21
Jim Sturgess Actor , Kevin Spacey Actor , Kate Bosworth Actor , Aaron Yoo Actor , Liza Lapira Actor
MPAA Rating:
PG13
Contains:Violence,Brief Nudity,Sexual Situations
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Overview
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Cast & Production Credits
21
Theatrical Release Date: 2008 03 28 (USA)
UPC: 043396267183
Studio: Sony Pictures
MPAA Rating: PG13 Contains:[Violence, Brief Nudity, Sexual Situations]
Summary: Director Robert Luketic adapts Ben Mezrich's best-seller Bringing Down the House: The Inside Story of Six M.I.T. Students Who Took Vegas for Millions to tell the true-life tale of six genius students who used their brains to beat considerable odds. Ben Campbell (Jim Sturgess) may be shy, but his wallflower reputation betrays his inner brilliance. As smart as Ben may be, however, if he can't pay his tuition he'll be kicked out of M.I.T. Fortunately, the answer to all of Ben's problems is right there in the cards. Recruited to join a team of extremely gifted students who have used their mastery of numbers to beat the odds at blackjack, Ben procures a fake identity in order to join the casino scammers and their brilliant leader -- eccentric math professor and stats genius Micky Rosa (Kevin Spacey) -- in some highly profitable weekend excursions to Las Vegas. Counting cards isn't illegal, and by using a complex series of signals, this team has cracked the code. Of course, it doesn't take long for Ben to become seduced by the glamorous Las Vegas lifestyle, and the attention afforded to him by his sexy teammate Jill Taylor (Kate Bosworth) finds him pushing his luck to the absolute limits. Laurence Fishburne stars as Cole Williams, the Sin City security chief who catches on to the group and makes it his mission to expose their lucrative blackjack scam. ~ Jason Buchanan, Rovi
Category: Thriller
Awards: Film Presented – SXSW
Features:
cc
21: The Advantage Player - The cast explains the game of blackjack and card counting
Basic Strategy: A complete film journal - Making-of featurette
Money Plays: A tour of the good life - Featurette that explores the clothes, luxuries and locations shown in the film
Filmmaker commentary
21
Format: DVD
Release Date: 07/22/2008
Aspect Ratio: 2.40:1 2.40:1
Audio: DD5.1 Dolby Digital 5.1
Runtime: 123 Minutes
Sides: 1
Number of Discs: 1
Language(s) English,French,Spanish
Subtitles: English,French,Spanish
Region: USA & territories, Canada
Chapters:
Disc #1 -- 21
1. Chapter 1 [4:11]
2. Chapter 2 [3:48]
3. Chapter 3 [4:14]
4. Chapter 4 [4:21]
5. Chapter 5 [6:54]
6. Chapter 6 [2:46]
7. Chapter 7 [2:57]
8. Chapter 8 [2:46]
9. Chapter 9 [4:01]
10. Chapter 10 [4:48]
11. Chapter 11 [2:59]
12. Chapter 12 [4:18]
13. Chapter 13 [3:31]
14. Chapter 14 [3:58]
15. Chapter 15 [5:31]
16. Chapter 16 [3:03]
17. Chapter 17 [2:56]
18. Chapter 18 [5:33]
19. Chapter 19 [4:02]
20. Chapter 20 [5:22]
21. Chapter 21 [7:49]
22. Chapter 22 [4:54]
23. Chapter 23 [3:09]
24. Chapter 24 [4:19]
25. Chapter 25 [2:48]
26. Chapter 26 [3:41]
27. Chapter 27 [4:48]
28. Chapter 28 [8:51]
Nathan Southern
Some stories lend themselves effortlessly to film, and Ben Mezrich's nonfiction tome Bringing Down the House: The Inside Story of Six M.I.T. Students Who Took Vegas for Millions marks no exception. Even the headlines engendered by this tale sang a biting, irreverent ode to the wiles of a half-dozen underdog co-eds who managed to beat the evil "system" at its own game through sheer cunning and frightening intelligence. How can one make an unexciting film out of this material? In sum, one cannot; if a "foolproof" film story exists, this is it. It may be the most entertaining blackly comic anti-American fable since the Boyce-Lee account that inspired John Schlesinger's The Falcon and the Snowman. As a result, Robert Luketic's drama 21 (adapted, very loosely, from Mezrich's book) feels eminently thrilling and watchable almost by default. Never once does it fail to hook the audience. And yet, in retrospect, the film clocks in as a missed opportunity on many levels, with more than a handful of aching flaws. Luketic qualifies as a competent journeyman director at best, and he's never even come close to topping the sugar-sweet whimsy of his underrated romantic fable Win a Date With Tad Hamilton! (2004). Here, his ham-fisted approach proves that he's absolutely the wrong person to helm this material (a fact evident as early as the disastrous prologue - a bizarre, post-MTV whirlwind trip up and down the surfaces of CG-drawn gaming tables, where massive CG gaming chips fly across the screen). Luketic skirts through many sequences courtesy of flashy montages, pounding the audience repeatedly with blaring, deafening walls of music that bear no connection to the events on-screen, and images that do little to communicate anything of significance or even move the narrative forward satisfactorily. Preserving the approach of Mezrich's book, the Allan Loeb-Peter Steinfeld script makes a wise decision by honing in on a single protagonist - Ben Campbell (Jim Sturgess as an ideally-cast everyman). Steinfeld and Loeb immediately enable the audience to understand the universally empathetic motivations that would lure this straight-shooter into an 'underground' collegiate gambling ring: with an inability to make his dreams happen by paying for $300,000 in tuition to Harvard Medical School, and a slim chance of landing a 1 in 78 scholarship that will give him a free ride to the said institution, does he have any other option? And could we feel any less than completely in synch with him? As Professor Mickey Rosa, the leader of the said ring, Kevin Spacey achieves something close to perfection; drawing from some of the same cocky and intransigent notes that he sounded in Swimming With Sharks, and yet wrapping them in a veil