Review: Ocean’s Thirteen

Thirteen is a relatively-cerebral affair which offers an absorbing alternative to the summer blockbusters of the over-stimulating, special effects-driven variety.

Film Review

 
Upping the ante in terms of intrigue while toning it down in terms of
action, Ocean’s Thirteen is a relatively-cerebral affair which offers
an absorbing alternative to the summer blockbusters of the
over-stimulating, special effects-driven variety.

All the boys are back in this cast crowded with male matinee idols,
starting with George Clooney as ringleader Danny Ocean, and including
Brad Pitt, Matt Damon, Bernie Mac, Don Cheadle,
Carl Reiner, Casey Affleck, Elliott Gould, Shaobo Qin, Scott Caan and
Eddie Jemison. Meanwhile, Catherine Zeta-Jones and Julia Roberts have
opted out of this installment in favor of Ellen Barkin who’s flying
solo, here, as the fetching femme fatale.

The film also introduces a new villain in Al Pacino as Willy Bank, a
particularly ruthless mobster who has just bilked Reuben (Gould) of the
millions he was set to retire on. The rest of the rat pack prove that
there is still honor among thieves when they decide to reunite for the
sake of their apoplectic mentor currently confined to bed in critical
condition due to the stress of the double-crossing.

With Bank about to launch a new casino on the strip in Las Vegas, the
gang agrees to bankrupt him by rigging the games so that the house will
lose $500 million on opening night. Furthermore, since they are aware
of the cocky kingpin’s fondness for diamonds, they conspire to relieve
him of a quarter billion in precious stones hidden away in a
presumably-impregnable, penthouse vault. In it more for revenge for the
money, they even hope to embarrass Bank for good measure by having the
hotel receive low grades from the fussy inspector (David Paymer)
assigned to rate the quality of its services.

After brief prefatory sequences show the team’s reunion and
establishing the above premise, masterminds Danny and Rusty (Pitt)
discover that to succeed they must map out a strategy to defeat a
state-of-the-art surveillance system capable of reasoning like a human
being.

As the details of the scheme are finalized, they realize that their
elaborate plan is going to be much more expensive than anticipated,
since it involves everything from simulating an earthquake to
infiltrating a Mexican dice factory.

Therefore, they grudgingly make strange bedfellows with former
adversary Terry Benedict (Andy Garcia), offering the cutthroat crime
boss a share of the profits in return for a sizable investment. He
agrees, and at this juncture the story divides into numerous parallel
plots as each participant gets his assignment and prepares for D-Day in
his own inimitable fashion.

Ladies’ Man Linus (Matt Damon) wines and dines Abigail (Barkin),
Willy’s conniving confidante. Siblings Virgil (Affleck) and Turk (Caan)
go undercover to sow seeds of discontent among employees on an assembly
line in Mexico. Saul (Reiner) masquerades as a high roller from London,
while Basher (Cheadle) the Brit is put in charge of creating the
artificial earthquake.

Each of the rest infiltrates the casino somehow as either an employee
or guest, before patiently awaiting to drain the place of every penny
at the appointed hour.

The appeal of Ocean’s Thirteen rests not in the execution of the
patently preposterous crime caper, but in the easygoing badinage among
the members of the ensemble. For though there are few surprises as the
pat plot marches inexorably to its predictable finale, there’s
something nice about being in on the joke at probably improvised
moments such as when a clowning Clooney breaks from the script to
suggest to Pitt that he ought to settle down and have a couple of kids.

A downright comfortable diversion in male-bonding that doesn’t ask
anything of you except to sit back, relax and eat some popcorn.
 

Very good (3 stars) Rated PG-13 for brief sensuality.
Running time: 122 minutes Studio: Warner Brothers





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