0 out of 1 people found the following comment useful :- Uberhip Underworld, 26 November 2006
Author:
dunmore_ego from Los Angeles, California
*** This comment may contain spoilers ***
SPOILERS.
Embedded in hip, street-thug canon, there is Scorcese's *Goodfellas*,
there is Tarantino's *Pulp Fiction*, there is Ritchie's *Snatch* all
periodically panned for their film stylings, yet garnering indirect
accolades through their wealth of imitators but if there is such a
thing as "too hip," Paul McGuigan's *Lucky Number Slevin* would be
choking on its own faux street cred.
Sidling past the grandmasters of urban cool, *Slevin* embraces its
influences and tilts unashamedly at the zenith of Thug Hip.
Sometimes it works, as when danger men like Bruce Willis (as hired gun,
Mr. Goodkat) or Sir Ben Kingsley (as crime kingpin, The Rabbi) orate
Urban, but sometimes it flails for credibility, as when Morgan Freeman
(as opposing kingpin, The Boss) tries to convince he's Bad, or when Boy
Hartnett (as title character, Slevin) tries to convince he's Hard.
The impeccable Stanley Tucci, as the testy New York cop, edges into hip
with his seedy, malign temperament. Lucy Liu is the Girl Next Door (why
doesn't the Girl Next Door ever look like Janeane Garofalo?), as
titillating yet irritating as a GND usually is, her contribution to hip
being a slavish adherence to Gap-generation mismatched clothes; her
presence an obvious element required for gratuitous intercourse and
Implausible Happy Ending Protocol.
There's a sarcasm at work in the title, for at first glance, Slevin
(Josh Hartnett) is anything but lucky, being mistaken for the guy whose
apartment he is crashing in and whisked off with a twice-broken nose
(with nary but a bath towel betwixt him and primal exposure) to visit
two of the crime bosses of New York City, and told that he owes them
both large. The Boss makes a deal with Slevin to cancel his debt in
return for a favor: assassinating The Rabbi's son. But Slevin is not
the low-rent thug they think he is And hit-man Goodkat is skulking
around, seemingly hired by both The Boss and The Rabbi, for reasons
unknown There is something afoot and we can't quite focus our thug-dar
for all the misdirection thrown at us by the serpentine style of the
film-making and the bass-ackwards nature of the film.
A million plot twists later, we discover that *Slevin* is a tale of
revenge. The long way 'round. Events go nowhere and twists add up to
nothing, but when the layer cake is baked, the Moebius strip winds up
making sense - until it tries to make sense of itself. In the last
explanatory dialog (delivered by Robert Forster) all non sequiturs are
accounted for, with one glaring exception, a mistake on the
film-makers' part the motivation of a major player is lacking, to the
detriment of the film's overall enjoyment.
SPOILERS...
During the movie, we are led to believe that lethal Mr. Goodkat
(Willis) is playing both bosses for his own ends (a role much like
Willis' character in *Last Man Standing*, 1996, one of the many
inferior remakes of *Yojimbo*) and that he has "plans" for Slevin, who
is in turn being played by the two bosses. In the denouement, it is
revealed that twenty years ago, Goodkat was sent to execute Slevin as a
boy, but stayed his hand, unbeknownst to his employers. In the present,
Goodkat is in fact aiding Slevin's revenge on the two bosses.
The question is: Why? What possible reason did Goodkat have to renege
on his kiddie execution? If it was to groom Slevin as an accomplice,
we'd have motivation, but Slevin is NOT his accomplice on the
contrary, Goodkat seems to be aiding Slevin for no recompense. We can
speculate all we want about Goodkat doing something moral to palliate
his nihilism, or that for the past twenty years, Slevin was in fact in
Goodkat's debt until the revenge job released him from Goodkat's
services. But as Sloe (Mykelti Washington) tells Slevin - "Tell it to
the one-legged man, so he can bump it on down the road." Speculation
schmeculation.
In all the smash-cuts and filtered film, all the mind-numbing wallpaper
and misdirection (making pretty-boy Hartnett not so pretty with a
broken nose or prison goatee), in all the flashing forward and
backward, all the split-screens and strobed scenes, in all the
compositing of dialog from different flashbacks and spine-snapping the
chronology for more impactive "reveals," director McGuigan and writer
Jason Smilovic strangely but understandably - neglected to give
Goodkat plausible motivation.
The movie might have been harder, heavier and hipper were it not for
the discrepancy in Willis' character and the silly girl-boy happy
ending. Yet it retains its high rating for the obvious effort to create
a film more interesting than your average bear - visually,
conceptually, linguistically.
Best line is Goodkat's reply to Slevin: "I'm a world-class assassin,
fuckhead!" because it seems so altogether true - about BRUCE WILLIS. In
one scene, Goodkat, in long, tough-guy overcoat, raises two guns
straight forward, arms outstretched, furious intent on his face - an
image of Bruce Willis as engraved in our minds as Christ on the Cross.
