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Ocean's
Eleven Movie Review:
Based on the
Rat Packs 1960 film of the same name, director Steven
Soderbergh and screenwriter Ted Griffin modernize the heist,
bringing along with them a star studded cast. Although the
film will not be considered Soderberghs crowning achievement,
in a year full of lifeless popcorn junk, Oceans
Eleven is the perfect example of what a popcorn movie
should be a-sit-down-dont-think-and-just-enjoy
kind of movie.
Daniel Ocean (George Clooney), freshly granted a parole
after years of imprisonment for embezzling, decides to pull
another heist on the same day he gets out. Setting his suave
eyes on Las Vegas, Ocean wants to score from three of the
most profitable casinos on The Strip: The Bellagio, MGM
Grand and The Mirage. All owned by Terry Benedict (Andy
Garcia), the casinos can hold up to anywhere from $80 million
to $160 million on site. While the money alone is a very
good incentive to do the job, Ocean has a more personal
reason as his estranged wife Tess (Julia Roberts) has left
him for Benedict.
With the casinos state of the art safe, security guards
with uzis, ubiquitous laser motion sensors, tons of
cameras, fingerprint identifications and security codes
that change more times than my luck playing slots, Ocean
needs a talented group to even have a chance of pulling
such a caper. From a slick pick-pocketer (Matt Damon) to
a sensitive blackjack dealer (Bernie Mac), from a rich kids
poker instructor (Brad Pitt) to a limber Chinese acrobat
(Shaobo Qin), Ocean gets his guys.
For those expecting OE to be as dramatic as Traffic
or as intricately detailed as The Score, they
will be terribly disappointed. With his Oscar win for Best
Director earlier this year, it seems like Soderbergh is
taking a little break with this one. Not as cinematically
significant as any of his earlier works in terms of being
groundbreaking, OE is nothing more than a solidly gratifying
movie.
The actual heist falls in place a bit too perfectly and
conveniently to be plausible though. Change of costumes
left in elevators and sneaking in through the back with
a food cart seems just a tad bit improbable not to be noticed
by security, especially in Las Vegas where the whole city
is basically under close surveillance. However, OE is not
so much about how believable it can be, as so much how fun
it can be watching it all unfold. With its suave banters,
colorful cast with lots of personality, and bumps along
the way that will keep you guessing, OE will keep you smiling
from start to finish.
Then there is the subplot of the romantic quibbles between
Ocean and Tess. Although not the main focus of the film,
the screenplay masterfully incorporates it into the heist
and works quite well.
With Soderbergh behind the camera, Griffins slick
screenplay and a cast that is out of sight (go
ahead and roll your eyes), OE is one movie you should check
out.
3/5
Review by Mazzyboi
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Ocean's Eleven
Info:
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Ocean's
Eleven Directed By:
Steven
Soderbergh
Ocean's Eleven Written By:
Stephen
W. Carpenter, Scott Frank and Ted Griffin
Ocean's Eleven Cast:
George
Clooney, Julia Roberts, Brad Pitt, Matt Damon, Don
Cheadle, Casey Affleck, Scott Caan, Ralph Fiennes,
Bill Murray, Carl Reiner, Andy Garcia.
Buy
Ocean's Eleven on DVD U.S.
Buy
Ocean's Eleven on Region 2 DVD at Blackstar (UK)!
Buy
an Ocean's Eleven Movie Poster!
Reviewed
by:
Mazzyboi
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