Now You See Me. Rated M (mature
themes, coarse language and sexual references). 116 minutes. Directed by Louis
Leterrier. Screenplay by Ed Solomon, Boaz Yakin and Edward Ricourt.
Verdict: This curiously
unengaging heist tale fails to equal the sum of its parts.
Occasionally, a promotional
trailer will flash across the screen that makes a film look intriguing. It
won’t reveal much about the plot, but the flashy effects and instantly
recognisable cast will ensure that the film’s impending release registers in
our consciousness.
Such is the case with this
Now You See Me – an over-produced story about four street magicians who are
invited by a mysterious mentor to form a group known as The Four Horsemen, and
use their combined creative powers to perform daring heists around the world.
Leterrier (Clash of the Titans) has assembled an outstanding cast, led by Jesse Eisenberg (The Social Network) as one of the four magicians, and Mark Ruffalo (The Avengers, Shutter Island) as an FBI agent tasked with breaking the cycle of increasingly
ambitious robberies the group manage to pull off – right under everyone’s
noses.
It is always a pleasure to
have the opportunity to watch Morgan Freeman, and his performance as Thaddeus
Bradley – a man who has dedicated his life to revealing the secrets behind
magic acts – is a gem. Equally, Michael Caine devours his brief but critical
turn as the wealthy philanthropist, who suddenly finds himself to be nothing
more than a powerless pawn in The Four Horsemen’s grand plan.
The central relationship
between Ruffalo’s Dylan and Mélanie Laurent’s Interpol agent Alma fails to ring
true, and if there is a flaw in the otherwise interesting screenplay, it’s that
the human relationships are left wanting in the presence of the glossy magic acts.
We are left with the sense of not being particularly engaged in the lives of
the main characters, but rather impressed by all the technological wizardy that
make the unbelievably fantastic heists possible. With a generous injection of
more heart and soul, this is a film that might have been a good deal more
involving than it ends up being.
This review was commissioned
by the West Australian Newspaper Group.
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