Summary Capsule





| reviews |
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Let me briefly fill you in on what a movie experience is like at a theater there. First of all, you buy tickets for specific seats. Which meant that in a theater room with a capacity of around 275, Lance, me, and the other ten people were all sitting in the same little square area. Second, you don't have that deep booming movie guy doing voice-overs for the trailers. Our film was in English, with Japanese subtitles, which was mildly annoying, because I assumed that Japanese had all mastered English already. The main difference of seeing a movie in a Japanese theater is the humor aspect. Japanese people don't tend to laugh out loud, a lot... most of it is restrained giggling behind schoolgirl hands (you have to rent a pair if you're not a schoolgirl). Lance and I, while generally respectful of other nations and cultures, are just not the types to hold back our loud, offensive, booming American laughter. And Ocean's Eleven was a funny movie, which meant we were laughing A LOT, and we were also the only people in the theater who were doing so. So that just made us laugh more. A deadly chain reaction of cosmic proportions, you see. I'd heard Ocean's 11 be referred to as an excellent "popcorn flick," and so I spent time after I saw it thinking of what, exactly, constituted a popcorn flick. Maybe it's just a movie you can see and turn your brain off for two hours and enjoy the cleavage and explosions, but I don't think so. As a writer, I have to acknowledge that there are multiple styles and techniques when it comes to storytelling. There's a style -- I'll call it Tom Clanceynitis -- that prefers to deluge the reader with setting descriptions and every last piece of information vital or even passingly connected to the story. This way, you end up with 22 pages of a description of a submarine hallway, and about one line of action. Then there's a style of writing -- I'll call it John Grishamosity -- that takes on faith that the readers will fill in all the minor details of the story on their own, and so they write a fast-paced, minimalistic plot that trades off depth for page-turn-worthiness. New writers tend to fall into one of these two styles, and they can both be done very poorly, very easily. A popcorn flick like Ocean's 11 takes the second of these approaches, and makes its number one priority to tell a good story. Sure, you get character intros that maybe top ten seconds apiece, and a large ensemble that literally crowd together for screen time, but that's just fine. It's fast-moving, and it tells a fun and captivating story. We all like good heist flicks -- well, at least I do -- since part of the fun is the impossibleness of the scenario (in this case, knocking over three Las Vegas casinos), and part of the fun is seeing how they do it. There are many points where Ocean's 11 could have stumbled, the big one being the presence of Clooney and Pitt, who have as many strikes as successes when it comes to headlining cool (Batman and Robin anyone?). But it's to the film's extreme credit that it doesn't fall for any typical plotholes (cons turning against each other, dumb villains, blah blah), and places such a heavy emphasis on humor and suaviteé. It's a slick film, very easy on the eyes and mind, and there's just enough of a twist to it that makes you feel somewhat cerebral after it's over. It's hard to go wrong with this movie. It really appeals to a broad cross-section of people, including my mother, who just has this weird George Clooney thing. I don't get it, and I don't want to. But the next time you're throwing a party and wringing your hands over whether your guests will be sophisticated enough to enjoy Dude, Where's My Car?, save yourself a bit of headache and just rent this flick.
Ocean’s Eleven is a remake of a Rat Pack feature, but I don’t care. I’ve never seen the old one. The new one is sleek and cool and while it’s short on story, it’s long on style. Eleven guys knocking over three casinos with their wits and the best equipment money can buy + star casting = entertainment! George Clooney and Brad Pitt lead the way as they and their crew prove themselves to be the coolest of the cool and therefore deserving of $150 million. Works for me! Seeing this film won’t change anything but the time on your watch, but it’s easy fun. Just go for it! Speaking of Vegas, if you go there as much as I do (it’s just a few hours away!), you’re bound to encounter those downtimes when all the families are asleep and it’s just the die-hards and the insomniacs and the dead-tired walking around with you. It’s then you realize that as strangely quiet it is for one of the noisiest places on Earth, there is still more to do at 3 in the morning than anywhere else. Plus you can win $300 million with a $1 bill! My point is: if anyone wants to knock over a casino, I can’t legally recommend it. But I can mention my email address is posted on the front page. Write me anytime, and, uh, let me know how your “grandma” (as in, your plan for knocking over a casino or two) is doing. Cool!
