|
21
Columbia Pictures, 118mins, PG-13

Directed by
Robert Luketic
In his book "Bringing Down the House," Ben Mezrich tells the story
of what might be the most profitable sports team in history. In
real life, a fellow named J.P. Massar recruited mathematical
geniuses from MIT and other schools to go to Los Vegas and other
places with casinos, and count cards in the game of Blackjack, which
is legitimate and legal pretty much anywhere, and thus take the
casinos for literally millions of dollars.
The story is a compelling one, and had already inspired another
movie between the time Kevin Spacey bought the rights to the book
and the film was actually made. \
In telling a story like
this, you have to fictionalize it to some extent, if only to prevent
all those pesky lawsuits, and so, the protagonists,
Ben Campbell(Jim Sturgess) and his mentor Mickey Rosa(Kevin Spacey)
aren't anything like the real people. None of them are.
So Ben is a young genius starting his last year at MIT. His widowed
mother(Helen Carey) is only middle class, and Harvard Medical school
costs a total of three hundred grand to attend and he's only making
enough on his gig at a men's clothing store to pay for some extra
meals and drinks with his nerdy friends Miles(Josh Gad) and Cam(Sam
Golzari). That's when he's recruited for the MIT Blackjack team.
The team works like
this: two beautiful gals(Kate Bosworth and Liza Lapira) and comic
relief Choi (Aaron Yoo) would spot the “hot decks” as they call it
in Card Counting, and bring in heavy hitters Ben and Fisher(Jacob
Pitts) to seal the deal and the six of them would split half the
take, with Coach Rosa taking the other half.
Of course, casino security, leaded by the nefarious Cole Williams
(Laurence Fishburne) are doing their best to find out how to catch
these people who are taking all that money.
The result is a combination of “The Paper Chase”, “Animal House” and
“Goodfellas.” The acting is well above par, considering director
Robert Luketic's track record, Sturgess manages to lost his British
accent completely. Peter Steinfeld and Allan Loeb's screenplay
manages to get the hackneyed “crime doesn't pay” theme stuck in
without it being too obvious. This is actually a rather fun film and
worth a look.
|