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Match Point Movie Review
Match Point Review

"Match Point" Overview

Rating: R
2005
Cast and Crew
Director : Woody AllenProducer : Letty Aronson,Lucy Darwin,Stephen Tenenbaum,Gareth Wiley
Screenwiter : Woody Allen
Starring Scarlett Johansson, Jonathan Rhys Meyers, Emily Mortimer, Matthew Goode, Brian Cox, Penelope Wilton
I'm tired of apologizing for Woody Allen. I've rated his recent films higher
than most critics. Not sure why, but I probably gave Celebrity a higher rating
than anyone else who saw it. (There are, of course, exceptions to this.) I just
like Allen's sensibility. He was Seinfeld before Seinfeld.
I like almost all Woody Allen movies: When he's in them, when he's not in them,
when he's being funny, and when he's being serious. But aside from a couple of
classic straight-up comedies -- Annie Hall and Hannah and Her Sisters -- Allen
is at his very best when he's being slyly funny and deadly serious at the same
time.
Finally, I'll have to apologize no more: Match Point is nearly perfect, a
Crimes and Misdemeanors for the '00s, done, inexplicably and most unexpectedly,
British-style. It is a thriller, and it is a darkly black comedy that is
effortless in its attempts to be funny. It is Allen's best work since 1986's
Hannah.
19 years is a long time to wait for a masterpiece, but Match Point is worth it.
The setup is traditional and unsurprising, belying the sophisticated film that
underlies it. Chris (Jonathan Rhys-Meyers) is a former pro tennis player who
never really hit it big. Now he's weighing his next move, and a job as the
tennis pro at a ritzy club seems to be the logical -- if not the only -- choice.
In short order he falls in with Tom (Matthew Goode), the son of an extremely
wealthy London tycoon (Brian Cox), and his daughter Chloe (Emily Mortimer) is
instantly smitten. But Tom's betrothed to the luscious Nola (Scarlett
Johansson, the only American in the cast), a struggling actress who's obviously
come to the wrong part of the world to get her big break. Part from attraction,
part from a sense of financial gain (one of Match Point's many charms is how
delightfully ambiguous it is about Chris's motivations), he's soon married to
Chloe… while carrying on a torrid affair with Nola (now split from Tom), who's
overstuffed with sexuality in the way that only Scarlett Johansson can be.
What develops is a story of love vs. money: Will Chris stay with Chloe or leave
her for Nola? And, more to the point, what exactly is he going to do with that
shotgun?
Match Point creeps up on you seductively and slowly. It never announces its
intentions, a problem of many thrillers and one that Allen has had in
over-the-top fare like Deconstructing Harry and Mighty Aphrodite, with its
chorus of masked narrators commenting excruciatingly on the plot. Here, Allen
puts the tricks and gimmicks aside, and he lets the film tell the story on its
own. Allen jumps in and out of scenes, showing us little snippets of his
characters' lives to give us just enough information and no more. He skips
ahead with no warning, months, years at a time. It's up to us to fill in the
blanks, which is ultimately very rewarding to the attentive viewer. You won't
have trouble following the plot, mind you: There's nothing confusing and no
"mystery" to solve. It's more like a chess game, or, dare I say, a tennis match.
The tennis setting is only a small part of what makes one recall Hitchcock's
Strangers on a Train, an equally masterful film that, believe it or not, isn't
quite as satisfying as Match Point when we reach the final scene. Hitchcock
ultimately pulled his last punch. Allen follows through with a hit that still
has me reeling. I was certain I saw the ending coming a mile away, and I was
dead wrong.
But Match Point is more than a good thriller. It's also really, really funny.
Part of it is traditional "British" comedy (something I had assumed Allen knew
nothing about), part of it is just the absurdity of the situation Chris finds
himself in. You can almost see the gears turning in his head, and as Nola
becomes more and more insistent that he leave Chloe, you may even ask yourself
what you would do in that situation. Sure, jealous lovers have been turned into
films before, but rarely this memorably.
No matter what you think of Woody Allen -- his classic movies or his more
recent films -- that opinion will irrevocably change -- for the better -- after
seeing Match Point.
Unmatched.
Reviewer: Christopher Null
an entertaining black comedy. Woody "lucked out" on this one.
I like Woody´s sense of humor. Altough this one is not really a comedy, it´s
really really interesting the history itself...
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