When I left the theater my only complaint was that it wasn't as funny as I had hoped it would be, but upon a second and third rental viewings, I realized that it really IS laugh-out-loud funny, just in a more of a subtle way than I was expecting. Which is nice. It makes me feel smart because it doesn't go for cheap slapsticky jokes. For example, when Danny Ocean first meets up with Rusty and they leave the bar, the "movie stars" like Holly Marie Combs and Topher from That 70s Show and Joshua Jackson all get mobbed for autographs while George Clooney and Brad Pitt, arguably two of the finest men in Hollywood, waltz on by without a glance. It's a little thing, but it struck me as immensely funny. Another of the comedic highlights for me is Eliot Gould as Rubin. First of all, I love seeing Ross' dad in silky boxers, no shirt, fancy-schmancy robe with lots of gold chains around his neck. Secondly, I really enjoyed his run-down of the 3 most successful robberies in Vegas. They show one from the 50s and play "Papa Loves Mambo." They show one from the 70s and play "Spirit in the Sky." And they show one from the 80s and play "Take My Breath Away." Really excellent comedic moment. There are a lot of good visuals in this movie as well, such as the transitions. As the elevator doors close, they usher in the next scene from both sides of the screen. The split screens and cross fades are excellent, they really add to the fun feel of the movie. Some other little visuals I really liked include when we see the old hotel being blown up over Basher's shoulder right out the window and then it is revealed he is watching the demolition on TV. Or when Terry Benedict is announcing the demolition and everyone in the crowd turns at once to watch the building blow up except for Danny and Linus. They're heads stay perfectly trained on Terry and Tess. It's a terrific homage to Alfred Hitchcock's Strangers on a Train tennis match scene and a great visual effect. Another thing that was nice about Ocean's Eleven was that I didn't have to think too hard while I was watching. I could just sit back, relax and enjoy it. However, I also couldn't turn my brain off completely or I would've missed something. It was the perfect balance between concentrating-so-hard-you-miss-the- enjoyment movies and not-paying-attention-enough-so-you-miss-something movies. And finally I really thought the cast was stellar in this movie. George Clooney is perfectly smooth as fast-talking thief Danny Ocean. Brad Pitt could not look any hotter as his partner in crime Rusty. Andy Garcia makes a deliciously greasy villain. Matt Damon cracks me up as an unsure pick-pocket college kid named, of all things, Linus. If I didn't know better, I would've thought Don Cheadle as Basher really was British. Scott Caan and Casey Affleck are hilarious as the Mormon Twins. And of course Bernie Mac as Frank the Insider is great. The scene between him and Matt Damon where Frank accuses Linus of being racist is perfect. "Might as well call it White Jack!" So anyway, what I'm trying to say is that this movie is great. It's a wild romp, it's really fun and I've seen it three times and am still not tired of it. It is put together really well and takes you on a fun, slick 2 hour roller coaster full of fun and interesting people. I highly recommend it.
