The Deal Movie Review
The Deal Review

"The Deal" Overview

Rating: R
2005
Cast and Crew
Director : Harvey KahnProducer : Christian Slater,Harvey Kahn,Ruth Epstein
Screenwiter : Ruth Epstein
Starring : Christian Slater,Selma Blair,John Heard,Angie Harmon,Colm Deore,Robert Loggia,Kevin Tighe
It's an old adage that you "write what you know," which is very much the case
here. First-time screenwriter Ruth Epstein is a 9-year veteran investment
banker with Wall Street's Goldman Sachs. As a legal and financial negotiator,
she knows mergers backwards. What she trips up on is translating the language
of high stakes finance into intelligible drama.
Most of us couldn't tell the difference between a back-end hedge and a backhoe.
So, when Delaney & Strong's hot shot investment banker Tom Grover (Christian
Slater) is asked to manage a Russian oil company called Black Star in a $20
billion sale to Condor Oil & Gas, the technical details are about as clear as,
well... a barrel of crude.
The need to pull his company out of impending bankruptcy with this deal shines
through the goo, and we detect that Tom is up against a global conspiracy and
the Russian mob. Though we want to bond to him, the part, and Slater's
performance, generates all the sympathy of a legal contract. Salvaging the
operation is tree-hugger Abbey Gallagher (Selma Blair), whom Tom's been trying
to recruit. Before coming aboard, she seeks advice from her mentor, Harvard
professor Roseman (John Heard), and he's just fine with his protégé's ability
to add her ecological water to the company's oil -- but that subplot doesn't
mix.
When an executive of Condor is killed, we start to appreciate the stakes
involved and grasp that maybe there's some drama being pumped to the surface
along with the sludge. In a strategy of co-opting a potential hitch in the
deal, Condor's slick CEO Jared Tolson (Robert Loggia) lures an increasingly
suspicious Tom into evaluating his company's bid. But this doesn't go down well
with Tom's boss, steel-jawed Hank Weiss (Colm Feore), furious that Tom would
align with the other side.
At this late stage of the game, the vixenish Anna (Angie Harmon) is introduced
as a femme fatale with designs on the handsome banker who has, by now, begun to
chemically react with his alluring recruit. This competitive romantic angle is
explored like a newly opened tract at Alaska's Anwar Preserve, with sweet Abbey
getting the short end of the deal. Until, that is, Tom catches on that Anna is
a corporate spy (with a Russian accent out of the Comedy Store) engaged in
espionage through seduction. The time it takes him to reach this insight tests
our patience, but we breathe a sigh of relief when he rejects the temptress and
gets it on with the gal we've been rooting for.
Blair's casual animal appeal comes through despite some wickedly stiff, aimless
direction by co-producer Harvey Kahn) and she readily becomes the only
emotional connection on the patch. She's a welcome balance to Slater, whose
serious concerns as the third co-producer on the film (alongside Epstein and
Kahn) leak into a performance that shows signs of rust. One might think that
the principals who put this dry well together were fueled more from mutual need
to make a movie than from a gusher of talent. If only someone on the team had a
clue that a re-write was as essential as the cleanup of an oil spill.
Here's the deal: My tongue, your throat.
Reviewer: Jules Brenner





