Movie Title: Ocean’s Thirteen (2007)
Actors: Brad Pitt, George Clooney, Matt Damon, Michael Mantell, Elliott Gould
Directors: Steven Soderbergh
Format: Closed-captioned, Color, Dubbed, DVD-Video, Widescreen, NTSC
Language: English
Studio: Warner Home Video
Run Time: 122 minutes
Movie Description
Ocean’s Thirteen. It’s bolder. Riskier. The most dazzling heist yet. George Clooney, Brad Pitt, Matt Damon and more reteam with director Steven Soderbergh for a split-second caper that stacks the deck with wit, style and cool. Danny Ocean again runs the game, so no rough stuff. No one gets hurt. Except for double-crossing Vegas kingpin Willy Bank (Al Pacino). Ocean’s crew will hit him where it hurts: in his wallet. On opening night of Bank’s posh new casino tower The Bank, every turn of a card and roll of the dice will come up a winner for bettors. And they’ll hit him in his pride, making sure the tower doesn’t receive a coveted Five Diamond Award. That’s just the start of the flimflams. The boys are out to break The Bank. Place your bets!
Movie Review
George Clooney is one, Brad Pitt is two, Matt Damon three… well, let’s just assume there are 13 collaborators in this installment of Steven Soderbergh’s profitable caper franchise. We’re back in Las Vegas for Ocean’s Thirteen, where the boys plot to shut down the brand-new venture of a backstabbing hotelier (Al Pacino) because the guy double-crossed the now-ailing Reuben (Elliott Gould). If you look at the plot too closely, the entire edifice collapses (hey, how about those Chunnel-digging giant drills?), but Soderbergh conjures up a visual style that swings like Bobby Darin at the Copa. Other than the movie-star dazzle, the main reason to see the film is Soderbergh’s uncanny feel for how the widescreen frame can float through the neon spaces of Vegas or sort through groups of characters sitting in hotel rooms talking (he shot the film himself, under his pseudonym Peter Andrews).
The film doesn’t give enough time to goofballs Casey Affleck and Scott Caan (whose riffs made Ocean’s Twelve worth seeing), although it provides comic stuff for a fun roster of actors, including Eddie Izzard, David Paymer, and Bob (“Super Dave”) Einstein. Meanwhile, Ellen Barkin makes a fetching assistant for Pacino, and Pacino himself, his hair dyed Trumpian orange, is content to gnaw on some ham for the duration. Biggest puzzle about the two sequels is why George Clooney seems content to retreat from centerstage. Still, his Hemingwayesque conversations with Pitt are an amusing form of male shorthand, and even as the movie overstays its welcome during a long finale, Clooney’s easy sense of cool makes it all seem acceptable. –Robert Horton
Plot Synopsis:
When senior Ocean member Reuben Tishkoff (Elliott Gould) gets double crossed by the scheming Willie Bank (Al Panico), the Ocean team decide it is time to get even, but this time, with the help of an old enemy. Together, they decide that the goal here is not to take Bank’s money, but make him loose it and his Five Diamond awards. Through a series of scams, they rig every game in the casino, making everything pay out to any player there. Underground, they create an earthquake, causing everyone in the casino to evacuate, removing Bank’s chance of winning it back.Through out the movie, the Five Diamond reviewers time at the casino is sabotaged through various means (chicken pox-like infection on his towels, laxatives in his food, terrible smelling insences being burned in his room, and overall bad service) and he reviews it very poorly, taking Bank’s chance at winning another Five Diamond with him. At the end, after successfully pulling off the heist, Rusty (Brad Pitt) rigs one last machine in the Airport, letting the reviewer who they un-willingly put through all the problems hit the jackpot before boarding his plane.
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