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Before The Devil Knows You’re Dead
Reviewed By Rich Drees
It seemed like a simple plan at the beginning.
Two brothers, both in various states of financial distress, plan to
rob a small mom and pop jewelry store in West Chester, New York.
Their plan is perfect. They know the layout of the place and its
employees’ habits. They know all this, as this particular mom and
pop store is owned by their own mom and pop.
Such is the deceptively simple set up of Sydney Lumet’s new film
Before The Devil Knows You’re Dead. But keeping things simple is
not how Lumet works, and it is relatively quickly into the film that
things fall apart.
The narrative of the film constantly circles back on itself, with
flashbacks that simultaneously illuminate a different character’s
perspective on events we have already seen, while progressing the
storyline a little further along. These revelations help to reveal
onion-like layers about the characters as well as reinforce the
story with additional motivations and complications. Younger brother
Hank (Ethan Hawke) is sleeping with older brother Andy’s wife
(Marisa Tomei), while Andy has his own costly indiscretions. Hank’s
relationship with his ex-wife and daughter is strained, to say the
least, but no more so than Andy’s is with his father (Albert
Finney). The end result is a beautiful and complex tapestry that
Lumet has woven for us right before our eyes.
As the manipulative older brother Andy, Philip Seymour Hoffman gives
us another incredible, powerful performance that is simultaneously
raw and unrestrained yet subtly shaded. Andy is a despicable person-
selfish, jealous, manipulative and greedy. Yet throughout Hoffman’s
portrayal, it is hard not to feel sympathy for Andy at certain
points in the film, even if he is the root cause of all the misery
he is going through. At one point in the film he expresses envy for
the clean, clear absolutes of his chosen field of real estate
accounting and laments how, in comparison to the rows and columns of
numbers he deals with on a daily basis, the many sides of himself
that he shows to various people doesn’t seem to add up to a whole
person.
And while Hoffman has perhaps the meatiest role in the film, he in
no way dominates it. Although there is no physical resemblance,
Hawke and Hoffman’s interaction sketch a history between the two
that suggests anything but happy childhoods for the pair. Tomei
manages to find depth and misery for a character who has quickly
become disenchanted with her role as trophy wife.
It would be easy to state that Before The Devil Knows You’re Dead
is a culmination of Lumet’s five decades directing motion pictures,
but it would be the right thing to say about this movie. Many of the
themes he has explored over the years are examined again here, this
time by fusing them together. The familial relations rival those
found in Long Day’s Journey Into Night (1962) or Running
On Empty (1988). While several of Lumet’s films have dealt with
manipulation and betrayal, it has never been done so on such an
intimate level as it exists between Andy and Hank.
“The world is an evil place,” one of the characters is told at a
particular junction of the story. “Some of us make money from it and
some of us are destroyed.” It is not so much an observation but a
warning. Things will end badly for many of the characters here. But
in this instance, it’s the audience who profits. |