Reindeer Games (2000)
Director: John Frankenheimer
Movie review
From Time Out Film Guide
Frankenheimer's twisty thriller feels like a film from the mid-'60s, albeit one with a '50s B noir set-up and a Runyon-esque turns: it's Yuletide and there are several dead Santas. The widescreen, deep focus compositions and long takes give free rein to the actors, whose natural performances are curiously at odds with the arch clever-cleverness of the screenplay. Too complicated to summarise, the plot has Affleck leaving prison and being lured into an amateurish casino heist by Theron, a femme fatale masquerading as a wholesome blue collar girl. Affleck is too lightweight and likeable to convince as a hardened criminal, but Theron shows her claws as the white trash wildcat and, as her violent, psychotic 'brother', Sinise adds a nasty edge. There are enjoyable moments, not least the hungry love-making of Affleck and Theron shortly after his release. Filmed with handheld cameras and edited as jump cuts, the scene is far from explicit but looks and feels like two people having raunchy sex. By contrast, the action scenes are flaccid, while all the snappy dialogue sounds just that: snappy movie dialogue.Author: NF
Cast & crew
Director: John Frankenheimer
Producer: Marty Katz, Bob Weinsten, Chris Moore
Cast: Ben Affleck, Gary Sinise, Charlize Theron, Dennis Farina, James Frain, Donal Logue, Clarence Williams III, Dana Stubblefield, Mark Acheson, Isaac Hayes full cast
Genre(s): Thrillers
Duration: 104 mins
Most popular on this site
Features
Holiday gift guide
Instructions on how to get your own customized soda machine (and other, slightly more rational gifts for your film-loving friends).
Holiday film preview
Are you more interested in seeing the Daniel Craig movie, the Steven Soderbergh movie or the Freddy Rodriguez movie? Answer carefully.
Boyle's orders
The director of Slumdog Millionaire talks about the joys of filming on the cheap in India after having worked under Hollywood's thumb.
Time and again
Wong Kar-wai spruces up his underseen martial-arts epic, Ashes of Time.
Mergers and acquisitions
A new deal between the Underground Film Festival and IFP pays off.
Chicago Festival of Israeli Cinema
The films we previewed offer very few reasons to kvetch.



What do you think?
Post your review now