LUCKY YOU

C-

Perhaps aficionados of the spectator poker competitions that are so ubiquitous on cable television nowadays will be drawn to Curtis Hanson’s new film—which is actually pretty old, its release having been put off several times while the writer-director tinkered with the final cut. But even they will probably find the tale of a young, ambitious but undisciplined player finding love and smoothing things over with his estranged father at a Las Vegas tournament rather tepid going.

“Lucky You” is a handsome movie, not only in terms of its use of Vegas exteriors, its fine production design (Clay A. Griffith) and art direction (Jason Lester) and slick widescreen cinematography (Peter Deming), but because it stars Eric Bana, a very photogenic fellow, in the lead role. He plays Huck Cheever, a decidedly lean and hungry guy who regularly wins and loses big pots in the Las Vegas casinos, his performance at the tables aided by his innate skill but undermined by a penchant for rash, imprudent bets. His hope of getting a seat in the upcoming World Championship is further endangered by the arrival of his father L.C. (Robert Duvall), a former two-time champ whom he’s never forgiven for abandoning the family, whose return unnerves him more than he’ll admit. But a possibility of redemption also shows up in the form of Billie Offer (Drew Barrymore), a naïve young thing from Bakersfield who shows up in the city to look for a singing gig at one of the local clubs. She and Huck hit it off—though their incipient relationship is soured by his habit of taking her cash for his stake whenever he needs to, and generally of selfishly cutting corners whenever its expedient (as well as by the misgivings of the woman’s older sister, who knows Huck all too well). But she becomes the person who calls him to his better side, which includes coming to terms with his feelings about his father and even making a sacrifice for the older man.

What the picture’s all about, in the end, is a man’s facing up to his past, embracing human relationships over a life of isolation, and tempering the recklessness of youth with the maturity that comes with emotional experience. Which would be well and good, provided that Hanson and co-writer Eric Roth had found a way to make it dramatically compelling. But they haven’t. “Lucky You” is limp and meandering, with thin characters and a flaccid rhythm. Huck’s personal demons are portrayed in the sketchiest terms, and though Bana brings a certain lithe intensity to the part, he’s unable to give the guy real charisma. Similarly, L.C.’s biggest character trait is his vanity—what’s most notable about him is his dyed hair!—and about all Duvall can do to give him a bit of color is to wince and grimace, familiar bits from his bag of tricks. Barrymore is provided even less to work with, and emerges blank and pallid.

Along the way the script tosses in lots of sidebars—Huck’s involvement with a sinister money man (Charles Martin Smith); his camaraderie with a loopy fellow who takes all bets, however absurd (Saverio Guerra); his tense relationship with Billie’s protective sister (Debra Messing). But none of these tangents really goes anywhere or contributes to the larger theme. And the structure of the picture is lackadaisical, partially as result of editing (by Craig Kitson and William Kerr) that never manages to give shape to the proceedings. (There’s a sequence about Huck’s taking a bet with a gambler, played with gusto by Horatio Sanz, that involves his running a marathon and then completing a golf game within three hours, that has promise, but is choreographed so randomly that it loses any punch it might have had.)

Even the poker sequences, which presumably were the raison d’etre of the piece, are curiously lifeless. Partially that’s because the script has to explain what’s happening to those in the audience who might not be experts (at one point in an instruction-book recitation Huck gives to the novice Billie, and then in the competition at the close via that old standby, the play-by-play television announcer). But mostly it’s because they can’t really convey the underlying drama, since they’re necessarily reduced to montages, the final card-toss between the two remaining players, and those repetitive shots of competitors sneaking glances over and over at the two cards they’re holding. (Why would they do that? Certainly they can’t have forgotten what they are.) Even using some real pros in these episodes doesn’t make them seem real. And Bana and Duvall are simply unable to bring enough drive to their generational duel to give it the tension it demands. (Perhaps, like this viewer, you’ll become more and more attached to the only player who’s really fascinating—the bullet-headed Ralph Kaczynski played by John Hennigan—a dour, totally emotionless guy who might be auditioning for a role in a David Lynch movie.) The last-act reconciliations—Huck with L.C., Huck with Billie—don’t carry much electricity, either.

