Essentially a crime noir thriller with a twist, Paul McGuigan's film is showy and sharp, whose witty dialogue is delivered with a shrug
Lucky # Slevin (2006)
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Reviews Counted:151
Fresh:78
Rotten:73
Average Rating:5.9/10
Consensus: Trying too hard to be clever in a Pulp Fiction kind of way, this film succums to a convoluted plot, overly stylized characters and dizzying set design.
Runtime: 1 hr 50 mins
Genre: Dramas
US Box Office: $22,438,650
Synopsis: Directed by Paul McGuigan, LUCKY NUMBER SLEVIN is a mistaken identity thriller starring Josh Hartnett as a guy who ends up in the wrong place at the wrong time. With boldly colored sets covered in... Directed by Paul McGuigan, LUCKY NUMBER SLEVIN is a mistaken identity thriller starring Josh Hartnett as a guy who ends up in the wrong place at the wrong time. With boldly colored sets covered in graphic wallpaper, the film has an almost comicbook-like feel, the emphasis being on visual entertainment rather than believability. When Slevin (Hartnett) shows up at his friend Nick's apartment in Manhattan, Nick is nowhere to be found. After meeting Nick's sharp and flirty neighbor, Lindsey (Lucy Liu), Slevin is kidnapped by two thugs and taken to meet the Boss (Morgan Freeman). Explaining that he is not Nick gets him nowhere, as the Boss and his arch rival, the Rabbi (Ben Kingsley), both pull Slevin (a wiseguy who spends much of the film in a lavender towel) deeper and deeper into a complicated underworld of murder and revenge. The clever dialogue and romance that grows between Hartnett and Liu gives the film a lighthearted charm. Even when orchestrating cold-blooded murder, the film's lead villains never seem too threatening. This is due in large part to the strong tongue-in-cheek performances of Bruce Willis, Ben Kingsley, and Morgan Freeman. Many of the film's plot twists rely on camera tricks and quick editing, which are used to deliberately confuse the viewer. While the storyline is convoluted and the film falls into a self-explanatory trap near the end, the world of LUCKY NUMBER SLEVIN is never meant to be taken too seriously. Displaying a Tarantino-like self-awareness, the film makes frequent references to James Bond and vintage cinema, and contains such strong visual elements that viewers are forced to notice each character's surroundings. The film is incredibly stylish and old-fashioned in this way, with particular attention paid to each villain's dwelling, and with the production design often saying more than the characters themselves. [More]
Starring: Josh Hartnett, Morgan Freeman, Ben Kingsley, Lucy Liu
Starring: Josh Hartnett, Morgan Freeman, Ben Kingsley, Lucy Liu, Bruce Willis, Oliver Davis, Stanley Tucci, Michael Rubenfeld, Sam Jaeger, Dorian Missick, Kevin Chamberlin
Director: Paul McGuigan
Director: Paul McGuigan
Screenwriter: Jason Smilovic
Producer: Kia Jam
Composer: Joshua Ralph
Studio: Weinstein Company
Reviews for Lucky # Slevin
In the end, Lucky Number Slevin is like that guy you knew in high school who seemed cool and interesting until he opened his mouth.
Forgets the richness of these characters and concentrates on unveiling a series of cheap twists.
Long delay before the film starts to roll. And, though clever, no one delivers in the acting department with any depth (aside from Ben).
A bloodied ledger and brutal gangster on the prowl opens this clever and stylish film and we are queued that whatever the outcome, this is going to be a thriller with a fresh visual approach.
This fun but ultimately disappointing mistaken-identity thriller has style galore, which may actually be the crux of its problem.
The film has no more depth than the M.C. Escher-esque wallpaper that turns each room into a busy sort of moire cage.
As twisty thrillers of the genre go, this one is more than passable. Overanalyzation can spoil the fun -- this is the kind of movie with which it's best to go with the flow.
This crafty indie with a big-budget cast goes from a seemingly paint-by-numbers noirish comic thriller to something entirely more genre-bending. Definitely a ride worth taking.
A crime puzzle that pulls the wool over your eyes with cast talent and a peppy style you'll love... if you don't mind a slashed carotid or two.
Hartnett would seem hard-pressed to carry a basket of laundry, let alone carry a motion picture.
If Lucky Number Slevin was as good as it is clever, we'd be talking four stars here.
Tarantinoid...the machinations are all familiar enough that your unoccupied brain may drift off to wonder how Hartnett's made a career out of bad haircuts.
Don't think too hard when seeing this movie because you'll spoil the surprises.
This mistaken-identity thriller delights in narrative complication and Tarantino-esque self-awareness; it's when the labyrinthine plot starts to make sense, ironically, that the pervasive shallowness becomes a liability.
Tarantino's films work because there is usually some moral code at work, however fallen it might be. By comparison, Slevin is an unsettling exercise in amorality.
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