of sly, unctuous, come-hither temptation, his Mickey is a perfect Mephistopheles figure for these unwitting, impressionable, and deftly-manipulated co-eds. The film scores a bull's-eye in its early passages as it sets up the logic for the events to follow, and Luketic and his production designers make an inspired decision by giving us an ontological environment where clandestine spheres (such as the nocturnal classroom where Professor Rosa "instructs," and a Chinese betting parlor that literally lies underground) seem to exist just beyond the confines of sunlit normalcy. The drama falters, however, once the students hit Vegas; if material such as this sings, we need to feel the lure - the dirty, acid-infused kick - of the gambling, along with Ben and his cohorts. Instead, the first several scenes in Glitter Gulch (in addition to feeling numbingly repetitive) have a limp, half-assed quality that bogs the film and the audience down. Never once do Luketic and his screenwriters pull the audience into the exciting gradual build of Ben & co.'s progressions from aspiring gamblers to instantaneous millionaires. (Most of the time, we aren't even sure how much they've accumulated, and throughout, Luketic skimps on one of the sauciest details - the ensemble's employment of clever disguises to evade pit bosses). The film's second half seriously strains credibility. The surprises will not be disclosed here, but let it be said that Luketic and his screenwriters interpolate several twists and double-crosses that make the film feel like an ersatz, fifth-rate David Mamet thriller. It may have all happened exactly like this, but it rings false and seems to bear little correlation to real life. The film also suffers from a massive tonal problem in its second half. According to the book, these students got away with millions, but that isn't the impression that Luketic gives us at the conclusion. Instead, the director and screenwriter launder the ending by implying that the students (particularly the character of Ben) didn't really end up wrangling all that much from Vegas. We can recognize that implication as false from even the subtitle of Mezrich's book. Luketic is deliberately vague about the conclusion; he even spares us a final title card giving us the satisfactory knowledge of what happened to each character - the saving grace in a movie like this. The false implications of the concluding scenes are a real shame, because they defeat the film's ability to function as a guilty-pleasure thriller where we root for a bunch of underdogs who manage to screw the system from inside out and thwart the doings of the vile pit bosses. (We end up feeling that they haven't gotten away with anything). At least the movie has the casino bouncers right: tonally, much of the tension in the picture originates via the enlistment of Laurence Fishburne, cast as Cole Williams, the head honcho at one of the Vegas casinos. As that character - a great fire-breathing bull of a man who teaches card-counters a lesson by carting each one off to a subterranean warehouse, donning several gem-studded rings on one hand, and then viscerally beating each perpetrator within an inch of permanent brain damage - Fishburne practically commands the production. Much of the first half of the movie does seem to be pointing to a tale in which a bunch of crafty students pull off a big one and in the process, out-manipulate some thoroughgoing bastards who really deserve it. And up until the last 40 minutes, that's more or less what we get - thanks in no small part to the loathsomeness of Fishburne's characterization and Sturgess's everyman affability. But in the end, we're given an unsatisfactorily "moral" conclusion in which we don't even quite know what the moral is (Don't manipulate Vegas casinos??). Moreover, the events of the last few scenes (which seem to negate everything that has preceded them) undercut our sense, throughout the movie, that Ben Campbell has benefited immensely from the casino experience - both fiscally, and psychologically as well, by honing his identity and escaping from his lackluster life for the first time. That sudden contradiction is a difficult pill to swallow after watching the first 2/3 of this movie. In the final analysis, the prospect of watching this tale and remaining genuinely interested in the on-screen events may be an automatic, but this feels like yet another example of Hollywood's ultra-reactionary tendency to shy away from anti-establishment themes at the risk of offending or alienating part of the audience. Didn't they realize that the behavior of Cole Williams is offensive enough to sway just about everyone? ~ Nathan Southern, All Movie Guide
Cast and Crew:
Kevin Spacey
Producer
Michael De Luca
Producer
William S. Beasley
Executive Producer
Brett Ratner
Executive Producer
Peter Steinfeld
Screenwriter
Robert Luketic
Director
Dana Brunetti
Producer
Ryan Kavanaugh
Executive Producer
Allan Loeb
Screenwriter
David Sardy
Composer (Music Score)
Jim Sturgess
Actor
Kevin Spacey
Actor
Kate Bosworth
Actor
Aaron Yoo
Actor
Liza Lapira
Actor
Jacob Pitts
Actor
Laurence Fishburne
Actor
Jack McGee
Actor
Josh Gad
Actor
Sam Golzari
Actor
Helen Carey
Actor
Jack Gilpin
Actor
Donna Lows
Actor
Butch Williams
Actor
Jeffrey Ma
Actor
Frank Patton
Actor
Steven Richard Vezina
Actor
Chaska T. Werner
Actor
Kyle D. Morris
Actor
Ernell Manabat
Actor
Frankie DeAngelo
Actor
Marcus Weiss
Actor
Anthony DiMaria
Actor
Christopher Holley
Actor
Scott Clark Beringer
Actor
Terasa Livingstone
Actor
Jeff Dashnaw
Actor
Colin Angle
Actor
Supriya Chakrabarti
Actor
Bradley Thoennes
Actor
Kieu Chinh
Actor
Alice Lo
Actor
Sally Livingston
Actor
Henry Houh
Actor
Frank Chen
Actor
Spencer Garrett
Actor
Celeste Oliva
Actor
Tom McGowan
Actor
Ruby Hondros
Actor
Christian Mello
Actor
Greg Seymore
Actor
Country: USA

