An admirable but not
entirely successful attempt at transplanting classic film-noir themes into a hip ’70s
milieu, this downbeat detective thriller features the peculiar pairing of
delicate Gallic beauty Catherine Deneuve and suave Deep South stud Burt
Reynolds. The fact that these actors don’t exist in the same cinematic universe
reflects the many clashing tonalities director Robert Aldrich brings to Hustle. After smoothly
blending comedy and drama in an earlier Reynolds movie, The Longest Yard (1974), Aldrich tries to do too many things here,
because Hustle aspires to be a
tragedy, a whodunit, a commentary on sexual politics, and more. Since Aldrich
was generally at his best making unpretentious pulp, with deeper themes buried
below the surface, his striving for Big Statements is
awkward—much in the same way that Deneuve’s cool sophistication fails to gel
with Reynolds’ hot emotionalism, the high and low aspects of this movie’s
storytelling collide to produce a narrative muddle.
The picture begins with
cynical LA detectives Phil Gaines (Reynolds) and Louis Belgrave (Paul Winfield)
commencing their investigation into the murder of a young hooker. The victim’s
father, Korean War vet Marty Hollinger (Ben Johnson), is sniffing around the crime
as well, because he wants revenge. When clues identify lawyer Leo Sellers
(Eddie Albert) as a possible suspect, things get tricky not only because
Sellers has political influence but because Sellers is a patron of another
hooker, Nicole (Deneuve)—who happens to be Phil’s girlfriend.
The idea of a cop
living on both sides of the law is always provocative, but in this case, Phil’s
relationship with Nicole makes him unsympathetic. Tolerating her demeaning
career paints him as a user, while pushing her to abandon her work suggests
he’s a chauvinist; there’s no way for Reynolds to win. Nonetheless, the actor gives a
valiant effort, while Deneuve struggles to elevate her clichéd role despite obvious
difficulty with English-language dialogue. Inhibited by iffy writing and
overreaching direction, the stars end up letting their physicality do most of
the acting—Deneuve looks ravishing and Reynolds looks tough. But that’s not
enough. Excepting Johnson, whose obsessive bloodlust resonates, most of the
skilled supporting cast gets lost in the cinematic muddiness, and Aldrich does no
one any favors by shooting interiors with ugly, high-contrast lighting. Still, Hustle gets points for seediness and for
the nihilism of its ending.
Hustle:
FUNKY
1 comment:
This is one of those rare films where the look of it turned me off immediately. You speak of that harsh lighting on the interiors, you ain't kidding! The interiors in this movie look like a sitcom, it's dreadful. After the wonderfully evocative film noir-like cinematography achieved by Bruce Surtees John A Alonzo and others during the same period it's just disgusting to see something so flat and television like as Hustle I couldn't get through the first 5 minutes of it. And it's unusual for me to let a drab visual style turn me off but in this case it was overpowering.
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