Lock, Stock & Two Smoking Barrels Movie Review
Lock, Stock & Two Smoking Barrels Review
"Lock, Stock & Two Smoking Barrels" Overview

Rating: R
1999
Cast and Crew
Director : Guy RitchieProducer : Matthew Vaughn
Screenwiter : Guy Ritchie
Starring : Jason Flemyng,Nick Moran,Jason Statham,Vinnie Jones,Sting
Lock, Stock & Two Smoking Barrels has been described as the British Pulp
Fiction, and on the surface, that would seem like an accurate depiction. It's
got the usual cross-section of characters with witty tongues involved in varied
illegal activities, that get themselves into very peculiar situations in which
no one really survives unscathed. Nonetheless, the film seems to be missing
something that characterized its predecessor. And right now, you're getting
the feeling that I'm about to quickly file Lock, Stock as another Tarantino
homage/copy-cat crime, but that's not quite it either.
Lock, Stockis in fact, probably the best film since Pulp Fiction in which there
are no really good guys. Pulp Fiction, Lock, Stockbegins with what would seem
to be a simple story, that quickly careens out of control. In this case, four
buddies; Tom, Eddie, Bacon, and Soap, pool their money together to back can't
lose Eddie at an unbeknownst-to-them rigged game of cards. Of course they get
fleeced, and end up in heavy debt to the local heavy. What follows is a madcap
plan to recoup the money by intercepting a heist Eddie has fortuitously
discovered his neighbor is carrying out. The interrelation of the problems
with the original heist, along with the interception of it by Eddie's gang, and
a couple of other local illegal activities result in a frantic circle of
destruction.
Though the web of illegal activity is obviously reminiscent of Pulp Fiction,
where Lock, Stockmost significantly strays from its de facto blue print is in
theme. In Tarantino's masterpiece, the theme was essentially that there was no
theme, no morality. In the gritty underworld, outcome is random. While Samuel
L. Jackson is divinely saved and given a second chance to "walk the earth like
Kane in Kung Fu," his partner in the guise of John Travolta is sentenced to
death on a toilet. In this incarnation, the badder they are, the worse their
fate seems to be, which often is death.
The real question now, is why have I rambled on without making much comment on
the quality of the movie. The answer of course, is that I don't have much to
say. Lock, Stock is one of those films that pretty much leaves you when you
leave it. You can talk about the witty plot, and the funny lines, but in the
end, I guess a movie with o one to really root for (I guess we do root for our
four pals a little) leaves you in the end without too much invested. So we
leave it like we Pulp Fiction before it, by walking out of the theater and
saying, "Wow, that was pretty cool," and not thinking of it after that. (Of
course, as with Pulp Fiction, some could always take a deeper shine to it.)
The new DVD includes a featurette on the film's cinematography and a
compilation of expletives (funny!) from the film.
Reviewer: Bradley Null





