Director: Christopher
Nolan | Starring:
Hugh Jackman, Christian Bale, Michael Caine,
Scarlett Johansson
Released: 2006
| Runtime: 130m
| Rating (out of 5):
***½ |
|
I knew next to nothing
about this movie before I rented it. I couldn't even remember if it
was the one with Ed Norton or Batman. I had a vague recollection somewhere
in my head that Christopher Nolan, the director of Memento
and Batman
Begins, helmed the picture. I seem to recall that being the main
draw when I saw the previews a couple years back. I also knew it was
about magic and that at one point someone stood in a big field surrounded
by giant light bulbs that looked to be plugged into the ground. Turns
out my memory held up in both cases. It also turned out to be more
than a movie just about magic. It was a narrative about obsession
and dedication and the lengths to which human beings will go to perfect
their craft. It's the tale of two magicians in oldy-time London who
start off as shills for a third, until one accidentally kills their
beautiful assistant--who happens to be one of their wives (Hugh Jackman).
Thus begins a bitter rivalry filled with one upmanship that destroys
all their other human relationships. Proving, of course, that the
person that they are closest to is the person they despise the most.
Part of the story is told in a cool way, as the characters read each
other's diaries, getting only the info the other has put in there
for them to see in flashbacks. Bale spends the majority of the film
in the present time in prison, arrested for the apparent murder of
Jackman's character. The plot twists and turns as the mystery builds.
At one point a semi-fictionalized Tesla
shows up in the film (played stoically by David Bowie)--and forms
the perfect triumvirate of self-destructive obsession with his magician
friends. Reading about Tesla afterwards proved this personality and
professional connection even further. All of the acting is top notch
(except for Johansson, who is kinda okay as Bales' assistant/lover
and Bowie, who still can't act), and the set and costume design never
disappoints. There are a few lulls in the film, but it was honestly
interesting enough that I would have dealt with another half hour
to fill in some of the storylines that seemed to happen too fast.
Granted, the film was already too long, but being transported to the
world of Christopher Nolan's mind is never a bad thing. [DVD]
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