Plans
Rebecca Pidgeon has her work cut out for her. Most of
her time on screen these days is spent delivering her
husband David Mamet's trademark rat-a-tat dialogue.
This is no small feat. It's a rhythmic and
performative effort, you know, to make Mamet's taut,
insinuating language -- and especially, the
repetition, the repetition -- sound like it's coming
from a human being's mouth. No doubt, this is the
challenge and the delight of doing Mamet, on stage or
in movies, to wrestle with his words, to slip into his
pauses, to make them all seem like yours. Some critics
have called Mamet's language inherently masculine, and
it's true that it is male actors who are most
definitively identified with his work: Joe Mantegna
and William H. Macy come to mind (and both together,
in Homicide -- what a treat!). But many others,
male and female, have down swinging. The man's work is
hard.
And so Pidgeon might be commended for coming back to
it again and again. And this time, in Heist,
she's considerably less stilted than she has been (in,
for instance, The Spanish Prisoner), and even
plays sultry, in what seems a perversely perky way.
And she has serious reason to have her game on,
considering her costars. She plays Fran, married to
Joe (Gene Hackman), a sometime boat-builder who
supports this rather non-lucrative habit by stealing
stuff, really big, expensive stuff, with his partner
Bobby (Delroy Lindo) and their utility man, Pinky
(Ricky Jay). As the film opens, the four of them are
on a job, robbing a jewelry store; things go wrong, in
a pretty spectacular way: the scene moves quickly,
with considerably less language than you usually hear
in a Mamet scene, because everyone is so busy trying
to keep the imminent disaster under some control.
This blunder means that Joe, who was hoping to retire
to an island with his beautiful young wife, is in for
one more job (isn't that always the way?), because
they owe front money to their fence, Bergman (Danny
DeVito). The team -- particularly Joe and Bobby -- are
reluctant to go again; they map things out carefully,
and the big job that Bergman is pushing them to do is
looking shaky. Worse, much worse, he wants them to
take along his cocky nephew, the ignominiously labeled
Jimmy Silk (Sam Rockwell). Clearly, everything in this
Last Job is set up to go wrong.
Like most caper films, this one follows a fairly
predictable route. Save for the details of which
twists will come when, caper films pretty much do what
they do: they're always about plans -- initial plans,
foiled plans, and new plans. In Heist, the
characters follow suit: they make plans, betray each
other, play with gadgets, deal with surprises, make
more plans, and in the end, some characters are killed
or punished, and one or two get off, because they plan
better than everyone else, or maybe just have
incredibly good luck that they turn into better plans.
To change up the formula just a bit, Heist adds
some noirish elements, such that the men have
murky motives and limited vision, the femme is
mostly fatale, and, as Mamet has said, the plot
involves both violence and irony. You just can't plan
for everything, much as you think you can.
The last big job involves a whole lot of Swiss gold
being shipped from an airport, and so there is some
amount of security -- technology and armed guards --
to manage. Together, Joe, Bobby, and Pinky are a
well-oiled machine, and the addition of Jimmy, no
surprise, causes tension: the pros think he's a
"fucking cowboy." He swaggers, he slouches, he mouths
off. And then he spoils one of their early recon
excursions, causing Joe to be spotted by a cop: "Now I
got my face on a cereal box," he grumps. When Sam
promises, "I'm gonna be as quiet as an ant pissing on
cotton," Joe only snarls, "I want you as quiet as an
ant not even thinking about pissing on cotton."
Colorful.
As this bit of banter demonstrates, Heist
revisits Mamet's usual thematic ground -- the ways
that men behave with one another, their aggressions
and apprehensions, their unself-conscious brutality
and hyperconscious posing. The guys Mamet makes are
all salesmen in some way, whether they're gamblers or
thieves or actual executives. They're selling some
idea of themselves, to one another, yes, but also to
themselves. That their slick maneuvers and manly
contests most often take verbal forms is what makes
Mamet so Mamet. It's a good thing, but it is a limited
thing.
And still, there's the girl. Always an issue in
Mamet, she's dishonest or naive, she's selfish or less
sure of herself than she needs to be. Fran is all of
these things at various points in Heist, as
well as a prize the men think they're playing for,
even as, at the same time, the money is the most
important prize, the one they will not walk away from,
no matter what. When Bergman asks Jimmy, "As rational
men, don't we have to distrust her?", snarky little
nephew is sure enough of his dick size that he agrees
to test her "sincerity," but only because she's a
means to the end. Joe knows she's good on her feet and
he's proud: "She could talk her way out of a sunburn."
But she's up against a battalion of guys. Is Jimmy as
dumb as he looks? Is Joe as in love as he looks? And
is Bobby really as tight with all these untrustworthy
white folks as he looks?
Heist revisits a lot of old turf, but brings the welcome dimension of Hackman, Lindo, and Jay, all
supple, magnetic performers, experts at seeming
ordinary. You don't see them act. Instead, each seems
to inhabit a movie's space and time like an old but
still stylish suit; it looks really good, tailored and
precise, but worn and comfortable. And so these guys
push past the flat, emotionless line deliveries that
usually characterize Mamet's direction. His language,
severe and spare, actually sounds quite human coming
from their mouths.