‘Spartan’ effort typical first-rate Mamet fare
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JOHN DEPKO
David Mamet has been the writer or director of many successful plays
and films. “The Verdict,” “The Untouchables” and “The Spanish
Prisoner” are examples of his mainstream work for Hollywood. But his
smaller, more intense efforts, like “Glengarry Glen Ross” and the
strange “House of Games,” are where his gritty characters and offbeat
stories really shine. His anti-heroes always seem to inhabit an
elusive netherworld beyond ordinary life that only Mamet knows how to
penetrate.
Val Kilmer plays the deep undercover CIA agent who is the
“Spartan” at the center of this taut tale of intrigue and subterfuge.
The president’s daughter has been kidnapped from her college by
members of a white slavery ring who may not know who their hostage
really is. Agents at the highest levels of government pull Kilmer
into a seemingly straightforward rescue mission to save her. In
typical Mamet fashion, this simple premise for a political thriller
becomes a convoluted spy story within a con game within a double
cross with many more twists and turns to come before the whole truth
is finally revealed.
In the hands of a lesser director, this complex plot could end up
a fantastic and forgettable action adventure flick. But Mamet creates
a realistic alternative universe with current political overtones
that render the situations on the screen plausible beyond their bare
facts. William H. Macy, Derek Luke and the other supporting actors
lend credence to the ongoing conspiracy with their sharp-edged
performances. Sinister music, cinematography and myriad unforeseen
events keep the suspense always alive and omnipresent. But it’s the
guiding hand of the writer and director that makes the whole
enterprise work. A cut above the average cloak and dagger thriller,
“Spartan” is Mamet at the top of his game.
* JOHN DEPKO is a Costa Mesa resident and a senior investigator
for the Orange County public defender’s office.
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