Sexy Beast (2000)

reviewed by
Robin Clifford


"Sexy Beast"

Gary "Gel" Dove (Ray Winstone) lives in quiet complacency on the sunny coast of southern Spain. To all appearances, he is a normal middle-aged guy who opted for early retirement. When friends tell him that he is about to have a visit from Don Logan (Ben Kingsley), fear strikes the hearts of all in "Sexy Beast."

One thing that "Sexy Beast" definitely is, is an enigma. It is, as far as I can tell, a one of a kind, dazzlingly colorful gangster film noir. Music vid and commercial director Jonathan Glazer does make quite a splash (and not just at the film's funny, offbeat rolling stone opening) with a gangster film that is long on talk and brief, even terse, on caper.

Gal has done time for his gangland deeds and is now blissfully retired to a villa on the Costa del Sol with his mutually adoring wife, Deedee (Amanda Redman). Aside from a near miss by a huge, mysteriously rolling stone, life on the sunny Spanish shoreline could not be better. Until he learns that he is about to have a visit by the sinister Don Logan (Ben Kingsley), a blast from his gangster past. Just when Gal had himself convinced that he was out of the crime game for good, Logan arrives to drag him back in, whether he wants to or not. Gal is convinced that if he tells Don to his face, "I'm not gonna do it," all will be well. But, it won't and the violent, unpredictable Logan will not take "no" for an answer.

This scenario, with snippets of the setup for the upcoming London caper mixed in, takes up the first two-thirds of the film, and precedes the heist itself with a violent confrontation with Don. Gal arrives in London, sans Logan, and wholeheartedly does his bit to pull off the grand theft and take attention away from the missing Don. Crime boss and mastermind of the break-in into an ultra secure vault, Teddy Best (Ian McShane), smells a rat in Gal and does not believe his underling's story on the whereabouts of Logan. After the heist and a pointedly insulting payoff to Gal, the ultra-sinister Teddy promises that he might pay a visit to Gal in Spain, just to see how he's doing. Once in, never out.

Ray Winstone does a fine job as the troubled Gal. The retired criminal's particular talent (though this is not made clear in one of the movie's ambiguities) earned him a good enough living, but after being busted and doing time, he lost his taste for crime, seeking the solitude of Spain to spend his days with Deedee. Ray doesn't have the gonads to stand up to Don and weakens under his violent colleague's constant badgering. Winstone ably displays Gal's tumble into insecurity and fear.

Ben Kingsley earns point as a violent, uncontrollable monster, but his character is one-note sinister and doesn't rise above his symbol of Ray's past evils. More effective in being a full-fledged bad guy is Ian McShane. His Teddy Best conveys a violent, unbridled power capable of snuffing out life in the blink of the eye. In a much smaller role than Kingsley's, he develops into a three-D person, though one you would not want to cross. Amanda Redman's Deedee puts depth into Deedee, making her the obviously strong member of the couple. The rest of the supporting cast is capable, but are mainly there to flesh things out. James Fox appears, in little more than a cameo, as Teddy's ex, in more ways than one.

There is a bigger film here and it's unfortunate that the makers saw to keep it short and sweet. While "Sexy Beast" is fun in its psychedelic noir, there should have been more to it. I never thought I would willingly say that a film should be longer than it is, but that is what is needed here. The caper sequence is handled so quickly and stylishly, with an underwater break-in as the linchpin, I wanted to see more, particularly of Teddy Best. There could have been a great ruthless bad guy performance if McShane had more screen time.

The techs, from camera, by Ivan Bird, to sets and locales and costumes, are of a mind with the color-saturated eye of helmer Glazer. Frequent surreal scenes, with Gal's nightmares prominent, also lend to the noir nature of this modern gangster parable. At first, I compared "Sexy Beast" to the classic Brit gangster flick, "The Long Good Friday," but comparison falls apart pretty quickly, and in the end, it feels more akin to "The Hit" with a dollop of "The Godfather 3" thrown on top. I give it a B-.

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robin@reelingreviews.com
laura@reelingreviews.com

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