If there's one exact phrase or sentiment that the three finely accomplished Mutants before me didn't use in describing Ocean's Eleven that I wish they had, that would be it. On the off chance that you'll donate just a little more time to read a humble Canadian's opinion (we try 63% harder to offset the dollar, you know), well that's just ducky. I really, really like heist flicks. There is something just so wonderfully fun and freeing about rooting for the wrong guys every now and again, it's great. I mean, look at this story in the black and white facts. A group of accomplished criminals want to steal over $160 million (US dollars, mind you!) while their leader plots to steal the only female character in sight. Normally, this is the setup for James Bond to come rolling into town and start busting heads. But not so! Instead, we get to pull for the antiheroes, something that's just so tough to do right, but done to excellence here. I especially love the lasting aftereffects these kinds of movies have on me. I sneak between cars on my walk home. I stick to the shadows. I desperately wish that someone will come up to me and serve up a perfect straight line to bounce some witty banter off of. I pretend I'm a far better dresser than I really am. It's all a little unbalanced, though. Out of eleven criminals, I'd challenge you to name all of them. They're worse than the friggin' seven dwarves. Some of the guys (I'm thinking Scott Caan and Casey Affleck) basically melt into the background, especially if you don't really know they're faces (like me). They never really do anything that you or I couldn't. On the other hand, Clooney gets the (only) girl, and Pitt gets about 95% of the punchlines. Honestly, just about every funny line in the movie came from Rusty's script. For the average Fight Club fan, however, this won't present much of a problem. This flick is styling. It is hot. It's downright sexy (without any sex, how about that?). It is all those icky words marketing people tend to use when describing any George Clooney/Brad Pitt/Julia Roberts movie, only this time they're right. I'd actually been avoiding seeing this for general lack of interest, and man, I'm kicking myself. I spent my entire time either laughing my ass off, grooving my whole body to the fantastic soundtrack, or reminiscing about Las Vegas as it's always presented in the movies. I haven't had this much fun in ages with a movie. If you don't like Clooney, suck it up. If action's not your thing, turn off your brain for a minute or two. If laughing's not your ticket, try Ebert instead of this website. But no matter what, rent this flick NOW. It's worth it in ways that I can't explain with green text on a black background. And you'd be surprised what you can accomplish with that these days. |
| extras |
![]() 2001 Rated PG-13 Crime Comedy Director
Starring
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Is It Worth Staying Through End Credits?
No. The video release of the movie has a looooooong chat with the costume
designer, for some reason. Sure, it's fascinating that Andy Garcia's tux
is fashioned after a Japanese kimono, but if there's anything after that, I
sure didn't stick around for it.
The Movie Store!
Intermission!
[Andie] I have something to add to the Brad Pitt constantly eating thing. I saw an HBO special on Ocean's Eleven and the reason Soderbergh wanted Brad Pitt to be doing something all the time was because in the original Ocean's 11, Pitt's counterpart is Dean Martin. Throughout the movie, Martin was constantly drinking some alcoholic beverage. Soderbergh wanted to keep that trait but not make Pitt a total lush, so they decided he'd be eating all the time.
This was the 11th movie directed by Steven Soderbergh.
Mark Wahlberg, Bruce Willis, Alan Arkin, and Luke and Owen Wilson were all at one point originally cast, but had to bow out to make room for other projects.
Official and Not-So-Official Websites
You do not talk about Ocean's 11 |
Tess: You're a thief and a liar.
Ocean: I only lied about being a thief.
Danny: You seen him [Rusty]?
Frank: Last I hear he was teaching movie stars how to play cards. Why? You got a plan already?
Danny: Are you kidding? I just became a citizen again. [smiles]
Bartender: How's the game going?
Rusty: Longest hour of my life.
Bartender: What?
Rusty: I'm running away with your wife!
Bartender: Great.
Rusty: God I'm bored.
Danny: You look bored.
Rusty: I am bored.......so how was the clink? Did you get the cookies I sent?
Rusty: So tell me.
Danny: It's tricky. It's never been done before. It's gonna need planning and a large crew.
Rusty: Guns?
Danny: Exactly. There's a lot of security. But the take--
Rusty: What's the target?
Danny: 8 figures each.
Rusty: What's the target?
Danny: When's the last time you were in Vegas?
Rusty: [pause] What, you wanna knock over a casino? [Danny holds up 3 fingers] Three? Three casinos?
Danny: These feed into the cages at the Mirage and The MGM Grand but every dime ends up there.
Rusty: The Bellagio, the Mirage--these are Terry Benedict's places.
Danny: Yes they are. You think he'll mind?
Rusty: More than somewhat. [looks back at blueprints] Well, if I'm reading this right--and I like to think that I am--this is probably the least accessible vault ever designed.
Rusty: You'd need at least a dozen guys doing a combination of cons.
Danny: What do you think?
Rusty: Off the top of my head--I'd say you're looking at a Boeske, a Jim Brown, a Miss Daisy, 2 Jethros and a Leon Sphinx. Not to mention the biggest Ella Fitzgerald ever.
Rusty: I need a reason. And don't say money. Why do this?
Danny: Why not do it? [pause] Because yesterday I walked out of the joint after losing 4 years of my life and you're cold-decking Teen Beat cover boys. [pause] Because the house always wins. You play long enough, you never change the stakes, the house takes you. Unless, when that perfect hand comes along you bet big and then you take the house.
