DIRECTOR
Steven Soderbergh
SCREENWRITER
Ted Griffin
PRODUCER
Jerry Weintraub
CINEMATOGRAPHER
Steven Soderbergh (as "Peter Andrews")
MUSIC
David Holmes
EDITOR
Stephen Mirrione
CAST
George Clooney (Danny Ocean)
Brad Pitt (Rusty Ryan)
Julia Roberts (Tess Ocean)
Matt Damon (Linus Caldwell)
Andy Garcia (Terry Benedict)
Don Cheadle (Basher Tarr)
Elliott Gould (Reuben Tishkoff)
Carl Reiner (Saul Bloom)
Bernie Mac (Frank)
Casey Affleck (Virgil)
Scott Caan (Turk)
MPAA rating: PG-13
Running
time: 116m
U.S. release: December 7, 2001
Video availability: VHS - DVD
Official
website
Other Steven
Soderbergh films
reviewed on this website:
- Erin
Brockovich
- Full
Frontal
- Out
of Sight
- Solaris
- Traffic
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Only a few years ago, Steven
Soderbergh was an experimental artist who'd decided to hone his
directorial skills on the whetstone of the mainstream; the result
in his best recent work (Out
of Sight, The Limey) was an old story with
a new indie pulse. But how much dabbling in the mainstream can
a director do before it stops being just dabbling? Ocean's
Eleven, a smooth and absolutely meaningless lark directed
by Soderbergh, is the most dispiriting evidence yet that the
filmmaker once responsible for such non-vanilla fare as Schizopolis
and Kafka is long gone -- perhaps killed by the Academy
Award, perhaps stifled long before by the cruel verities of making
art in an expensive medium.
The original Ocean's Eleven
(1960) was by no means of any consequence, either. By remaking
that piece of Rat Pack cronyism, Soderbergh hasn't exactly defiled
a masterpiece; I've only seen bits and pieces of it -- Frank
and Dino and the boys, shooting pool and cracking vaults with
roughly the same degree of lounge-lizard detachment -- but I
feel I've seen all I need to see. I also feel that, after this
year's The
Score and Heist,
I've seen all the caper movies I need to see for a good long
while. A screenwriter can toss in ornaments and complications,
but these films boil down to two narrative beats: (A) A group
of guys team up for the Big Score; (B) Either they get away with
it, or they don't. At this point, unless you do an everything-but-the-actual-heist
movie like Reservoir
Dogs, it's a stale genre.
Working with a fairly witty
script by Ted Griffin (also capable of writing meatier stuff
than this -- see Ravenous,
no pun intended), and working with his most star-stuffed cast
yet, Soderbergh luxuriates in the sheer lazy pleasure of a straightforward
big Hollywood vehicle. He drives it better than most, but this
one stalls on him just the same. Two of his past stars -- George
Clooney and Julia Roberts -- are here with him, more for comfort
and camaraderie than for what they actually bring to the screen.
Clooney, as ringleader Danny Ocean, who orchestrates a plot to
hit three Vegas casinos (downgraded from the original's five),
is suave and authoritative in exactly the same way he's been
many times before; poor Roberts is handed a zero role -- Danny's
ex-wife, now involved with the owner (Andy Garcia) of the casinos
-- anyone could've walked through. Both actors have been far
better before, for Soderbergh and for other directors.
Brad Pitt, Matt Damon, Don
Cheadle (another Soderbergh regular), Bernie Mac (totally wasted
here as a card dealer), Elliott Gould, Carl Reiner, the tiny
Chinese acrobat Shaobo Qin -- they all drift in and out of the
plot, making little or no impression (though Shaobo Qin, like
any performer with physical gifts beyond the rest of us, becomes
the near-wordless star of the film by default). Pitt has a funny
scene early on, when he's coaching young movie stars (including
Dawson's Creek's Joshua Jackson, as himself) how to play
cards, but then he recedes. Ocean's Eleven is busy without
being exciting; it showcases personalities to cover its own lack
of personality. The heist itself, which gets pretty Mission:
Impossible, isn't staged with any particular imagination;
Soderbergh, again serving as his own cinematographer, is more
at ease with the scenes of guys conspiring quietly in casino
bars. (Soderbergh has a natural eye for tone and composition;
if he wanted to quit his day job, he could probably gainfully
shoot other people's movies.)
Ocean's Eleven might have been a vibrant case of
alchemy -- an artist starting with a hoary piece of pulp and
transcending it -- if Soderbergh hadn't been so tied to the rules
of the game. Crisp professionalism only takes you so far; some
of us are looking for more than that, particularly from the director
of sex, lies and videotape. I don't think Soderbergh has
sold out, exactly -- I think that, in his way, he thinks he's
still experimenting, in this case taking a nothing-special vanity
project and trying to give it as much energy and gloss as he
can. But in practice it's not a lot different from any other
A-list Hollywood offering. Perhaps without realizing it, Soderbergh
has been gradually losing what made him vital and original --
his sense of formal play, his eagerness to try on new clothes
instead of old clothes that happen to be new to him. If his next
movie is as empty as Ocean's Eleven or emptier, someone's
going to have to tell this emperor the truth about his wardrobe.
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