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Allen MacDonald
David Mamet’s “Heist” is a long and winding road of plot twists that
unfold at a dizzying rate. If you happen to blink, you risk missing
crucial information that will pay off in the movie’s final act. Not a
single word is wasted, every gesture is a clue building toward a
suspenseful conclusion. This film demands your full attention. Otherwise,
you’ll find yourself lost in a jungle of confusion, all alone without
water.
Gene Hackman plays Joe, an aging thief who is at the top of his game.
Typical of this genre, Joe is looking for one last score that’ll allow
him to retire in peace with his sexy, younger lover Fran and his beloved
sailboat (not necessarily in that order).
Mamet knows the heist film cliches, but chooses to embrace them,
turning each on its head. This is why “Heist” opens with Joe successfully
pulling off that final score with the help of his loyal crew, which
includes Fran, Bobby (Delroy Lindo) and Pinky (Ricky Jay). These guys are
as cool as cucumbers. Unfortunately, their employer Bergman (Danny
DeVito) plays the blackmail card, holding their hard-earned pay hostage
to secure their participation in a larger job: stealing Swiss gold off a
jet. Not surprisingly, danger and betrayal lurk around every corner. Let
the cat and mouse games begin.
Mamet delivers a solid caper thriller chalk full of his signature
dialogue: sharp, brutal and delivered with rapid-fire cadences. When his
characters speak, the rhythm of their delivery becomes as crucial as the
information it conveys. Joe and his crew jump off the screen full of
dimension and color. Even if you don’t approve of how they make a living,
you’ll marvel at the skill with which they pull it off.
Hackman will seduce you into admiring any character he plays, and this
remains true of his work here. His performance holds together a tightly
coiled story and keeps it from unraveling. What’s most fascinating about
Joe is his acting talent: in order to manipulate and deceive, he is
forced to give an Oscar worthy performance to whoever he’s dealing with,
even using the perception that he’s too old for the job to his advantage.
Joe can be charming, deceitful, loving and tough -- sometimes he may even
mean it, but Hackman’s layered performance prevents you from ever knowing
for sure.
Joe’s most compelling trait is his ability to trust in a world where
downfall is rooted in human weakness. Trust is a liability. But rather
than harden, Joe relies on a shrewd intuition that prevents him from ever
misplacing that trust. That’s the heart at the center of “Heist.”* ALLEN
MacDONALD, 28, is currently working toward his master’s degree in
screenwriting from the American Film Institute in Los Angeles.
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