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For a couple of weeks in early 1960, Frank Sinatra, Dean Martin, and
the rest of the Rat Pack moonlighted in Las Vegas, working the stage of the Sands Hotel at
night and by day shooting a little caper picture called Oceans Eleven. The Lewis Milestone movie was
transparently a vehicle for Sinatra and his buddies to trade on their bad-boy image, and
everyone whos seen it has been prompted to say the same thing: It looks like
theyre having a party. Now Steven Soderbergh has remade Oceans Eleven and studded it with the crowned
heads from a new generation of entertainers. George Clooney, Brad Pitt, and Julia Roberts
will never be compared to their forebears except in terms of their megawatt fame, yet the
new Oceans Eleven looks amazingly like
the old one. While it offers the chance to gaze on several of our brightest stars gathered
into one constellation, its not much of a movie, and thanks to a Ted Griffin script
thats a compendium of heist-movie cliches, its not even much of a party.
Danny Ocean
is an upscale version of Jack Foley, the disarmingly relaxed bank robber that Clooney
played in Soderberghs Out of Sight. After getting
paroled from prison, Dannys feet have barely touched the pavement before hes
plotting the mother of all heists: the simultaneous takedown of three Las Vegas casinos.
With his versatile back-up man Dusty Ryan (Pitt), Danny recruits an eleven-man crew of
criminal underachievers, including a demolitions wizard (Don Cheadle, working with a
British accent and a dreamy look in his eye), a card-dealer with a shady past (Bernie
Mac), an artful pickpocket (Matt Damon), and an aging con-man (Carl Reiner). (Oceans Eleven greatest surprise comes when
one realizes that the gangs potbellied gay Jewish money man is none other than
Elliot Gould, looking like a shellfish under all his gold chains, and primed to give a
great performance the movie never lets him deliver.) The heist is set to coincide with a
high-stakes prizefight, leaving the gang two weeks to put the finishing touches on their
scheme, but in that time it turns out that Danny has more on his mind than mere money.
Tess (Roberts), the wife who left him when he got busted, is now keeping time with Terry
Benedict (Andy Garcia), the fabulously rich smoothie who just happens to own the three
casinos, and when Danny starts making it a point to run into Tess in the casino bars, the
entire job is put at risk.
Benedict is a pompous little snot all right, but its hard to
fathom why the movie wants us to root against him so badly, or why its providing a
villain at all. In the old days crooks were crooks, and we understood that a $150 million
score was all the motivation they needed. But Oceans
Eleven has to find some reason to squeeze Julia Roberts name into the credits,
so whenever the picture runs low on montages of casino employees hustling through their
routines, were treated to another one of her lukewarm tiffs with Garcias
vacant casino baron or Clooneys shallow felon. Its not exactly Casablanca. In their few
short scenes together, Clooney and Roberts dont generate any of the heat that
Clooney and Jennifer Lopez cooked up in Out of Sight,
largely because Tess is a talking doll whose every line is some variant of You
cant win me back. And not content with turning Julia Roberts into a male
accessory, the movie makes her an ugly one, photographing her from angles that make her
lips look like a hotdog bun thats floating in midair.
Like practically no other director working today, Steven Soderbergh
knows how to give a movie a kinesthetic buzz with his caffeinated camerawork and simmering
music tracks. Oceans Eleven has an
additional lift in its step because its jettisoned everything that might weigh it
down, including any quiet moments in which we might observe the robbers unprodded by any
plot points. The number of casinos has also been pared, from the original films five
to a less challenging three, and even that
figures a cheat: Benedicts three casinos all store their take in a central
vault, so in truth only one location is being
knocked over. The 1960 movie understood that wed want to see how a mere eleven men
could attack so many different targets at once, and it used the individualized decor of
the famous casinosthe Desert Inn and Bugsy Siegels old Flamingo, among
themto keep us oriented. Most of all it had a whiff of sin, which is what a heist
movie set in Las Vegas should have. This
ones set in the new, post-Mob Vegasthe Vacation Playground Vegasand
accordingly features neutered, audience-friendly criminals and a smoke-free casino
atmosphere in which the extras step politely out of the way whenever a star appears. The
one flaw in its silky surface comes when the robbers blow the citys lights, and for
a blissful second all hell breaks loose as the players try to grab everything they can off
the gaming tables.
Not one single aspect of the actual robbery will be remembered forty
years from now the way one recalls those glow-in-the-dark footprints from the Sinatra
flick. The only footprints that Griffin and Soderbergh follow are those of recent
high-tech heist flicks like Mission: Impossible and Die Hard. To crack the vault
Danny Oceans gang has to get past all the usual laser sensors,
fingerprint-recognition systems, and closed-circuit TV cameras, and they do it in all the
usual ways, all the while fooling the casinos security staff with tricks that a dog
wouldnt fall for. Griffin came up with one great inventiona Chinese Cirque du
Soleil-type acrobat who has to make a catlike leap across the vaults
interiorbut fails to give him the great scene the character deserves, settling
instead for a ramshackle bit of business involving a bandage on the acrobats hand.
Perhaps trying to remedy all this, Griffin has grafted some late double-switches onto the
movies endgame, but these only mess up the heists emotional flow, so that we
never get that zing of satisfaction from seeing all the parts of the plan emerge into
sudden clarity. Were even denied anything like the morbid twist ending that nearly
redeemed the unredeemable original film.
At best, Soderbergh is wasting his talent on Oceans Eleven; at worst, hes
deliberately dumbing himself down for it. Whatever the case, theres practically
nothing in this movies direction that couldnt have come from Jerry Bruckheimer
and his stable of facile technicians. Its depressing to see the man who helped spark
the indie revolution now making pictures that bow and scrape before the most depleted
Hollywood conventions. And Soderbergh seems shellshocked by his ability to attract
premiere movie stars: he uses their presence as a substitute for heart, and winds up
striving for emotional responses that Oceans
Eleven doesnt come close to earning. Late in the film his camera pans down a row
of carefully positioned crooks, and as Debussy soars on the soundtrack their faces display
a depth of feeling that hasnt been visible anywhere else in the movie. Does
Soderbergh think this Mount Rushmore will move us just because its faces include so many
famous ones?
The sight of those faces may be enough to make moviegoers salivate, but
drooling is a Pavlovian response when the actors have to only show up. Oceans Eleven works on the cheapest side of
our relationship with movie stars, the mindlessly adoring side that makes us go gaga
thinking about the rich, the beautiful, and the famous. We arent like the crowds of
the Great Depression, whom the studios sheltered from the foibles of their idols; though
actors can still act as our healers, we know too much about them now to look on them as
deities. Yet Soderbergh throws his Clooney-Apollo and Roberts-Aphrodite up there on the
screen as if their giant faces alone should keep us from noticing that these gods are fast
asleep. The scary thing is that hes probably onto something. Throwing stardust in an
audiences eyes is always a safe bet, even in Las Vegas.
- Tom Block