Like steaks, skyscrapers and long-running sitcoms, the con trick caper is the sort of thing probably best left to the Americans.
Unfortunately, British debut director Marc Munden has a crack at the overheated genre and cooks up a collapsed souffle of a story.
Grifter tales need bluff and counter-bluff as well as the unexpected. The big surprise here is that they were able to con anyone into financing it at all.
In a piece of miscasting that would make Roy Chubby Brown a conservative bet to play the Queen Mother, Christina Ricci stars as the ice cool vamp.
When we first see she's hanging around a condemned public library somewhere in London while librarian Frank (Simm) shoots her loving looks from afar.
Where Miranda (Ricci) should be intriguing us as a sleek sexual predator, she looks more like she's waiting for her mum to pick her up from the bus stop.
Anyway, she agrees to go out with Frank on a date and before you can say "lottery grant" they're testing the load-bearing properties of his sofa.
Frank is smitten...but he doesn't know about Miranda's sleazy mentor Christian (Hurt) or the next "mark" for her career as a con artist - glowering Kyle MacLachan.
If you ignore the clumsy styling, soulless location work and dreadful dialogue, you'll only find yourself getting depressed by a cast who really should know better.
The only one to come out of this with any credit is Julian Rhind-Tutt, whose consistently drole kung-fu obsessed sidekick is about the only example of genuine humour.
"It's the best night I've ever had," a breathless Frank gushes to Miranda. "You should get out more," is the reply - advice worth taking up by anyone planning to see this.
|
|