The supporting cast of “Lucky You” is rich in unrealized promise: Messing and Smith are pretty much wasted, and Robert Downey, Jr. shows up for a cameo which is basically a one-joke gag; Sanz and Guerra, meanwhile, act like refugees from a TV sketch comedy. The only actor, in fact, who leaves you wanting more is Michael Shannon, who makes the most of two short scenes as an especially nasty foe of Huck’s.

Though Hanson is a talented filmmaker, and presumably a devotee of the tables, he hasn’t been able to bring this story to life. And you can’t simply argue that card games are naturally uncinematic—after all, in the mid-sixties both “The Cincinnati Kid” and “A Big Hand for the Little Lady” got reasonably good mileage out of poker games, though in very different ways. But here, it seems a tedious pastime indeed, at least from the outside looking in. The pronoun in the title obviously doesn’t refer to the viewer.

SPIDER-MAN 3

Grade: C

Sam Raimi made Spider-Man swing in the first two installments of this mega-series—the 2002 original was excellent, and the 2004 sequel even better, one of the best super-hero movies ever made. But in the comics the Web-Slinger has occasionally lost his grip and come crashing to earth, and that’s what happens here, too. As if to prove the old adage that bigger isn’t necessarily better, “Spider-Man 3” is both overstuffed and undernourished, with a plethora of villains and too many extraneous sequences (some of them positively embarrassing). Even most of the necessary scenes go on too long, and many of the action set-pieces (most notably the elaborate finale) are overly reminiscent of those from the earlier pictures. The best one can say of it is that it works hard to tie up all the loose ends from the initial two films, but unhappily it does so without a similar sense of enjoyment and simple flair. By comparison to “Spider-Man” and especially “Spider-Man 2,” this is a major disappointment.

Plot-wise the new picture continues to adhere to the pattern established in the “Superman” movies: the first episode was the origins story, and the second the one in which the hero hangs up his tights but then puts them on again when danger demands it. Now the third “Spidey” has the hero, like the Man of Steel in “Superman 3,” forced to face his own evil side. The means of bringing this about is to lift the Venom scenario from the comics, with Spider-Man (Tobey Maguire) first affected by the aggression-inducing “symbiote” from space that turns his costume black and his personality nasty, and then—after he manages to divest himself of the parasite—the oily goo attaching itself instead to disgraced photojournalist Eddie Brock (Topher Grace) who, blaming Spidey’s civilian self Peter Parker for his humiliation, aims to destroy him.

This was actually a good choice of plot for the third picture, and it provides a few fine moments, most notably the church tower sequence in which Parker rips the symbiote from his body—an agonizing process—and it takes over Brock instead. Had the story been treated throughout with equal depth, it could have achieved real mythic power. But instead the script by Raimi and his brother Ivan dilutes it, shortchanging Grace, who’s not terribly well cast in the part but might have invested Brock/Venom with more personality if given the opportunity, and portraying the alien’s effect on Parker in ways that don’t work at all. The shots of “bad-boy” Peter strutting down the street, ogling every passing girl and showing off his stuff, may have had their intended comic effect if they’d lasted thirty seconds or so, but Raimi returns to them so often that they become tiresomely unfunny. (It’s almost as though they were padding in a picture that, at 140 minutes, doesn’t need any.) But even worse is the elaborate sequence in which Parker, to demean his girlfriend Mary Jane (Kirsten Dunst), from whom he’s temporarily estranged, brings another girl, Gwen Stacy (a bland Bruce Dallas Howard), to the bar where MJ’s working, and then indulges is an absurdly athletic (and nearly endless) dance. Maybe it was intended to give Maguire a chance to show off, but it just stops the movie dead in its tracks and may well leave you slack-jawed.

And that’s not the only example of misguided musical decisions in “Spider-Man 3.” A good deal of the romantic plot thread with MJ is devoted to her disappointing singing career, which not only gives Dunst the opportunity to sing two numbers (poorly) but turns her character into a whiny, self-pitying drag one for much of the running-time—a part Dunst, quite peevish and shrill here, fills all too convincingly. And as if that weren’t enough, at one point MJ, feeling abandoned by Peter, visits Harry Osborn (blankly grinning James Franco)—another holdover from the previous installments—with whom Parker must eventually come to terms over Osborn’s desire to take vengeance against Spider-Man for killing his father in the first film. (To do so, Harry takes on the identity of the Green Goblin, his dad’s old villainous alter-ego.) And in a sequence that plays like an out-take, Mary Jane and Harry indulge in dancing the twist while preparing breakfast—a routine that, like Maguire’s in the bar, goes on interminably.