Own the rights?
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0 out of 1 people found the following comment useful :-

Uberhip Underworld, 26 November 2006
Author: dunmore_ego from Los Angeles, California
*** This comment may contain spoilers ***
SPOILERS.
Embedded in hip, street-thug canon, there is Scorcese's *Goodfellas*, there is Tarantino's *Pulp Fiction*, there is Ritchie's *Snatch* all periodically panned for their film stylings, yet garnering indirect accolades through their wealth of imitators but if there is such a thing as "too hip," Paul McGuigan's *Lucky Number Slevin* would be choking on its own faux street cred.
Sidling past the grandmasters of urban cool, *Slevin* embraces its influences and tilts unashamedly at the zenith of Thug Hip.
Sometimes it works, as when danger men like Bruce Willis (as hired gun, Mr. Goodkat) or Sir Ben Kingsley (as crime kingpin, The Rabbi) orate Urban, but sometimes it flails for credibility, as when Morgan Freeman (as opposing kingpin, The Boss) tries to convince he's Bad, or when Boy Hartnett (as title character, Slevin) tries to convince he's Hard.
The impeccable Stanley Tucci, as the testy New York cop, edges into hip with his seedy, malign temperament. Lucy Liu is the Girl Next Door (why doesn't the Girl Next Door ever look like Janeane Garofalo?), as titillating yet irritating as a GND usually is, her contribution to hip being a slavish adherence to Gap-generation mismatched clothes; her presence an obvious element required for gratuitous intercourse and Implausible Happy Ending Protocol.
There's a sarcasm at work in the title, for at first glance, Slevin (Josh Hartnett) is anything but lucky, being mistaken for the guy whose apartment he is crashing in and whisked off with a twice-broken nose (with nary but a bath towel betwixt him and primal exposure) to visit two of the crime bosses of New York City, and told that he owes them both large. The Boss makes a deal with Slevin to cancel his debt in return for a favor: assassinating The Rabbi's son. But Slevin is not the low-rent thug they think he is And hit-man Goodkat is skulking around, seemingly hired by both The Boss and The Rabbi, for reasons unknown There is something afoot and we can't quite focus our thug-dar for all the misdirection thrown at us by the serpentine style of the film-making and the bass-ackwards nature of the film.
A million plot twists later, we discover that *Slevin* is a tale of revenge. The long way 'round. Events go nowhere and twists add up to nothing, but when the layer cake is baked, the Moebius strip winds up making sense - until it tries to make sense of itself. In the last explanatory dialog (delivered by Robert Forster) all non sequiturs are accounted for, with one glaring exception, a mistake on the film-makers' part the motivation of a major player is lacking, to the detriment of the film's overall enjoyment.
SPOILERS...
During the movie, we are led to believe that lethal Mr. Goodkat (Willis) is playing both bosses for his own ends (a role much like Willis' character in *Last Man Standing*, 1996, one of the many inferior remakes of *Yojimbo*) and that he has "plans" for Slevin, who is in turn being played by the two bosses. In the denouement, it is revealed that twenty years ago, Goodkat was sent to execute Slevin as a boy, but stayed his hand, unbeknownst to his employers. In the present, Goodkat is in fact aiding Slevin's revenge on the two bosses.
The question is: Why? What possible reason did Goodkat have to renege on his kiddie execution? If it was to groom Slevin as an accomplice, we'd have motivation, but Slevin is NOT his accomplice on the contrary, Goodkat seems to be aiding Slevin for no recompense. We can speculate all we want about Goodkat doing something moral to palliate his nihilism, or that for the past twenty years, Slevin was in fact in Goodkat's debt until the revenge job released him from Goodkat's services. But as Sloe (Mykelti Washington) tells Slevin - "Tell it to the one-legged man, so he can bump it on down the road." Speculation schmeculation.
In all the smash-cuts and filtered film, all the mind-numbing wallpaper and misdirection (making pretty-boy Hartnett not so pretty with a broken nose or prison goatee), in all the flashing forward and backward, all the split-screens and strobed scenes, in all the compositing of dialog from different flashbacks and spine-snapping the chronology for more impactive "reveals," director McGuigan and writer Jason Smilovic strangely but understandably - neglected to give Goodkat plausible motivation.
The movie might have been harder, heavier and hipper were it not for the discrepancy in Willis' character and the silly girl-boy happy ending. Yet it retains its high rating for the obvious effort to create a film more interesting than your average bear - visually, conceptually, linguistically.
Best line is Goodkat's reply to Slevin: "I'm a world-class assassin, fuckhead!" because it seems so altogether true - about BRUCE WILLIS. In one scene, Goodkat, in long, tough-guy overcoat, raises two guns straight forward, arms outstretched, furious intent on his face - an image of Bruce Willis as engraved in our minds as Christ on the Cross.
Bruce Willis bigger than Jesus? Now that's hip.
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