Before the Devil Knows You're Dead Movie Review
Before the Devil Knows You're Dead Review

"Before the Devil Knows You're Dead" Overview

Rating: R
2007
Cast and Crew
Director : Sidney LumetProducer : Paul Parmar,William S. Gilmore,Michael Cerenzie
Screenwiter : Kelly Masterson
Starring : Philip Seymour Hoffman,Ethan Hawke,Marisa Tomei,Albert Finney,Rosemary Harris,Brian F. O'Byrne,Amy Ryan,Aleksa Palladino,Michael Shannon
At the tender age of 83, director Sidney Lumet opens his latest film with a
married couple going at it, doggy-style, in a bedroom full of mirrors. The wife
is black-haired and thin while the husband is bulky and stares at the
reflection as if it's his only moment of true triumph. In a recent interview,
Lumet described the image as the man's idea of "classy"; an act of high-class
privilege that the man can only hope to aspire to.
The man in question is Andy (Philip Seymour Hoffman), a pudgy volcano of a
corporate hustler with a trophy wife. Gina (Marisa Tomei) fits that role to a T
as she spends Andy's money and enjoys mid-day quickies with Andy's brother Hank
(Ethan Hawke). Hank's money goes towards his ex-wife (a great Amy Ryan) and
daughter while Andy's cash, when not with Gina, is spent on heroin in the très
chic twentieth-floor apartment of his dealer in Manhattan. The boys need dough
and their bourgeois office jobs aren't keeping it coming in. That's when Andy
gets the idea.
The plan is to rob a mom-and-pop jewelry store in the sanitized community of
Westchester, New York. It's a simple early-morning job with a friend of Hank's
(Brian F. O'Byrne) as gunman and Hank as the driver. The hitch: The mom and pop
owners are Charles (Albert Finney) and Nanette (Rosemary Harris), Hank and
Andy's own parents. As you might expect, everything goes wholly haywire, with
the gunman getting four shots in the chest while two bullets hit mom. Then it's
up to pop to find the men responsible for the heist.
Lumet hasn't been this energetic and perceptive since The Verdict, released
two-and-a-half decades ago. Who knew the old kook had it in him? As both an
evocation of all the director's obsessions (corruption of American
institutions, familial secrets) and a step towards more abstract storytelling,
Before the Devil develops and portrays a world where blood has run black and
greed has infiltrated our last vestige of hope: family. In fact, the most
fascinating thing about first-time writer Kelly Masterson's throttling script
is the lack of Americana in the demeanor and attitude of her upper-middle-class
family. They act like members of a crime syndicate rather than brothers,
fathers, and sons.
The minimalist sheen and cleanliness of the dealer's pad, the faux-fancy décor
of Andy's apartment and the suburban-dungeon atmosphere of the local bar &
grill become cultural benchmarks under Lumet's deft direction. Within these
set-pieces are actions that wouldn't be out of place in the works of Aeschylus.
The tailspin into the visceral fourth quarter could have been ludicrous if
these performances weren't so well balanced between the believable and the
grotesque. Hoffman's blazing work infests everything from Hawke's brilliantly
weak baby brother to Finney's brooding father to Tomei's sensuous/reckless
beauty. The members of this corroded American family don't want to hear
anything honest, but they still yearn for that familial closeness, if only for
the promise of some sort of comfort. It's all eerily evoked by one of Lumet's
favorite images: the living room, empty with the loopy and chaotic sounds of
childhood cartoons filling the space.
Not dead yet.
Reviewer: Chris Cabin





