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Ocean's Thirteen
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Ocean's Thirteen (2007) More at IMDbPro »


0 out of 1 people found the following comment useful :-
Lucky Number Thirteen, 23 June 2007
7/10
Author: dunmore_ego from Los Angeles, California

*** This comment may contain spoilers ***

Like a rehabilitated version of its two retarded brothers, *Ocean's Thirteen* is still eye-candy (primary colors and insatiable set dressing screams at us within the opening five minutes), it is still big band bop underscoring a lavish, hedonist production, it is still man-toys squirming their taut butts through unutterably outlandish scenarios – but this time 'round, the direction is wiser, the plot is tighter and some of the jokes are actually funny.

My expectations going into *Thirteen* were not high – the Sequel Syndrome, I believed, would eat this production alive as soon as it was greenlit. You know the syndrome – you've seen it spiral out of control with every "blockbuster" (how I hate that word) from *X-Men* to *Pirates*; brace yourself for a dumber summer.

So when director Steven Soderbergh fills his first act with "past tense" sequences, showing us the Setup of this heist, I thought we were in for it – now, not only will the *heist* be in past tense (as in *Ocean's Eleven* and *Twelve* - where man-toys spend inordinate wrap time explaining every detail which we didn't really miss, but were never shown in the first place) – we're also gonna get the Setup and the Formula and the Solution and everything goddam else in past tense as well! Bluster for luster.

But then – salvation!

The story (by Brian Koppelman and David Levien) soon emerges after the first act's unnecessary smash-cutting. Slamming with the scamming without too much glamming. And hooks us - by crook! Reuben (Elliott Gould – one of Danny Ocean's "Eleven") has been taken for an investment ride by devious veteran hotelier, Willie Bank (Al Pacino, super-cool, super-cruel, taking over where Andy Garcia left off), leaving Reuben bedridden from a major heart attack. Both Reuben and Bank have "shook Sinatra's hand" – a milestone which should forge a tacit bond between them – so Bank's betrayal is doubly grave, which prompts Ocean (once again, George Clooney) and his Eleven (nay, Remaining Ten, featuring The Damon, The Pitt, The Cheadle *et al*) to seek revenge. In the only way they know how – through a major con.

The boys reconvene in Las Vegas to destroy Bank insidiously, by fixing all the games on opening night in his new super-high-roller casino and busting him. To do this, they must of course pull the most convoluted machinations and confidence tricks this side of Houdini. Usually when heist movies show us "how it's done" we marvel at how easy it is and why more people aren't heisting, but when the *Ocean's* films show us, it looks so hard and expensive that it's not worth the effort.

There are a host of funny subplots: David Paymer as a V.U.P. (Very Unimportant Person) – a hotel critic mistaken for a regular guest; Casey Affleck and James Caan cause comedic mayhem inciting wage riots at a Mexican dice plant, while Damon seduces Pacino's right-hand woman, Abigail (Ellen Barkin, whose breasts are really barkin'). After twenty minutes of seduction - where Abigail is uncontrollably crawling over Damon's big-nosed character due to a "Gilroy" aphrodisiac – she still hasn't shimmied out of her low-cut, sheer, skin-hugging red dress. Are they Iowa teenagers to keep necking that long without nakedness? (Barkin's lucky her breast-aug is so tantalizing, cos she's always had a face that looks like it took second place in a lemon-sucking competition.)

Eddie Izzard – Brit-suave and clinical-cool - is brought in as a kind of super-crim consultant, for the super-security-computers Bank's casino boasts.

Vincent Cassell returns as the skulking Night Fox, his presence just screaming Euro Double Cross. Rest assured, the twists are not annoyingly smug – they straighten themselves out after their initial jolt.

One of the more ironic twists is the inclusion of Andy Garcia in the Eleven's roster, who, along with Izzard, gives us the titular "13." Playing smarmy Benedict again (the hotelier the Eleven heisted in *Twelve*), slicker than an Exxon oil spill, Garcia on screen with Pacino is a heady nostalgia – their last on screen pairing in the ill-remembered, yet gloriously-powerful *Godfather Part III.*

Speaking of *The Godfather,* Reuben paraphrases from his sick bed, "I hear cars driving up to the house, I hear Linus crying – why don't you tell me what everyone seems to know." The last scene reverberates with in-jokes: Clooney to Pitt, alludes to (dare I say it?) Brangelina: "Settle down, have a coupla kids," while Pitt in return alludes to *Syriana*: "Keep the weight off between jobs."

It might seem redundant to note, but this time round, there is much more "cheating" – by the film-makers! After describing the maddeningly precise security systems, when Pitt pays off a concierge or when Caan replaces a dumpling with a spiked one, suddenly those security systems see nothing. The security is impossible to subvert when the Eleven decry it, but when they have to actually "get away" with something, the security is as useless as it is in the real world.

I was glad the chicks were M.I.A. – Julia Roberts and Catherine Zeta-Jones; there are one-line explanations for each, explaining their absence. (How must that make them feel? Not too indispensable, I bet.) Let's face it – Vegas is a MAN'S town; we really don't want the spouses sniffing around. And a heist is a MAN'S game; the only roles women ever play in heists are *objects d'sex* (and the Eleven have Brad Pitt for that) and maybe squeezing into tiny airducts where men can't fit (and they have Shaobo Qin for that).

This beyond-lavish production has renewed my faith in the ensemble power of man-toys – and it only helps that the spirit of Sinatra somehow imbues this entry more so than even *Eleven* (2001). I wrote that *Thirteen* would be the new Zero. It's not – so maybe *Fourteen* will be the new *Godfather Part II.*



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