Ditka wins ‘Screaming’ match
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The game of soccer has become a serious part of mainstream American
childhood. The packed theater I saw, full of 10-year-old kids eagerly
watching “Kicking and Screaming,” demonstrates the hunger for a
family-friendly soccer flick.
The kids were rewarded with several chuckles and a dozen good
belly laughs that peppered this otherwise forgettable rehash of the
“Bad News Bears.” The soccer dads and moms attending the show will
not feel as satisfied as their children.
Robert Duvall and Will Ferrell are cardboard cutouts as the father
and son rivals coaching opposing teams. Duvall is the hard-charging
taskmaster who drives his boys to excel. Ferrell’s caffeinated
character teaches all the wrong things to his youngsters, who play on
the worst team in the league. They have no discipline, no work ethic
and no game plan.
Ferrell’s winning solution includes cheating, intimidation and
humiliation. He uses Italian ringers, who play at a professional
level, to embarrass his opponents. Though definitely funny at times,
it’s not the kind of sportsmanship most parents would want to impart
to their kids. Farrell’s last-minute speech regretting his unsavory
actions is hardly compensation for the selfish and thoughtless advice
he imparts to his players through most of the movie.
It’s Mike Ditka, playing himself, who steals the show. The retired
Chicago Bears coach is Duvall’s neighbor and adversary in their lawn
wars. The cantankerous Ditka joins forces with Ferrell and helps the
team find integrity and balance, in spite of Ferrell’s over-the-top
persona.
He is the saving grace in this amusing but crass commercial
enterprise that recycles every cliche of the genre.
* JOHN DEPKO is a Costa Mesa resident and a senior investigator
for the Orange County public defender’s office.
‘Layer Cake’ a tasty treat
“Layer Cake” is a smart, stylish crime thriller that features a
plot too good to fully reveal here. This latest, and certainly one of
the best, in British neo-noir gangster dramas is adapted by J.J.
Connolly from his own novel and directed by Matthew Vaughn, who
produced “Snatch” and “Lock, Stock and Two Smoking Barrels.”
It also features a memorable leading man, Daniel Craig, who has
been rumored to be the next James Bond. Blessed with a taut, sculpted
face and piercing blue eyes, Craig is probably most familiar in the
United States as Paul Newman’s son in “Road To Perdition.” His
deadpan delivery lends itself equally to menace, black humor and
seduction.
As the narrator and unnamed central character XXXX, Craig smugly
introduces himself to us as “a businessman whose commodity happens to
be cocaine.” He prides himself on taking care of his customers, crew
and boss honestly and efficiently, and he is planning an early
retirement. He’s got it all figured out, all under control.
However, his plans are seriously sidetracked when big boss Jimmy
Price (Kenneth Cranham) asks him to find the daughter of equally
scary crime lord Eddie Temple (Michael Gambon).
XXXX, like all good film noir characters, finds himself more and
more trapped in a situation he did not create or want. This involves
a huge stash of Ecstasy, Serbian gangsters, numerous two-bit thugs
and, of course, a cool blond (Sienna Miller) who may prove to be his
undoing.
The acting is first rate. Stylish henchmen Gene (Colm Meaney) and
Morty (George Harris) can be your best buddies one moment and
shockingly violent the next.
There are enough characters, twists and double-crosses upon
double-crosses in this story to make your head spin. But if you stay
with it, “Layer Cake” will leave you very satisfied, indeed.
* SUSANNE PEREZ lives in Costa Mesa and is an executive assistant
for a financial services company.
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