[pause]
Rusty: You've been practicing that speech haven't you?
Danny: A little bit. Did I rush it? It felt like I rushed it.
Rusty: No, it was good, I liked it. The Teen Beat thing was harsh.
Ruben: They got cameras. They got watches. They got locks. They got timers. They got vaults. They got enough armed personnel to occupy Paris. Okay, bad example.
Ruben: You're gonna need a crew as nuts as you are........who you got in mind?
Turk: [to his brother Virgil] I'm gonna get out of the car and I'm gonna drop you like 3rd period French.
Basher: It'll be nice working with proper villains again.
Rusty: Guys like us don't change Saul. We stay sharp or we get sloppy, we don't change.
[to a completely unresponsive Rusty]
Danny: Saul makes 10. 10 oughta do it, don't you think? Do you think we need one more? You think we need one more. Alright, we'll get one more.
Tess: We need to get Rust a girl.
Rusty: There's a women's prison down the road!
Danny: And I always confuse Monet and Manet. Now which one married his mistress?
Tess: Monet.
Danny: Right, and then Manet had syphilis.
Tess: They also painted occasionally.
Danny: You gotta walk before you crawl.
Rusty: Reverse that.
Linus: Apparently, he's got a record longer than my... well, it's long.
[to Linus]
Danny: You're either in or you're out. Right now.
Danny: Okay, bad news first. This place houses a security system that rivals most nuclear missile silos. First we have to get within the casino cages, which anybody will tell you takes more than a smile. Next, through these doors, each of which requires a different 6-digit code changed every 12 hours. Past those lies the elevator. This is where it gets tricky. The elevator won't move without authorized fingerprint identification-
Rusty: Which we can't fake.
Danny: and vocal confirmation from both the security system within the Bellagio and the vault below.
Rusty: Which we won't get.
Danny: Furthermore, the elevator shaft is rigged with motion detectors-
Rusty: Meaning if we were to manually override the lift, the shaft's exit would lock down automatically and we'd be trapped.
Danny: Now, once we get down the shaft though, then it's a piece of cake. Just two more guards with uzis and the most elaborate vault door ever conceived by man. Any questions?
Saul: I have a question. Say we get into the cage and through the security doors there and down the elevator we can't move and past the guards with the guns and into the vault we can't open-
Rusty: Without being seen by the cameras.
Danny: Oh yeah, sorry. I forgot to mention that.
Saul: Yeah, well say we do all that. We're just supposed to walk out of there with $150 million in cash on us without getting stopped?
Danny: Yeah.
Saul: Oh. Okay.
Linus: Smash and grab job, huh?
Rusty: Slightly more complicated than that.
Linus: Well....yeah.
Danny: Saul, are you sure you're ready to do this?
Saul: If you ever ask me that question again, Daniel, you will not wake up the following morning.
Tess: I'm with Terry now.
Danny: Does he make you laugh?
Tess: He doesn't make me cry. [Terry walks up] Danny was just walking through the restaurant and he spotted me.
Terry: Is that right?
Danny: Imagine the odds.
Terry: In all the gin joints in all the world...
Saul: Tess is with Benedict now? She's too tall for him.
[coaching Linus]
Rusty: Where you gonna put your hands? No good. Don't touch your tie, look at me. Okay, I ask you a question, you have to think of the answer, where do you look? No good. You look down, they know you're lying. And up, they know you don't know the truth. Don't use 7 words when 4 will do. Don't shift your weight. Look always at your mark but don't stare. Be specific but not memorable. Be funny but don't make him laugh. He's gotta like you and then forget you the moment you've left his sight. And for God's sake, whatever you do, don't, under any circumstances-
Leon: Rust?
Rusty: Yeah?
Leon: Can you take a look at this?
Rusty: Sure [walks away]
[Danny exits prison in his tux]
Rusty: I hope you were the groom.
Danny: Ted Nugent called. He wants his shirt back.
[looks at Tess' wedding ring]
Danny: You said you sold this.
Tess: I said.
Danny: Liar.
Tess: Thief.
DVD Review
Soundtrack Review
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