Offering a textbook
definition of how much value familiar genre elements and slick location
photography can add to a picture, the international-espionage thriller The Sell-Out is fairly watchable despite
indifferent leading performances, sluggish pacing, and a turgid storyline.
Whenever the movie seems to be running out of gas, director Peter Collinson (The Italian Job) and his collaborators
unleash a chase scene, a shootout, or some other intense event. So, even though
The Sell-Out isn’t particularly
interesting, the filmmakers do their best to make sure that boredom is held at
bay. They don’t always succeed, so most viewers will experience fatigue midway
through the picture, but The Sell-Out
is, more or less, a respectable enterprise. Oliver Reed, sporting a clumsy
accent to play an American, stars as Gabriel Lee, a spy who defected from the
U.S. to Russia but has now landed in Israel. After operatives from the CIA and
the KGB try to kill Gabriel, alerting him that he’s no longer traveling
incognito, Gabriel phones his old CIA mentor, Sam Lucas (Richard Widmark), who
has retired from the spy game and now lives in Israel. Convenient! Things get
emotionally complicated because Sam’s live-in girlfriend, Deborah (Gayle Hunnicut),
used to be with Gabriel, and there’s still a weirdly sadomasochistic spark
between Deborah and Gabriel. (This makes Sam understandably insecure, she’s he’s
old enough to be Deobrah’s father, while Gabriel is roughly Deborah’s age.)
The
makers of The Sell-Out can’t quite
decide whether they’re after a character-driven story in the mode of John Le
Carre or a lusty adventure in the style of Ian Fleming, so they toggle back and
forth between these extremes. Generally speaking, the cartoonish Fleming-style
stuff works better, thanks to extensive use of Israeli locations (including the
Wailing Wall) and thanks to a fun supporting performance by Vladek Sheybal as a
cold-blooded mercenary nicknamed “The Dutchman.” Whenever the movie shifts into
overdrive, with Reed grimacing in between automotive bang-ups and near-miss
gunshots, The Sell-Out has a decent
pulpy vibe. Furthermore, some of the mano-a-mano scenes between Reed and
Widmark are tasty, with Reed overplaying per his norm and Widmark seething in
comparative restraint. (Hunnicut does what she can with her poorly written
role, since her character occasionally lapses into inexplicable histrionics.)
Adding an odd flavor to the picture is the score by Colin Frechter and Mike
Green, since they mix jazz-fusion jams with proto-disco grooves. Meanwhile, cinematographer
Arthur Ibbetson uses sleek moves and wide-angle lenses to fully exploit the
craggy textures of Israel’s cities and countryside—as well as the craggy
textures of his weathered leading men.
The Sell-Out: FUNKY
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