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"Ocean's Thirteen" brings series to spirited close
(Reuters)
Updated: 2007-05-25 18:27 CANNES - Rolling the dice for a third time in "Ocean's Thirteen," Steven Soderbergh and his team beat the odds. Final chapters of trilogies invariably suffer from lameness. This, of course, already transpired in "Ocean's Twelve," where subplots misfired and the script resorted to all sorts of sleight-of-hand trickery.
The new film returns to Las Vegas and recaptures much of the spirit of the original film. Of course, after six years and two installments, a new film can no longer have the bracing freshness of "Ocean's Eleven." Then again, "Thirteen" doesn't need to waste time explaining everyone's role. We know how these heist-masters operate. Familiarity also will breed solid box office for the film both domestically and internationally, as many will want to catch these cool men in cool clothes shaking down Vegas as you only wish you could. This time, in a clever script by Brian Koppelman and David Levien (who wrote the poker drama "Rounders"), the heist is for friendship. It seems a sleazy hotel and casino operator with the name of Willy Bank ( Al Pacino) has suckered Danny Ocean's ( George Clooney) friend and mentor, Reuben Tishkoff ( Elliott Gould), so badly that he was rushed to ICU with a critical heart condition. Ocean gives Willy a second chance to let Reuben back into his fair share of Vegas' newest casino, called the Bank, but Willy laughs it off. Only then does the gang re-assemble. The plan is not to steal a thing. Rather the boys will rig every game so that on opening night everyone but everyone can break the Bank. Dice, cards and slot machines are traced back to the manufacturer. Payoffs are made, and electronic equipment installed. One very amusing touch has the boys making certain that a hotel reviewer (David Paymer), who holds the key to a coveted five-diamond rating, will have a perfectly awful stay. Then the boys hit a problem. Actually two. To devise an "exit strategy," Danny and Rusty Ryan ( Brad Pitt) call in a top take-down expert (played with sly zeal by Eddie Izzard). He discovers the casino operations are protected by "Greco," an artificial intelligence so great and so sensitive it can sense when even one thing is amiss, much less all things. He suggests that Ocean's gang fold a losing hand. The boys brainstorm: What if an "earthquake" knocked out Greco, which would take more than three minutes to reboot? Would that be enough time to break the Bank? Basher ( Don Cheadle), the Cockney mechanical whiz, rents the massive drill used to dig the Chunnel connecting England with France. That ought to cause an earthquake! Then the drill breaks down. To buy, not rent, the other drill -- the one that dug from the French side -- will set the team back $36 million. Time to recapitalize. Linus Caldwell ( Matt Damon), always the most put-upon of the team, has a risky idea: Ask Terry Benedict ( Andy Garcia), their mark in the first movie and nemesis in the second, to fund the drill. He agrees -- he hates Bank, too -- but on one condition: Ocean's team must steal a necklace of diamonds worth $250 million from an impenetrable room on top of the Bank. This will require Linus to seduce Willy's right-hand woman, Abigail Sponder ( Ellen Barkin in a wonderfully comic role). One or two subplots misfire due to lack of time to make them work: Frank ( Bernie Mac) persuades Willy to let him operate a dominoes game on opening night. (Highly unlikely.) And Virgil and Turk ( Casey Affleck and Scott Caan), sent to a Mexican factory to make certain that dice for the casino are loaded, wind up organizing a strike by underpaid workers. (Even less likely.) Things move too fast for anyone to care much are about the misfires. Meanwhile, Clooney and Pitt smoothly MC the many-ring circus that is an Ocean's con game. Damon gets to play two roles, Linus and his sexed-up alter ego, Lenny Pepperridge, a handler for a mega-rich Asian real estate mogul, who undertakes the task of seducing Willy's vulnerable assistant. But Pacino is stuck with a wafer-thin role that denies us his usual fire. Philip Messina's design of the fictitious hotel, a jazzy score by David Holmes and Louise Frogley's cool costumes keep everyone and everything perfectly in character. Cast: Danny Ocean: George Clooney Rusty Ryan: Brad Pitt Linus Caldwell: Matt Damon Terry Benedict: Andy Garcia Basher Tarr: Don Cheadle Frank Catton: Bernie Mac Abigail Sponder: Ellen Barkin Willy Bank: Al Pacino Reuben Tishkoff: Elliott Gould Virgil: Casey Affleck Turk: Scott Caan Director/director of photography: Steven Soderbergh; Screenwriters: Brian Koppelman, David Levien; Producer: Jerry Weintraub; Executive producers: Bruce Berman, George Clooney, Susan Ekins, Gregory Jacobs, Frederic W. Brost; Production designer: Philip Messina; Music: David Holmes; Costume designer: Louise Frogley; Editor: Stephen Mirrione. |