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Matt Damon makes me wary--I
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smell a hustler. But I can't catch him faking the way I can his buddy Ben
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Affleck or the prodigiously bogus Brad Pitt. No, Damon's a smartie, and
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unquestionably a movie star. Already, he has staked out his own chunk of
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dramatic territory: He's the intellectual who's also a prole, who's arrested
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between the worlds of privilege and the street, who thinks and gets high on
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thinking but who also wrestles with earthier instincts. Are those instincts
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base or noble? A sign of corruption or purity? The conflict is as old as
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melodrama, but Damon makes the lines sound as if he's hammering them out on the
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spot. It's seductive, the way the wheels are always turning behind those small
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eyes, the way he licks his lips to suppress his emotions and then cagily
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examines his options. I can't recall another actor who seems at once so earnest
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and so cunning, so ingenuous yet with something so clearly up his sleeve.
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This
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paradoxical persona serves him gorgeously in Rounders , a snappy and
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ingratiating gambling picture in which Damon plays a character who fleeces
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"suckers" in poker games yet has a fundamental rectitude. His Mike McDermott
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begins by explaining, in a current of voice-over narration that hums through
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the movie, "If you can't spot the sucker in your first half-hour at the table
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then you are the sucker." Losing his life savings to a menacingly fey
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Russian gangster (John Malkovich) in the first 10 minutes, Damon's Mike has you
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rooting for him not only to get payback from the weird Russki but to take what
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he can off anyone dumb enough to sit across a card table from him, accepting
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the rightness of the line "It's immoral to let a sucker keep his money."
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Arounder is defined--in a handy glossary included with my
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press notes--as "[a] player who knows all the angles and earns his living at
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the poker table. The absolute opposite of a 'sucker.' " But Rounders
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makes distinctions among rounders. Mike is supposed to be an honest connoisseur
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of card playing nature, a master whose expertise derives from spotting "tells,"
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from "watching the player, not the cards." On the other hand, his buddy Worm
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(Edward Norton), newly discharged from prison, is a reckless and compulsive
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cheat who gets off on perpetually putting one impudent twinkle toe over the
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line. When Mike attempts to go "straight" by enrolling in law school (!) and
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moving in with a classy blond classmate (Gretchen Mol), Worm emerges from his
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hole to play the snake and lure his old chum back into the game.
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Rounders is an unusually talky movie, but the talk is slick and fast and
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the writers, David Levien and Brian Koppelman, wear their research on their
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sleeves. In fact, the script is a model of research and construction, a real
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summa cum laude effort from the school of screenplay pedant Robert
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McKee. The settings have a density of detail that makes them feel authentic,
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from the Brooklyn basement dens of the Russian mafia to the kitsch palaces of
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Atlantic City to the blue-collar bingo halls of Binghamton, N.Y.; and the
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aforementioned four page glossary is a bounty for urban anthropologists.
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("Alligator Blood: A compliment given to an outstanding player who proves
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himself unflappable under great pressure. ... Snap Off: To beat someone, often
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a bluffer, and usually with a not especially powerful hand.")
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Despite its high-wire subject, though, this is
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not a movie made by gamblers. It's a studied, deliberate, calculating piece of
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work, a formula Go-For-It picture with a jolt of Mean Streets to give it
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some edge. The morality is spoon-fed and self-serving. The writers use Worm to
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rack up debts with the vicious bully Grama (Michael Rispoli), who's sponsored
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by--guess whoski? So Mike plays cards to save his friend's life
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and--climactically, against his old adversary--his own. Although his blonde
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says what all blondes say in this sort of boy-movie setup--variations on "If
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you play cards again, I won't be here when you come home"--his elderly mentor,
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Judge Abe Petrovsky (Martin Landau), assures him he can't run from who he is,
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that "our destiny chooses us." May the Alligator Blood be with you, Luke.
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Rounders was one of those spec scripts that has become legend in
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Hollywood, selling for heaps of cash and attracting big-deal producers and
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stars who boasted that they "didn't have to change a word." Actually, they
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ought to have changed a couple. They might have given the Golden Girl more to
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say than her handful of wet blanket reproaches, and Worm deserved a bigger last
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act. Only my abiding affection for Landau kept me from snickering out loud at
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his rabbinical monologues, in which he explains why he defied his yeshiva more
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than half a century ago and followed his dream by going to law school. (He says
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the one thing he took from yeshiva was to be true to oneself. What tripe! In
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yeshiva, being true to yourself is possible only if you recognize that your
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true self longs to submit to the rule of Torah. It doesn't mean that God is in
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those poker chips.)
