The Brothers Bloom Movie Review
The Brothers Bloom Review
"The Brothers Bloom" Overview

Rating: PG-13
2009
Cast and Crew
Director : Rian JohnsonProducer : Ram Bergman,James D. Stern
Screenwiter : Rian Johnson
Starring : Rachel Weisz,Adrien Brody,Mark Ruffalo,Rinko Kikuchi,Maximilian Schell,Robbie Coltrane
A perfectly swell caper film that ultimately can't sustain the propelling
giddiness of its first hour, The Brothers Bloom burns bright with brilliance
before sputtering out in the end. In a case of extreme overreach,
writer/director Rian Johnson (Brick) sets out to make a magical-realist
brother-buddy screwball romantic comedy heist film, and actually comes close to
making it all work. Given the cock-eyed neo-noir linguistic mania of his first
film, Johnson seems to be just the right kind of blooming genius to pull off
this kind of over-ambitious cinematic caper, but in the end he just sets
himself an impossible task.
Johnson's brothers Stephen (Mark Ruffalo) and Bloom (Adrien Brody) appear in
the film like some kind of magic vaudeville act gone to seed. A spectacularly
goofy opener (including a fake magic cave and a one-legged cat locomoting about
on a roller skate) about their childhood paints them as Damon Runyon-style
scamps set free in a landscape of innocent marks. It's a cotton-candy world
that the boys, with their slouchy hats and black suits, are going to take for
everything they can. Their roles are cut and dried: Stephen as the storytelling
author of their scams, Bloom as his moody and conflicted accomplice, fated to
never live a real life of his own.
Cut to adulthood, after an unseen but very educational sojourn in Russia, and
the bickering duo are casting about Europe with a gypsy hoodlum flair. They've
got the same wardrobe but better patter, not to mention the addition of Bang
Bang (a phenomenally deadpan Rinko Kikuchi), a Japanese explosives expert who
apparently speaks no English but functions like the brothers' own personal Q --
albeit one with innumerable jazzy wardrobe changes and a penchant for blowing
up Barbie dolls with nitro. The only thing that's changed is that Bloom wants
out of the con-artist life and Stephen can only entice him back by promising
one final score: scamming the daffy, blindingly rich beauty Penelope (Rachel
Weisz, playing it about 45 degrees away from sane). Stephen's only demand is
that Bloom -- whom Brody plays as another of his emotionally blocked, ulcerous
yearners -- can't fall in love with Penelope; so of course he does.
Johnson is eager to please as he sets up the building blocks of his story,
packing the screen with diverting sights gags, slapstick, and exotic locales.
The dialogue whips out smart and fast, packed with references to Melville and
Dostoyevsky and deadpan lines like "I don't mean to vilify a whole country, but
Mexico's a horrible place." Given its thicket of allusions and storybook air,
The Brothers Bloom should remind one of a hundred other movies, but except for
the occasional over-emphatic nod to Wes Anderson, it somehow doesn't.
Where the film goes wrong is hard to identify, but it arrives somewhere after
the mid-point, when Johnson has thrown in one too many double-crosses and
fake-outs. The arrival of Maximilian Schell as the brothers' vicious old
Fagin-styled mentor also brings an unwelcome scent of heaviness and evil to a
light confection that had been cracking along just fine until that point.
Despite all his best efforts, Johnson and his cast wear themselves out long
before the finish line, and by the time the film arrives at its climactic
reveal in a decrepit seaside theater, its once-airborne feet are sadly
well-anchored on the tired old ground.
Boneless.
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Review by Chris Barsanti
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