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Sneakers is not, as some assume, a documentary about the rise and fall of the Reebok corporation. Instead, it's about a dude named Martin Bishop, who has an uncanny resemblance to Robert Redford. Bishop's been on the run from the law since he nearly got caught in the early days of computer hacking (the late 60's, when you had to make those modem connection sounds with your own voice: "RRRRRrrrrrrrSSHHHHHHHHHHHHHH"). As a fugitive (not THE Fugitive), Bishop gathered together a questionable bunch of morally-challenged tech hounds, and thus became Sneakers. A sneaker is skilled in the art of breaking past security systems for the purpose of showing companies where their weak spots are. The team of sneakers include ex-CIA Crease (Sidney Poitier), blind sound expert Whistler, extremely paranoid Mother (Dan Aykroyd, driving everyone wonderfully nuts), young spunky Carl (River Phoenix), and then Liz (Mary McDonnell), an ex-girlfriend of Bishop's who is the team's only link to the feminine world. This is one of those rare movies where the cast does not just contain one or two decent actors, but had a full deck of them, and they all seem to gel in a fashion that's incredibly fun to watch. There's a lot of banter passed back and forth, such as when Mother is trying to convince Crease that the Apollo landing happened on a Hollywood sound stage. This being pre-Internet, most of the high-tech stuff has to do with more physical concepts: wires, infrared sensors, cryptography machines. You see, during the course of a mission, the sneakers stumble upon a small machine that has the power to crack codes - ANY codes. This theme of encrypting and decrypting is run through the entire movie (including the opening credits, which form anagrams with the actors' names). Now every world government and some private organizations want to get their hands on this box, and it's near certain that when that happens, our Boys Club will be adios. The worst enemy they encounter is Cosmo (Ben Kingsley), who was Martin's friend in the 60s, and unlike Martin, ended up getting caught. Now he's bitter and full of long-winded speeches and self-delusion. I like Kingsley as a general rule, but in my mind, he's a Good Guy. My mind likes to try to form coherent connections between movies, so for some reason I have a hard time accepting a traditional Good Guy in a Bad Guy role (and vice versa). I'm weird that way. Up to the final moments, this film plays a solid crime caper / spy movie vibe. There are quite a few cool tricks the sneakers pull, the twists are abundant, and it's one of those movies that emphasize the power of mind over brawn. Still, Sneakers is also enriched with the flour of laughter (oh my, how my mastery of the English language is failing me). It's nothing outright satirical, but it does go back to the theme of men being thinly-veiled boys all along. These guys may be neck-deep in international intrigue, but they gleefully pull pranks, one-up each other, and encourage the sightless to take driving lessons. Redford does an excellent job (did I just say that?) with the simple way he masters his facial expressions in response to his much-more immature team. If you've seen this, you know the scene where Martin is getting lines fed to him via an earpiece, and he gets to saying the lines without realizing what the guys are feeding him. He catches one particular dirty word, stutters over it, and emotions cross his face along the vein of "I'm going to take a hacksaw to each of their necks when they fall asleep." Sneakers is literally one-of-a-kind in the movie world. Not only good to the last drop, it covers that small slice of time right before the World Wide Web went big in the technology world, it has River Phoenix (an actor cut down before his prime), and they managed to bag Aykroyd, Redford, Poitier, and even James Earl Jones ("Simbahhhhh") to create a dream team. There are hundreds of great details peppered throughout the flick, such as how the opening break-in leaves it ambiguous whether these guys are criminals or not. If it was up to me, a copy of Sneakers would come in every cereal box.
Okay, so now that I’ve gotten all my hormonal comments out in the open, I’ll talk about the movie a little. The reason this movie is so great is because it’s a tightly wound mystery that is also extremely funny. I think the premise of the characters’ line of work is great (how do I get a job getting paid to break into places?) and I also like the idea of the “little black box” falling into the wrong hands. I also think the climax is fantastic because there are so many suspenseful aspects. Robert Redford can only move 2 inches per second and the bad guys are coming and they’ve got guns and now the blind guy has to drive the van and then Ben Kingsley makes one final stab at getting Robert Redford and AHHHHHHH it’s just so tense. And then James Earl Jones comes along, which automatically makes for a good movie because he has a cool voice. And I love the guys’ requests for stuff, River Phoenix is the cutest. So anyway, take it from an original anti-Sneakers person, this is a fantastic movie and there’s something great for everybody. Drama, action, suspense, romance, and excellent humor. And peace on earth and good will towards men.
That's part of the big appeal of Sneakers. Although these guys have the coolest white hat job in the world, they still seem like regular Joes (or, if you're Canadian, Gordies). It's the circumstances around them, and the way they react that makes them cool. This is basically a heist flick. The good guys have to set up an elaborate way of retrieving a valuable object from a bad guy, who turns out to be the long lost evil friend of the lead character. There's twists and turns and robotic dogs, but mostly, that's it. The thing that REALLY makes Sneakers work, though, is the great cast. Aside from those mentioned above, you've also got Sidney Poitier, River Phoenix, Ben Kingsley, and James Earl Jones. This is practically the definition of what Entertainment Tonight ditzily refers to as "star-studded", people. It's a phenomenal cast, so much so that you're pretty willing to overlook a somewhat weak climax and an ending so soft you could sleep on it. The chemistry here is just so great... you'd never think Dan Aykroyd could jive with Robert Redford the way he does with Bill Murray, but there it is! All in all, I like this movie. It's fun, it's creative, and although it's technologically dated (at the time, it was a groundbreaker to have a speech about information meaning power, and little "ones and zeroes", but not so much these days), it's got smarts and style without being flashy. Great evening waster (and I mean that in the best way possible, honest!). |
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Is It Worth Staying Through End Credits?
Intermission! [some sources: IMDb]
Groovy Quotes
Cosmo: Who else is going to change the world, Marty? Greenpeace? Cosmo: There's a war out there, old friend. A world war. And it's not about who's got the most bullets. It's about who controls the information. What we see and hear, how we work, what we think... it's all about the information! Martin: You know I could have been in the NSA, but they found out my parents were married.
Whistler: I want peace on earth and good will toward man.
Crease: Now what are you saying, the NSA killed Kennedy?
Carl: It's fascinating what 50 bucks will get you at the county recorder's office. Playtronics Corporate Headquarters, the complete blueprints.
[Mother (the conspiracy theorist) is reading a tabloid.]
Martin: This is not a test. The penetration is live. The target is unaware. Martin: This isn't a date, dummy. It's a scientific exploration. Liz: You don't have a business, you have a club. You have a clubhouse with your friends, a secret club handshake...
Whistler: [over the mike, coaching Martin] And give him head whenever he wants.
[Liz is forced to spend the night]
Martin: What did we just do?
Whistler: Fellas, Janek’s little black box is on his desk between the pencil jar and the lamp.
[after Martin describes a location based on sound]
Werner: Doris, would you like to have breakfast with me?
Cosmo: I cannot kill my friend. [to guard] Kill my friend. Crease: You guys'll be chalk outlines without me.
[Mother is seen on a second story ledge getting equipment into position]
Carl: I'm Carl.
Soundtrack Review
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