The very British art forger Major Wingate explains in one of
his many voiceovers ‘an optimist is
simply a man who hasn’t heard the news’ but I would suggest an optimist is
a man who hasn’t seen Gambit (2012)! Because make no
mistake this is nowhere near as good as the promise of a Coen Brothers script
would have you believe, think more The
Ladykillers (2004) than No Country
for Old Men (2007) if you get my drift.
Harry Deane and Lionel Shabander |
This is the remake of the 1966 film of the same name
originally directed by Ronald Neame and starring Michael Caine, Shirley
Maclaine and the late great Herbert Lom. The idea for this remake has been
about for around 15 years with various line-ups of cast and crew ending up with
Michael Hoffman in the directorial chair. It was Hoffman who directed The Last Station (2009) an interesting
film about the final months of Leo Tolstoy’s life which starred Christopher
Plummer as the Russian scribe and Helen Mirren as his wife. Gambit 2012 stars Colin Firth as Harry
Deane Art curator, a character that attempt’s to get laughs by constantly being
punched in the face and being stranded half way up the outside of The Savoy Hotel
in London without his trousers! Cameron Diaz, with a dreadful Texas drawl that
really grates, plays cowgirl P J Puznowski. Also involved is Alan Rickman who
must have been drunk, drugged or skint to have agreed to play the part of the
arrogant media mogul Lionel Shabandar. The afore mentioned Major Wingate is
played by Tom Courtney. The films plot involves
Deane conning his abusive boss Shabandar into buying a fake Monet with the help
of Major Wingate and the Texan rodeo queen Puznowski.
Major Wingate and P J Puznowski. |
Although setting this remake in the 21st
century Hoffman has attempted to remake it as a swinging sixties pastiche
including animated credits, a Mancini style score and the obligatory glossy
London setting. Stupidly I’m naive enough to think that something described as
a lighthearted comedy would be at least amusing rather than just embarrassing.
Sitting through this 90 minute ‘comedy’ with out so much as a titter let along
an actual fully blown laugh raises the question of why remake a film that was
not particularly well acclaimed in the first place?
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