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Director : Steven Soderbergh
Producer : John Hardy, Scott Kramer
Screenwriter : Lem Dobbs
Starring : Terence Stamp, Peter Fonda, Lesley Ann Warren, Luis Guzman, Barry Newman, Joe Dallesandro, Nicky Katt, Amelia Heinle, Melissa George
Part of me feels like I didn’t really get The Limey. Though it’s a spare 85
minutes, director Steven Soderbergh always has a trick or two up his sleeve,
and I was sure some twists were in store for me.
Witness Out of Sight, with criminal and cop falling into an unlikely romance.
Witness Sex, Lies, and Videotape, which broke the indie film scene wide open.
Witness Schizopolis – you know, all of it.
But no matter how many ways I slice it, despite the critical smash that The
Limey has become, the film failed to impress me much. The story is trite:
British ex-con (Stamp) flies to L.A. to avenge his daughter’s death, which he
assumes is the result of foul play due to a music magnate (Fonda). Expecting a
clever plot twist, I waited and waited, and then the movie was over.
This isn’t to say that The Limey isn’t a well-made film. As usual, Soderbergh
is innovative behind the camera, with flashbacks, flash-forwards, flashes
sideways, alternate realities, and optical trickery. While this is
distracting, it does server to make the film more visceral and fun. Stamp and
Fonda make for interesting rivals, but neither really owns the film. The most
intriguing part of The Limey is Stamp’s limey slang: words like “snaffle” and
“doolally” that spice up the lingo a la A Clockwork Orange (though never with
the same power).
Unfortunately, The Limey falls into that class of films that is perfectly
watchable but ultimately forgettable. Soderbergh fans will rejoice. The rest
of the world will scratch its collective head.
Twist of Lime.
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" OK "
Rating: R, 1999
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