Confidence
review by
Cynthia Fuchs, 25 April 2003
Caught in the
Henhouse
"So, I'm dead." Jake (Edward Burns) introduces
himself as the camera looks down on his body, lying in the street,
crumpled and bloodied. "I think," he adds, "it's because of this
redhead." And you think, okay, I'm in.
You might think
this because James Foley's Confidence opens with a bit of an
homage to Sunset Boulevard's famous dead-guy-in-a-pool
opening. Or because Burns has a part sweet, part gravely voice, good
for selling a noirish premise as well as Fidelity Investments. Or
maybe because the movie begins with this sort of dare, a jaunty
smartness that will be hard to maintain. And with that, it cuts back
to "three weeks earlier," so Jake can explain how he came to be
dead.
The action
begins with Jake and his boys -- Gordo (Paul Giamatti), Miles (Brian
Van Holt), and Big Al (Louis Lombardi) -- on a job. They've got
crack timing, can read each other's slightest signals. At this
particular point, they're in a bar, conning some poor office-worker
weasel out of his money, which turns out not to be his money,
exactly. The upshot is, when the job looks most successful, Jake's
crew is in serious trouble. Now they owe $150,000 to a too-tanned,
unforgiving, and ADS-afflicted Mr. Big, Winston King (Dustin
Hoffman). The threat he poses is summed up in customary fashion:
Jake must meet him at his downtown club, all abstract edges and
neony lighting, where King is auditioning strippers: Dustin Hoffman,
big pimping.
Cocky, Jake
plays the hand he's dealt: he assures King that he'll sting someone
else of his choosing, who turns out to be a guy named Morgan Price
(Robert Forster, who, sadly, only appears for a few minutes). If
King puts up the front money, Jakes promises a $5 million return
(figuring he'll make be able to keep the money he's already
swindled, and either pay back or get over on King). Cockier, King
agrees to let Jake play, but only if he takes in his guy, the
apparently standard-issue henchman, Lupus (Franky G). Though Jake
protests ("I work with my guys"), the terms are set before he
even begins to negotiate. So now, the conning starts in earnest.
Though Jake's
guys are not especially happy with the situation (feeling content
with their relatively safe smalltime status), he spins an elaborate
scheme, which includes the participation of that redhead he
mentioned, Lily (Rachel Weisz), though she isn't actually a redhead
yet. They meet cute when she picks his pocket; Jake admires her
nerve, if not exactly her skill, and he makes an offer, Walter Neff-ishly:
"I'm talking about a grift, and it pays well." Though the guys
aren't completely comfortable with bringing in a new partner for
this, their biggest job ever, they go along because there has to be
a girl in a noirish con movie, to jumpstart heterosexual intrigue,
destabilizing and enhancing generic homosocial tensions.
Just so, Lily
throws a couple of seeming wrenches in the guys' posturing. Most
ostentatiously, she decides to dye her hair red, which sends Jake
into a tizzy over bad luck and his personal past. The guys moan and
groan about this omen, but the hair stays red, because Jake's
already brought it up in his framing voiceover. Lily also introduces
distrust among the crewmembers (crucial in a con movie). She and
Jake share a lustful evening, which either is or isn't a sign of
genuine affection. In turn, Gordo and Miles either see this as a
sign of Jake's debilitating distractedness or womanizing business as
usual. How you read these responses ambiguous depends on whether or
not you've figured out who's scamming whom.
This figuring
is, in turn, either easy or tricky, depending on how much attention
you're paying, or maybe, how many con movies you've seen. Jake's
plan is suitably complicated, involving bank embezzling, wire
transfers to Belize, a couple of cops on Jake's payroll, Whitworth (Donal
Logue) and Manzano (Luis Guzmán). And, by the way, he's not in it
for the money, he asserts, but for the "f*cking principle." The
commotion attracts the attention of a dogged fed, Gunther Butan
(Andy Garcia), who's been tracking Jake and company for years.
This plot point
allows for lively crosscutting between marks and surveillance
positions -- binoculars, cameras, listening devices -- which Foley,
editor Stuart Levy, and cinematographer Juan Ruiz-Anchia use toward
achieving an appropriately slick surface. Among the more striking
instances is a scene in which the crew meets at a sidewalk café. The
camera shoots them from across the street, traffic passing before a
series of increasingly intense close-ups. It matters less what they
say than what you're looking at: style filling in for scanty plot.
Other stylistic
flourishes are somewhat less efficient. Doug Jung's script is
structured as a series of flashbacks, embedded within the broad
flashback that begins with "So, I'm dead." Jake's storytelling is
occasioned by the fact that he's being held at gunpoint by Morgan
Price's guy, the smooth-suited Travis (Morris Chestnut). This
suggests that things don't go completely as planned during the scam,
but then again, maybe they do, since Jake is telling the story.
Movements between past to present (however you understand these
relative concepts here) use wipes and overhead pans, suggesting an
eye-of-god overview of events, in which motives and backstories are
withheld in order to sustain a kind of suspense.
But suspense is
always a function of style in a con movie: the plot can twist a bit,
but it follows a formula. As dedicated con-catcher Butan observes,
"A fox is not a fox until he's caught in the henhouse." And once
he's caught -- say, in frame one of such a movie, his destiny is
clear. The route toward this end can be sophisticated or snappy,
obvious or tortuous, but the end isn't in question. What may be
worth asking is what functions are served by such tidy little
puzzles, as they reflect a liking for nominal outlaws and
system-buckers, even as they reinforce a basic faith in systems.
|
Directed
by:
James Foley
Starring:
Ed Burns
Rachel Weisz
Andy Garcia
Dustin Hoffman
Paul Giamatti
Donal Logue
Luis Guzman
Brian Van Holt
Franky G
Morris Chestnut
Written
by:
Doug Jung
Rated:
R - Restricted.
Under 17 requires
parent or adult
guardian.
FULL CREDITS
BUY
VIDEO
RENT
DVD
BUY
MOVIE POSTER |
|