The basic Venom plot is further undercut by a decision to add yet a third villain to the mix (a misjudgment comparable to the one that doomed the various sequels in the initial “Batman” series). This one is Sandman, the alter-ego of escaped con Flint Marko (Thomas Haden Church, curiously anonymous), who turns out to be the actual killer of Parker’s Uncle Ben. The whole plot thread involving him is not only anemic, despite some pretty good effects for the character, but too weepy, involving as it does Peter’s ultimate coming to terms with his surrogate father’s death and replacing his desire for revenge with forgiveness. If handled sensitively, this aspect of the story could have had some real dramatic resonance. As it is, though, it’s played mawkishly, with too many scenes of characters tearing up at the drop of a hat. One of the strengths of the earlier pictures in the series was that they had heart as well as humor and action. But here while the ingredients may be the same, this time they’re miscalculated and badly mixed: too often the heart becomes bathos, the humor strained farce, and the action mere bombast.

Of course, there are still sequences that are rousing, if overlong. An initial battle with Osborn opens the picture with a roller-coaster-like ride, a sequence involving a runaway crane is impressive if somewhat plastic, and a couple of confrontations with Sandman show some imagination. But what’s intended as the piece de resistance—a big battle in the final reel, with Harry, Sandman and Venom all involved with Spidey as a captive Mary Jane dangles in a car high above the city streets—will be awfully familiar to anyone who knows the original “Spider-Man.” And it seems endless.

Throughout, it must be said, Maguire still shows himself an actor of considerable charm, even when forced to do those smug saunters down the streets or that misconceived dance bit. To be sure, he sometimes overplays the boyish naivete, and one wishes the script hadn’t demanded him to indulge in quite so many tear-jerking moments. But overall he keeps Peter a likable fellow in his natural state, and seems to be having more fun playing the young man’s dark side than we have watching him do so.

But he doesn’t get much support from Dunst, Franco, Church, Grace or Howard, and those further down the cast listing don’t fare all that well, either. Rosemary Harris, as Aunt May, and J.K. Simmons, as Jonah Jameson, merely repeat their bits from previous installments, with diminishing returns; the later in particular is stuck with farcical material that’s definitely second-rate. And joke bits from Raimi confederates don’t carry the punch that was clearly intended. The inevitable Bruce Campbell shows up for a comic cameo as a maitre d’ in a French restaurant, which comes off nicely at first but, as usual, is overextended. But the performance of the cadaverous John Paxton (Bill’s father), as Harry’s butler Houseman is disastrous, several steps below amateur level. His presence is all the more painful in that James Cromwell, who could have brought some real panache to the role (as he did to Prince Philip in “The Queen”), is instead wasted in a nothing part as Gwen’s policeman father. And the seemingly obligatory cameo by Stan Lee is even more tiresome usual; only the most devoted fanboy will react positively to yet another appearance by the old ham.

Technically, of course, “Spider-Man 3” is accomplished; any movie whose budget exceeds a quarter billion dollars should be. But even in this respect it’s somewhat of a disappointment after the second installment. In Part Deux, as in the first picture, there was a certain degree of restraint in the effects sequences, and they were handled very smoothly, even if they could never be termed realistic. Here one gets the sense that the makers are trying to overwhelm viewers with their CGI magic, perhaps to distract from the movie’s more fundamental weaknesses. Unfortunately, the emphasis on them merely accentuates their flaws. In this, as in so much else in the picture, a more sparing approach would have been the wiser course. And a final weakness may be noted. The first two “Spider-Man” movies were marked by excellent scores by Danny Elfman. But here Elfman’s been replaced by Christopher Young, whose contribution is far less engaging and effective, workmanlike rather than inspired. That’s somehow characteristic of the overall decline this film represents.

Of course, “Spider-Man 3” will be a smash hit, and will rake in big bucks. But in terms of quality the trajectory of the series proves to be like that of the original “Superman” movies, or even the first “Star Wars” trilogy, in which the initial installment was good, the second even finer, and the third a distinct letdown. Let’s just hope that if the franchise continues, it won’t fall to the level of “Superman 4” or “The Phantom Menace.”