to please with characters
Guy Ritchie made a splash a few years ago with his indie-import “Lock,
Stock, and Two Smoking Barrels,†a high-energy comedic film of the London
underworld. Now Ritchie returns with a new band of misfits cleverly
mining the London underworld again for a new adventure, “Snatch.â€
Unlike most gangster movies, Ritchie’s films are inhabited by mobsters
who would have been rejected and probably eaten alive by the characters
who populate Martin Scorsese’s films. Ritchie’s gangsters, while brutal,
are basically large buffoons whose vices and mental lapses contribute to
their various predicaments.
The comedic overtones of what ultimately resembles a “chase film†can
be traced back to the slapstick comedies of the 1940s and ‘50s,
especially the chase scenes from numerous Marx Brothers films.
“Snatch†stars Brad Pitt, Benecio Del Toro, Dennis Farina, Andy
Beckwith and Ewen Bremner. Their stories intertwine and revolve around
fixed, illegal, bare-knuckled boxing matches, an 86-carat diamond and a
recreational vehicle. Someway, somehow, through each of the characters’
bumbling adventures, their fates all rest on each other -- even though
they don’t know it.
The film doesn’t have a moral center or even try to impart some great
truth. It simply aims to please through its rich dialogue of outrageous
characters. All of the actors seem to enjoy inhabiting their roles and
seem to be winking at the audience. While the film too closely resembles
the characters in Ritchie’s first film, “Snatch†is a relief from the
repetitive formulas that too often populate the multiplexes.
o7 “Snatch†is rated R for strong violence, language and some nudity.
f7
* ROB OROZCO, 29, is an attorney who lives in Newport Beach with his
wife and two cats.
‘The Gift’ leaves something to be desired
With a better script and a few changes in cast, who knows whether “The
Gift†might have come up to the level of “The Sixth Sense†as a psychic
thriller. As it is, Sam Raimi’s film about a small-town Southern psychic
haunted by visions of a dead girl is basically a midnight movie with a
slightly larger budget.
Cate Blanchett stars as Annie Wilson, a psychic whose ability to read
cards gives her the means to support her three children. Annie’s attempts
to help a battered wife (Hilary Swank) leave her husband (Keanu Reeves)
lead to violence gaining a toehold in her life. That violence intensifies
when a young woman (Katie Holmes) disappears, and Annie begins seeing
visions of her dead.
The script, co-written by Billy Bob Thornton (“Sling Bladeâ€) and Tom
Epperson (“A Family Thingâ€), provides some genuine scares. But, perhaps
because the setting is Southern, it pigeonholes nearly all of its
characters into an odd or quirky mold. The one character who approaches
normal is the killer -- very predictable.
The cast tries its best to create something decent. Blanchett can make
even a mediocre role stand out -- witness her performance in “Pushing
Tin,†and you’ll understand what I mean. And Reeves is surprisingly
convincing, not to mention way scary, as a wife-beater.
But Holmes, far from her “Dawson’s Creek†persona, is woefully miscast
as the young fiance of the local principal (Greg Kinnear) who winds up
dead. Though her full-frontal nudity scene jump-started a lot of libidos,
she is simply too underage to be paired with Kinnear.
For fans of the genre, “The Gift†might be worth a gander at a bargain
matinee. For everyone else, wait until it reaches video or cable
television.
o7 “The Gift†is rated R for violence, language and sexuality/nudity.
f7
* JENNIFER MAHAL, 27, is the features editor at the Daily Pilot.
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