Movie Review #32
Out of Sight (1998)
Directed by Steven Soderbergh
Written by Scott Frank
Based on the novel by Elmore Leonard
Rating: 8.00/10.00 or *** 1/2 (out of 4)
Out of Sight can be labeled as a crime drama, a romance, a comedy, a thriller, or a caper. The beauty of this film is that each of these genres mixes so well that the film's purpose is not of one but of all. Soderbergh is able to balance a number of characters and their storylines into a nonchronological sequence of events that makes sense and is crystal clear. Out of Sight is a joy to watch.
The film stars George Clooney as Jack Foley, a man who can get away with anything just by talking but has no purpose in life other than to rob banks. Foley was almost made to rob banks, and nonviolently. Foley never used a gun to illegally take money from bank after bank, and it took hundreds of robberies for investigators to finally catch him. The first scene of the movie shows an angry Foley become calm and somewhat zealous as he walks into a bank and "politely" asks the teller to give him some cash. Soderbergh gives us a glimpse of what is to come in the movie here as he intricately mixes intelligent dialogue with charismatic acting. Clooney relishes his part, as his character Foley asks the teller, "Is this your first robbery?"
Soderbergh does what few directors choose to do with these types of films: He uses the plot to study human behavior rather than using people to keep a storyline going. Each character makes sense, and each scene serves a purpose. Take the several flashbacks presented throughout the movie. At the time, some of them may not make sense, but Soderbergh's intent is not necessarily that of furthering a plot point. His motivation is character development and clarity. I love the flashbacks involving Snoopy Miller (Don Cheadle). Snoopy is a bad dude. He has no issues with murder, bribery, extortion, you name it. Foley meets Snoopy in jail (after the robbery we see at the beginning of the film). The scenes we see do not really further the storyline the film is presenting, but instead the scenes present to us an evil man with a unique personality.
Foley plans a break-out from prison, and his plan is brilliant. However, during the escape, he uses Karen Sisco as a hostage. He and his friend Buddy Bragg (Ving Rhames) kidnap Sisco (Jennifer Lopez), and Foley takes Sisco into the back of the trunk. The resulting scene is masterful as Clooney and Lopez dig into their roles here. Foley and Sisco discuss movies (among other things) in a scene in which you can see the sparks of attraction in their eyes and their body movements. The scene is a true joy to watch. Throughout the movie, you can see the energy and the attraction the two characters have for each other. Such great performances come from Clooney and Lopez.
Foley's escape works, and the rest of the film focuses on how Sisco tracks him down. Meanwhile, Foley and Bragg are off to Detroit to find five million dollars worth of uncut diamonds in the home of Richard Ripley (Albert Brooks), a Wall Street businessman who idiotically decides to spill the beans to Foley (and others) while in prison. The climax of the movie involves Snoopy and his cohorts (including the hilariously clumsy White Boy Bob) invading 'Dick the Ripper' Ripley's home to steal the diamonds. Meanwhile, Buddy and Jack follow suit and the final showdown is between Foley, Snoopy, and Sisco, who learns quickly of the planned break-ins.
Even though the crime part of the film is well-presented and formulated, the romantic feelings between Sisco and Foley are the most interesting part of the film. Take the sequence in which Foley and Sisco "meet" in a bar and discuss their attraction for each other. The dialogue does not match what we are seeing, further emphasized by brief but frequent freeze frames added in from Soderbergh. The effect here is somewhat surreal. The scenes never match the dialogue, but it always makes sense. The freeze frames add a great deal by prolonging the moments, making them more pronounced. And the dialogue is so fresh that more attention is paid to what we are hearing and not what we are seeing.
I wish Soderbergh would not be excessive with his style, though. The freeze frames work in that scene, but they work nowhere else. All they do is attract more attention to scenes than what they truly deserve. Take the sequence in which Sisco is interviewing a bad-boy youth. The man threatens Sisco with words, and Sisco decides to take action in an almost "superhero" like fashion. The scene ends with a freeze frame of her sly smile while the man is shown in great pain. The freeze frame just makes the scene look silly and pretentious. There are other scenarios like this one that detract from the movie.
Nonetheless, this is small potatoes when compared to the rest of the film. The acting, the colorful characters, the energy, and the storyline are all an immense amount of entertainment. With solid acting from Clooney, Lopez, Rhames, Brooks, Cheadle, Dennis Farina (as Sisco's father), and Steve Zahn (as the comedic Glenn Michaels), top-notch writing from Leonard and Frank, and a director's knowing touch from Soderbergh, this is one of the more entertaining movies I have ever seen. Personally not a great fan of Soderbergh's, I have to give him credit for this one, a most entertaining and enjoyable yarn.