SNATCH (director/writer: Guy Ritchie; cinematographer: Tim Maurice-Jones; editor: Jon Harris; cast: Benicio Del Toro (Franky Four Fingers), Dennis Farina (Avi), Jason Flemyng (Darren),Vinnie Jones (Bullet Tooth Tony), Brad Pitt (Mickey O'Neil), Rade Sherbedgia (Boris the Blade), Jason Statham (Turkish), Stephen Graham (Tommy), Alan Ford (Brick Top), Ade (Tyrone), Lennie James (Sol), Robbie Gee (Vinny), Adam Fogerty (Gorgeous George), Mike Reid (Doug the Head), Sorcha Cusack (Mrs. O'Neil-Mickey's mother), Andy Beckwith (Errol); Runtime: 105; Screen Gems; 2000-UK/USA)
Reviewed by Dennis Schwartz
Guy Ritchie has cleaned up some of the mess he made in this encore to his surprise box-office cult hit "Lock, Stock and Two Smoking Barrels," but has made the same kind of empty, semiserious/comedy/crime caper, with many of the same actors from that film. But, this time the story holds together better and is much more amusing, thanks in a large part to the ensemble cast who come and go in the film with seamless fluidity.
It's a film filled with an assortment of colorful Runyonesque characters from the underworld of crime, or illegal bare-knuckle boxing matches, or from the outcasts of society. They are shady Jews speaking in broken Yiddish, who are diamond thieves; black con artists running petty scams; members of a gypsy caravan who engage in various hustles; and Brits with heavy cockney accents who are either thugs or wannabe thugs. Everyone is after some easy money. This film, like the director's other one, has no strong role for a woman.
The main plot is about a series of mishaps over a stolen diamond that somehow brings together a varied mix of characters who are after it or are inadvertently drawn into its disappearance, but the plot is really irrelevant, it plays as a McGuffin--this is strictly a character driven film, with all the characters being either lively in a cartoonish way, undeveloped, or forgettable.
Thieves posing as Hasidics, heist a valuable, flawless 84-carat stone diamond from an Antwerp jeweler and split-up after the job, leaving the diamond with the exquisitely well-tailored Jewish gangster Franky Four Fingers (Benicio Del Toro). He places the diamond in a briefcase handcuffed to his wrist and calls his diamond dealer relative Avi (Farina) in New York, telling him he has landed in London and has spoken to Doug the Head (Reid), who is a wannabe Jew and a fence for jewels.
The double-cross begins when one of the thieves, before they split, tells Franky to see the Russian, Boris the Blade (Sherbedgia), while in London, and he will get him a gun. The thief then calls his relative Boris and tells him to rob the diamond from Franky.
Boris gives the gun for free to Franky, but asks a favor of him, to place a bet with a bookie on a boxing match. He then arranges for black pawnshop owner Sol (Lennie James) to rob the bookie and get the briefcase to him. Sol brings along for the job two inept partners, Vinny (Robbie Gee) and Tyrone (Ade).
The movie will spin-off in different directions, telling each groups' story, until it all comes together in the last reel and plays itself out. The film is narrated by the main protagonist, the somewhat likable Turkish (Jason Statham), who with his clueless pal Tommy (Stephen Graham) own an amusement arcade and are boxing promoters, and are not above being small-time crooks.
Turkish wants a newer caravan instead of the wreck he currently has to be his business office and sends Tommy to buy one, but Tommy gets his fighter beat up in the gypsy camp he went to buy the caravan. To replace their fighter for an upcoming fight, Tommy gets the one who put his boxer out of commmission, the hustler who sold them the broken-down caravan, Mickey (Pitt), an Irish gypsy with an indeciferable brogue, a body filled with tattoos, and a beautiful knock-out punch. He is told to take a dive in a bare-knuckles boxing match arranged by Brick Top (Alan Ford), a notorious gang leader. If he doesn't take the dive, they're all in trouble with the sadistic Brick Top.
Avi, when he finds out from Doug that Franky is going to a boxing match and can't be located, flies over to London and hires Bullet Tooth Tony (former soccer star Vinnie Jones) to find Franky. Since Franky is a compulsive gambler and earned his nickname because he lost a finger over his bad luck in gambling, Avi fears he will lose the diamond to bookies.
The film is played mostly for the comedy and it throws everything it thinks is crazy into the comic mix, even a shaggy dog story. The language used has many expletives and is often hard to understand because of the heavy accents. The violence is brutal but cartoonish, as the film is styled much like a comic book. Guy Ritchie's wife Madonna sings "Lucky Star." The rest of this heavily induced homage to musical video films, has a soundtrack that ranges from Massive Attack to Oasis.
Ford's menacing psychotic performance, stood out as the film's most memorable one. Pitt's self-effacing comedy was the performance I best enjoyed, as it gave the film a sparkling light touch; while, Dennis Farina, also, was pleasingly comical and added some light touches to this cartoonish film.
The only slow down in the film is in the opening moments, when the large cast of characters is introduced. Other than that, the film moves at high speed, with all kinds of film gimmicks, from jump cuts to multi use of graphics. This is a film that thrives on controlled chaos as its signature theme. I would call it another dumb cult picture the director has made, one that suffers because there is no one in this film to care about.
REVIEWED ON 3/18/2001 GRADE: C+
Dennis Schwartz: "Ozus' World Movie Reviews"
http://www.sover.net/~ozus
ozus@sover.net
© ALL RIGHTS RESERVED DENNIS SCHWARTZ
The review above was posted to the
rec.arts.movies.reviews newsgroup (de.rec.film.kritiken for German reviews).
The Internet Movie Database accepts no responsibility for the contents of the
review and has no editorial control. Unless stated otherwise, the copyright
belongs to the author.
Please direct comments/criticisms of the review to relevant newsgroups.
Broken URLs inthe reviews are the responsibility of the author.
The formatting of the review is likely to differ from the original due
to ASCII to HTML conversion.
Related links: index of all rec.arts.movies.reviews reviews