‘Cooler’ is coolly offbeat, ‘Monster’ is Oscar material
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JOHN DEPKO
Genre-defying flick is worth watching
“The Cooler” is a strange, offbeat and very grown-up film that
defies categories. There’s a violent crime thriller with strong
mobster themes and “Goodfellas” overtones. There’s a very unlikely
romance between middle-aged losers living on the tawdry fringe of Las
Vegas glitter. There are subplots with genuine humor, intrigue and
enough surprising twists to detour our expectations of what should
happen next.
William H. Macy has the sad-sack face and personality that was
born to play Bernie, the professional loser whose gambling debts got
his kneecap broken with a baseball bat. Alec Baldwin is outstanding
as the old-time gangster Shelly Kaplow. He’s the edgy casino boss who
imposed the painful punishment, but still hires Bernie as a “Cooler”
to use his bad luck energy against customers on winning streaks. All
Bernie has to do is to touch or stand near the winner, and the win
streak comes to an end. The many gambling scenes are true to life for
anyone who’s been in the old casinos before renovation hit Vegas.
Working in this capacity, Bernie meets Natalie, a cocktail
waitress with her own checkered past, struggling to make a living in
the same casino. Their friendship leads to an improbable affair with
sexual escapades that are not glamorous but all too real and even
hilarious at times. But always looming over their relationship is the
tightly wound Shelly, who is in turmoil over the mob’s attempts to
upgrade his aging operation using corporate culture techniques. The
conflicts intensify as newfound love starts to change Bernie’s luck
for the better.
Under director Wayne Kramer, “The Cooler” becomes a poignant,
small gem of a film with a sharp screenplay and great character
studies by the entire cast. It will appeal to those of us who have
been around long enough to know that real life and love can be
complicated, messy, dangerous and a lot of fun all at the same time.
* JOHN DEPKO is a Costa Mesa resident and a senior investigator
for the Orange County public defender’s office.
‘Monster’s’ strength lies in storytelling
Most little girls dream of becoming movie stars, as did Aileen
Wuornos, but life’s hard-knock journey turned her on to the road of
prostitution and killing.
The powerful delivery by Charlize Theron as Wuornos in this
true-life story takes you into the hideous, scary and heartbreaking
world that no one wants their little girl to follow.
In the opening scene, we see Wuornos under a freeway on a rainy
night contemplating suicide with a gun to her head. Due to rape and
abuse from the time she was small, sex was of a most casual nature to
her. She found out that she could make a buck early on when curious
young boys wanted to “see,” but, unfortunately, the world of adult
males became a different vile story.
Flash to a gay bar just steps away from the freeway and in walks
the sopping wet, hitchhiking fleshy prostitute Wuornos meeting imp
Selby Wall (Christina Ricci), who has been sent to Florida to stay
with her Bible-banging relatives since her family caught her kissing
another girl. The hefty Wuornos proclaims, “I ain’t gay” in her gruff
way when Selby tries to befriend her. Not having much use for men
anymore, Wuornos lets the infatuated Selby buy her drinks.
A romantic relationship develops and the two soon are out on their
own. Love-starved Wuornos now vows to give up prostitution and find
“real” work. Not being realistic, Wuornos’ first choice is to be a
veterinarian. With no experience, education or skills, the interviews
turn sour. Selby becomes whiny, wanting “food and to have a party” as
she was promised, so Wuornos has no other choice than to return to
hooking to finance the two of them.
In the late 1980s, the inevitable happens and one of her tricks
brutally turns on her, beating her to a pulp, but she finds his gun.
Bang! The downward spiral begins. She assures herself she is “OK with
God” as she continues to kill her next six tricks even with the last
one “offering to help and shelter her.” With her arrest in 1991, she
was tried and on death row until her execution in 2002.
Theron’s acting was so real. Most do not know she gained more than
35 pounds for the role, undergoing a complete physical transformation
to become the “monster!” She gave us an Academy Award performance
never once leaving character.
For Patty Jenkins, first time writer/director, we look forward to
the Academy voting “Monster” as “Best” in many categories,
considering that two skilled performers took away the tabloid flash
and grabbed the audience by telling an excruciating story of life
where most movies haven’t dared to tread.
* GAY WASSALL-KELLY is the editor of a Balboa newspaper and is
active in the community. BILL KELLY is an industrial engineer.
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