

All that was felt was a hollow sludge pile of something trying to create meaning and a message under the guise of chaos, but it never works. Some may say it’s for the purpose of tension, the constant bickering and noises, yet I never felt an ounce of tension. A film that made me consider getting up and leaving, due to the incomprehensible chopped-up nature of the edit. From an Ethiopian mine, of which he wishes to gain a truck load of money from.Ĭoming off of the success of Good Time, the Safdie brothers have delivered an absolute incoherent mess of a film. A matter of multiple gambling schemes get Howard into trouble, he makes somewhat treacherous moves in betraying trust to earn for himself. Recently he came into knowing of a gem, a black opal. He is a gambler, a gambler like no other and this has an impact on his hectic New York life. Check out my video review with scenes from the film by clicking the link above.ĭo you plan to see Uncut Gems? Let us know what you think.Howard Ratner (Adam Sandler) is the owner of a showroom, based in the Diamond District in Manhatten, New York City. Producers are Scott Rudin, Sebastian Bear-McClard, Oscar Boyston and Eli Bush. This project took about a decade for the Safdies to realize it finally onscreen.
#Uncut gems review movie#
They certainly lend authenticity to a movie so atmospheric in its place and time that you can just smell it. The cast is first-rate down the line and also includes LaKeith Stanfield as a guy who brings in well-heeled potential customers to Howard, along with Eric Bogosian and a lot of non-pros who are the real deal straight out of the fictional Howard’s world. And considering its length, they keep you right on the edge for the entire time in such a way that I was astonished that any film could keep up such a relentless and demanding pace. Josh and Benny Safdie and co-writer/editor Ronald Bronstein have cooked up a corker of a film, and an all-timer of a role for Sandler, who has been great in the past in stuff like Punch Drunk Love and The Meyerowitz Stories but never this great before. There are excursions there, as well as family dinners, but the thrust of all this takes place in his store, where it all threatens to come crashing down on him. He also has a wife (Idina Menzel) who hates him and a side dish named Julia (the excellent newcomer Julia Fox) who he keeps in a spare apartment in town. All the while Ratner, per usual, is being pursued by creditors and those he owes a ton of money for his past indiscretions. Soon enough he has basketball superstar Kevin Garnett (playing himself in fine deadpan style) interested in it, even letting him take it out for a spin. This time, though, this new-age Willy Loman knows he has got the goods on its way, that diamond, and he thinks it has to be worth at least a million. ‘Uncut Gems’ Red Band Trailer: Adam Sandler Finds Brilliance and Luster In High Stakes Crime Thriller How is that for an beginning? It only gets better, if not weirder, from there as we take a dive into Ratner’s world as a crafty diamond dealer who is his own worst enemy, blowing whatever money he makes on wildly indulgent but confident sports betting. What can you say about a movie that opens like some weird epic set in Ethiopia among diamond cutters in that country? Soon we are following the ultimate opal diamond on its surreal, Felliniesque journey with dazzling visuals as it twists and turns its way across the planet - finally landing inside, wait for it, Howard Ratner’s bowels as he is in the midst of a colonoscopy. It also happens to be a quintessential and gorgeous paean to the city itself. It is probably not for everyone, but tune into its delirious rhythms and you will not be able to resist. So take Good Time and ratchet it up a bit, throw in a sound mix with overlapping dialogue right out of Altman, set your star loose, and what you have is the brew of this highly original and compelling piece of cinema. The same came be said for the Safdie brothers’ movie, which feels akin to their equally abrasive and insanely paced Good Time, which also featured a performance from its star (Robert Pattinson) that knocked you off your seat. It is as dizzyingly great a piece of acting as I have seen all year, one that will exhaust you and exhilarate you. At nearly two and a half hours, Sandler almost never is off screen, giving a performance that, in terms of toxic intensity, starts at a 10 and goes up from there, never once coming up for air.
