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Trigonometry
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Imagine a long lighted fuse
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that snakes down corridors, winds around corners, slithers up and down stairs,
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doubles back on itself, and finally arrives at an impressive-looking explosive
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device. Kaboom? No. Out comes a tiny flag with a sign reading, "Bang!" So goes
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Brian De Palma's Snake Eyes , a thriller of serpentine excitement all the
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way up to that dud of a climax. The preview audience left muttering darkly, and
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no one at the pizza joint next-door could say enough nasty things. But I'll bet
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that 30 minutes earlier those people were entranced. I was. De Palma is like a
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single-minded physics wizard who, with every new picture, sets out to
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demonstrate a different spatial/temporal theorem. The way Matt Damon scrawls
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breathlessly on a chalkboard in Good Will Hunting --that's the way De
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Palma makes a thriller, piling on angles, variables, fractions, exponents. Now
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De Palma needs to learn that the kind of payoff that dazzles a math professor
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doesn't always give an audience that ultimate, explosive charge.
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The
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movie's first 20 minutes is its premise--its mathematical "given." It's a
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single, 20 minute tracking shot that holds on Atlantic City Detective Rick
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Santoro (Nicolas Cage) as he bounds around the arena that's the site of a
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heavyweight championship fight. Sporting a loud orange rayon jacket with a
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Hawaiian shirt, the brazenly corrupt Santoro pummels a bookie (Luis Guzmán) and
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extorts a wad of cash, hollers encouragement to the rabbit-punching champ (Stan
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Shaw), and gives high-fives to his righteous-dude buddy, Navy Cmdr. Kevin Dunne
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(Gary Sinise), assigned to protect the visiting Secretary of Defense (Joel
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Fabiani). De Palma holds on Santoro even when the bout begins and the crowd
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goes nuts at what they see (but we can't)--and even when shots ring out and
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blood begins to gush from the secretary of Defense's throat.
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All the details De Palma withholds in that first showoff
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sequence he provides in the next hour: the fight, which a video replay suggests
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was "thrown"; the secretary's barely heard conversation with a blond
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"bystander" (Carla Gugino) who has glancingly caught one of the bullets; and
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the comings and goings of a mysterious woman with red hair and lots of cleavage
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and a wild man with a radio earpiece who shouts at the champ that he's going
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down, he's going down. The more perspectives the sleazy Santoro gets, the more
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he understands what actually happened "before his very eyes"--and the more
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unhinged he becomes at the prospect of having to be a hero.
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Snake
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Eyes takes place more or less in real time, and in one giant megastructure:
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The arena is attached to a hotel and casino, and outside rages a hurricane
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(Jezebel) that keeps the cast of characters indoors. This gives the movie an
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astonishing concentration. The hotel is a hothouse maze: The tacky décor is
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oppressive, the images shot a little too close, the camera angles skewed to
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induce vertigo.
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Here's an example of how De Palma works: The
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villain is searching for a young woman (Gugino), who, trapped in the
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hotel-casino, has pretended to be a whore, latched onto a fat man at a gaming
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table, and disappeared with him into his room. The villain knows she's on the
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35 th floor, and De Palma tracks with him down a long, tacky corridor
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as he moves from door to door, listening for her voice. The director cuts to
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Cage, riding up in an elevator, talking to a buddy in security. The buddy is
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screening a videotape of the fat man at the gaming table and zeroing in on the
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guy's wallet, trying to read his name, so that he can call the desk and find
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out the man's room number and tell Cage so that Cage can get there before the
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villain gets there. Now it's back to the villain, who stands outside another
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door, listening. Hot-dog that De Palma is, he cuts to an overhead shot, and his
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camera begins to move, gazing down at the bad guy in the corridor and then the
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inside of the room he's in front of (a couple is fooling around) and then the
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room after that (a man is sleeping) and then the room after that--which holds,
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voilà , the fat man and the girl. But there's another variable, another
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time bomb: The fat man expects sex, the girl doesn't want to give it to him,
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and he's trying to throw her out despite her protests that her life is in
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danger. Now the elevator door opens and Cage arrives at the 35 th
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floor--and now he and the villain are moving in opposite directions down the
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corridor, converging on the room where the increasingly frantic girl is being
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pushed toward certain doom ...
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Yes, it's mechanical, even
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metronomical, but thrillers are built out of wheels and pulleys and ticking
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clocks, and De Palma's machines are more intricate than anyone's since
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Hitchcock. And just when you think that he has run out of variables--that he
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can't possibly introduce another element, another angle--he'll suddenly split
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the screen and present you with two tumultuous frames instead of one. The
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score, by Ryuichi Sakamoto, is full of post-Romantic film noir gloom, but
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Sakamoto also introduces a more modern, free-floating anxiety, a New Age dread
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that deepens the horror--that takes it out of the whodunit class and into the
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"Can we ever believe what we see?" league of Rashomon .
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Snake Eyes could have
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been another De Palma masterpiece instead of a bummer on the order of
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Mission: Impossible (1996). But it never transcends its (glorious)
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elements. Santoro's high-tech odyssey and the movie's themes don't intersect as
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they did in Blow Out (1981), and the climax doesn't unify the movie's
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visuals--the way the angled escalators in the shootout of Carlito's Way
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(1993) were like a grand, trigonometric punch line. The screenwriter, David
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Koepp ( Carlito's Way , Jurassic Park [1993]) gives De Palma what
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he wants but no more--a blueprint, and not an especially witty or resourceful
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one. That leaves Cage, who in contrast to Koepp gives everything he has and
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then some, humanizing the film with his trademark goofy exuberance. Betrayed,
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humiliated, beaten to a pulp, he limps along a snakelike corridor toward that
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final confrontation with the bad guy--and then a deus ex machina robs
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him of his finest hour. De Palma leaves him all bloodied up with no place to
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go.
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