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So why do I recommend Rounders ? Because I'm a
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sucker--I was entertained. It's fun to watch these jazzy young actors
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scrutinize their cards and each other and throw around their poker lingo; and
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the director, John Dahl ( The Last Seduction , 1994), gives the picture a
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jaunty tempo and a deep-toned Rembrandt look without ever calling attention to
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his hand. The script is good at making you think that it has better cards than
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it really does. And the actors constitute a royal flush--OK, OK, enough with
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the poker metaphors. The tall, skinny Norton bobs and slits his eyes and twists
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his mouth into a yokel sneer and is wholly impossible to dislike, even when his
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character keeps crazily upping the ante. In the schematic role of a sober,
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family-man gambler called Knish, John Turturro proves that he doesn't always
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need to chew the scenery: Mumbling, hovering, shuffling in the margins, he
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makes you watch him closely to discern his real, complicated feelings.
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And then
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there's Malkovich, who does a Russian mafioso the way Olivier would have done
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one. Start with an accent unlike any heard anywhere on the planet, with
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syllables drawn out so audaciously that you want to applaud every line. He
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doesn't raise you, he rie-yee-zes you, and then informs you, Meester Son Ahv Ay
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Beeeech, that you'll soon see your hups go dow-in the drie-yeen (i.e., your
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hopes go down the drain). He's steeped in Russian melancholy, but he isn't
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pickled--those eyes are hard and mean. He opens an Oreo, holds it to his face,
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and slides his teeth along the cream while raking his opponent with invisible
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bullets. Malkovich is the only person in this potboiler who dares .
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He would have fit right into Touch of
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Evil , which overflows with rococo, mannerist ham acting. The 1958 film has
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been re-released in a new, expanded cut that conforms to a 58 page list of
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suggestions that Orson Welles, its writer-director-star, wrote after viewing
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the studio re-edit. Most of today's so-called "director's cuts" are marketing
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gimmicks, but the people behind this one--producer Rick Schmidlin, editor
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Walter Murch, and critic/consultant Jonathan Rosenbaum among them--deserve some
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kind of Academy Award. Sequences that once were run together by a studio bent
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on linearity are now fractured and intercut in accordance with Welles'
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intentions, and the still-astonishing first shot has been shorn of credits and
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of the Henry Mancini theme that obscured its cacophonous sound mix. Forty years
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late, Touch of Evil has arrived, and it's all of a piece.
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I first saw it when I was 14
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and thought it was one of the worst pictures ever--garish, oppressive, and
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appallingly overacted. Grown up, I'd go with those same adjectives, except now
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I think it's one of the best. But I'm not going to recant my first response.
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Part of recognizing that Touch of Evil is a masterpiece means also
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recognizing that it's often suffocatingly unpleasant, and that Welles is
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working off his aggression for the vast, trash-movie audience that he hoped to
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attract. His compositions are teeming, unbalanced, with a center of gravity
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that lurches left then right. The overlapping dialogue and squealing
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Cuban-African music heard over tinny-sounding radios seems meant to induce a
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migraine to accompany the seasickness.
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Welles isn't just plunging
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his straight-laced hero and heroine (Charlton Heston and Janet Leigh) into the
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squalor and chaos of a Mexican-U.S. border town. He's plunging us, the viewers,
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into it, too. The wide-angle lenses spread the images out obscenely, so that
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the whole movie takes on the sweaty fatness of Welles' Detective Hank Quinlan,
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and our own sense of space is continually violated. The images in Touch of
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E v il have been boiled down so that all its ingredients are mashed
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together in the sludge. It's no wonder that Robert McKee, the spiritual father
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of something like Rounders , reserves a special place in hell for Welles
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and Citizen Kane , in which the exhibitionistic auteur incessantly
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upstages his own narrative. Welles was at the peak of his talent in Touch of
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Evil , but let's never forget what an abrasive, high-wire, self-destructive
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talent he was.
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