| No Beauty in This Beast | ||||||||||||||||
| Ben
Kingsley in "Sexy Beast" by Beck Finley |
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These days, British gangsters are all the rage in movies. In Sexy Beast, however, they ruin the show. In what can only be referred to as schizophrenic, Sexy Beast contains two conflicting plotlines. The movie degenerates from an interesting conflict of wills between two despicable, yet likable characters, played by Winstone and Kingsley, into a cliched bank heist movie. In addition, it has neither the humor and flash of a Guy Ritchie vehicle, nor the witty dialogue and sexy violence of a Tarrantino flick. Add to that strange sequences involving a rabbit man, and you have one mixed-up movie. In the brilliant
opening sequence, Gary "Gal" Dove, in mango-colored Speedos,
happily suns himself poolside in the calm Spanish countryside. His running
commentary is as enjoyable as watching the boulder, which narrowly misses
him, crash down the hill and land in his pool. The boulder marks the most
dangerous event in Gal's life, which now consists of suntan lotion and
eating calimari with wife DeeDee (Amanda Redman) and best friends Aitch
(Cavan Kendall) and Jackie (Julianne White), since his retirement from
a life of crime. That is, until Don Logan (Kingsley) pays him a visit.
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Directed by movie newcomer Jonathan Glazer, Sexy Beast is at its best when Kingsley is on the screen. The scenes between Walstone and Kingsley are fast, smart and fraught with danger and suspense. Gone-soft Gal refuses to accept Logan's job offer. Logan refuses to accept Gal's refusal. And round and round it goes, with Logan working himself into a fury over the situation and the unresolved feelings he has for the lovely friend Jackie. Of course, these scenes culminate in violence and Logan comes to a bad end at the hands of the two couples, but what happens after that is a mystery. For some reason, the film finds Gal in London amidst Teddy Bass's gang, robbing a safety deposit vault. Exactly what Gal's specialty in the robbery is and his motives for going to London remain unclear. If he's trying to hide his guilt in the disappearance of Logan, why does he lie so badly? At any rate, the underwater robbery scene is fairly slick and. aside from the ultra-violent flashback scenes, reminds me of the Discovery Channel's televised sunken-treasure expeditions. After that, the movie really goes downhill, with an unnecessary murder and Teddy Bass's ironic confession about how little he cared for Don Logan - which is ironic because Logan is the only character in the entire movie worth caring about.
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