
(Note: We're re-posting our 21 review from SXSW to coincide with the film's theatrical release this weekend.)
In 21, an M.I.T. math whiz joins a secret cabal of card-counters who fly to Vegas on the weekends to make a killing at the blackjack tables. That's the hook, the part you may not have seen in a thousand other films. But the rest is as generic as the title (21? Really? That's the best you could come up with?), a story about a nobody who becomes a somebody, forsakes his friends, and learns What's Really Important.
Yawn is right. This is a prime example of a movie that isn't bad, per se, just unnecessary, a competently made but wholly unremarkable trifle. It trades exclusively in clichés and stock characters -- and yet, strangely, director Robert Luketic (Legally Blonde) seems to believe he has made something compelling and original. And I have to think, if I've seen lots of movies exactly like this one, then shouldn't Luketic have as well?
Apparently based rather loosely on a true story, 21 begins with Ben Campbell (Jim Sturgess), an upstanding, Boston-bred, good-to-his-mother math nerd trying to win a scholarship to Harvard medical school. Without the free ride, he has no hope of paying the $300,000 his post-secondary education will cost him. In the meantime, he works for $8 an hour at a men's clothing store and finishes out his senior year at M.I.T., working on robotics projects with his dumpy comic-relief buddies.
After making a dazzling observation in an advanced math class, Ben is summoned by the professor, Mickey Rosa (Kevin Spacey), to a clandestine meeting. Led by Professor Rosa (but please, call him Mickey), a small group of students has mastered the science of counting cards, accurately working the probability statistics to all but ensure a win every time they play blackjack. It's not illegal to count cards, and by most standards not even immoral or unethical. Of course, the casinos frown on it, but the nice thing about Mickey's system of decoys and code words is that it's practically undetectable!
Ben refuses to get involved, of course, then reconsiders after realizing he has no other way to pay for med school ... and also after being flirted with by Jill (Kate Bosworth), the pretty girl on Mickey's team. (I have to say, he's an awfully easy mark. If you ever need someone to help you execute an ill-advised get-rich-quick scheme, target Ben Campbell, as he will put up almost no resistance.) The rest of the squad comprises jealous loose cannon Fisher (Jacob Pitts), kleptomaniac goofball Choi (Aaron Yoo), and nondescript Kianna (Liza Lapira).
The film, written by Peter Steinfeld and Allan Loeb and based on Ben Mezrich's book, stalls for a while in the middle, with Ben and the crew having achieved unprecedented success in Vegas on the weekends while maintaining their ordinary, boring lives in Boston the rest of the week. Ben likes being a big-shot in Sin City, and wishes he could be that guy 24/7. He puts the moves on Jill, whose affections for him waver frequently and without apparent provocation. He earns the trust and respect of Mickey. And meanwhile, a loss prevention expert named Cole Williams (Laurence Fishburne) watches the security tapes and tries to figure out why certain casinos are taking such big hits at the blackjack tables every Friday and Saturday night.
When the twists start to come in the final act, it's enough to give the film a boost of energy but not enough to turn it into anything special. Jim Sturgess, recently seen in Across the Universe and here affecting an inconsistent American accent, could be a charismatic leading man if the story didn't require him to make so many dumb decisions (what, there are no banks in Boston to store your huge piles of cash?), and just generally be a sap. Kevin Spacey, though, can use his snaky charm to sell almost anything, even a trite old tale like this one. I'd rather see a movie about his character.













Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
3-25-2008 @ 1:50PM
Tom Mack said...
Your article forgot to mention the racist casting of this movie, about how the main book characters 'Ben Campbell', 'Steve Fisher', and 'Mickey Rosa' were real-life Asian American males Jeff Ma, Mike Aponte, and John Chang, who miraculously became White people in the film. Imagine the outrage if Hollywood made 'Coach Carter', a real life story, starring a White actor instead of Sam Jackson?
Reply
3-28-2008 @ 3:41PM
colby said...
I don't like to thrown in the race card to often, but even I thought there was a bit of "white washing" with this movie. Although it does have Aaron Yoo (whom I loved in Disturbia), I would have liked to have seen what someone such as Justin Lin (Better Luck Tomorrow) could have done with this story.
Reply
3-28-2008 @ 9:31PM
Kyralessa said...
"what, there are no banks in Boston to store your huge piles of cash?"
Not if you want to avoid paying taxes on all that cash, since all the banks have reporting requirements. Read Mezrich's book, it's pretty good.
Reply
3-28-2008 @ 9:36PM
Eric D. Snider said...
He could have put it in a safe deposit box at a bank, then. Or he could have gotten a small safe or strong box for his dorm room. Or he could have hidden it at his mother's house. Anything's better than putting wads of cash on top of the ceiling tiles above your bed.
Reply
3-29-2008 @ 2:43PM
Wendy said...
All Hollywood stereotypes aside, I enjoyed the film - I'm a sucker for plot twists, happy endings and cool cinematography (even if it happens to be stereotypical too).
Reply
3-31-2008 @ 4:09PM
Jason said...
Boycott 21...
http://www.facebook.com/group.php?gid=24381965401
Reply
4-01-2008 @ 6:03PM
Mary said...
-cough-
I thought it was good.
And, since it WAS based on a book, it couldn't have been written to be cliche.
I agree that hollywood shouldn't have intentionally cast white main characters, but if Jeff Ma didn't get all pissy about it, neither should we. Besides, Jim Sturgess is a really good actor. Aside from his occasional accent slips.
Reply
4-02-2008 @ 8:54AM
Elwood City said...
So, if this is based on a book, who was the one who figured it was a good idea for someone going into medicine to be a MATH whiz? I don't buy it. And since when do wanna-be doctors try to pay for medical school? That's what massive loans are for.
Reply