Director: Ben
Younger | Starring:
Giovanni Ribisi, Vin Diesel, Nia Long, Nicky
Katt
Released: 2000
| Runtime: 119m
| Rating (out of 5):
*** |
|
Aside from the fact
this movie is essentially a 2000 remake of Wall Street, it
proves to be entertaining and updated for these wacky times in which
we live. Now that I've gotten that out of the way, let me just say
that for a first time writer/director, Ben Younger has got something
here. You can tell Mr. Younger spent a good deal of time at Blockbuster
renting some of the power movies from the 80's. He actually pays homage
to Wall Street in the film (although that doesn't really
excuse the amazing similarities) and even tips his hat to Glengarry
Glen Ross (which, I assume he knows was a play before it was
a movie). The movie also has elements of Goodfellas, The
Firm and In the Name of the Father. Younger tried to
infuse his high-finance thriller with a little human character with
a couple subplots -- one of which worked and another that didn't.
The first subplot is the romance between Seth Davis (Giovanni Ribisi
playing a Jew!) and Abbie Halpert (Nia Long playing a high paid secretary).
We learn early on that she used to date one of the main guys at the
firm (Nicky Katt -- a little more convincing as a Jew) and now has
the hots for the new guy, Ribisi. First off, she's way older than
he is, and they look really silly together. Second, where did this
all come from? Suddenly they're together and nobody understands why
-- it's just a lame plot devise to cause more tension between Ribisi
and Katt's character, Weinstein. The second subplot is the reason
why Ribisi takes this job with this unscrupulous firm to begin with:
his disapproving father who just wants him to straighten up, fly right
and get a reputable job. OK, the relationship between the two is way
over the top, with the father (who is a judge) chastising Seth in
every scene, telling him that he will never speak to him again. Somehow
it worked for me, illustrating the undue pressure that is put upon
children of successful parents to be successes themselves. Where as
men of our parent's generation had to work hard and scrape for everything
they earned, our generation grew up as beneficiaries of their hard-earned
success, becoming soft and lazy (slackers). Seth has a business that
he built himself and he was proud of -- an illegal casino that he
ran out of his apartment in Queens. Yet even with his industriousness,
fortitude and earnings, he was not a success. In order to reconcile
his feelings of failing his father and proving himself worthy, he
takes the quick buck and joins the less than above board investment
firm. Shot to a great hip-hop soundtrack (which apparently isn't for
sale anywhere), Ribisi fights with his demons, trying to justify his
involvement with these people, trying to appease his father and trying
to do the right thing all at the same time. There's much more to the
movie and its social commentary about wealth and how we spend it,
earn it and lose it, but I'm running out of room. Oh, Scott Caan,
James' son, is great as a high-haired Long Island kid who thinks he's
Joe Pesci/Vanilla Ice. [movie theater]
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