Before The Devil Knows You're Dead
Starring: Marisa Tomei, Albert Finney, Philip Seymour Hoffman, Ethan Hawke, Rosemary HarrisDirector: Sidney Lumet
Studio: VELOCITY / THINKFILM
MPAA Rating: R (Restricted)
Format: NTSC
Running Time: 112 minutes
DVD Release: March 4th 2008
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DVD Review
Sidney Lumet's Before the Devil Knows You're Dead is an exceptionally dark story about a crime gone wrong and the complicated reasons behind it. Philip Seymour Hoffman and Ethan Hawke are outstanding as brothers whose mutual love-hate relationship subtly colors their agreement to rob their own parents' jewelry store, and more explicitly affects the anxious aftermath of their villainy when their mother (Rosemary Harris) ends up shot. Hoffman's steely, emotionally locked-up Andy, despite pulling down six figures as a corporate executive, is supporting an expensive drug habit while trying to leave the country with his depressed wife, Gina (Marisa Tomei). Hank (Hawke), a whipped dog of low intelligence, owes back alimony and child support to his ex-spouse. Both men need money and agree to rip off their parents' business, a decision that goes awry and puts both men in various kinds of jeopardy while their mother remains comatose and their father (Albert Finney) lurches along trying to make sense of anything. Writer Kelly Masterson's screenplay employs a perhaps now-overly-familiar time-shifting tactic, jumping around the chronology of the story's events and replaying scenes from different vantage points. The effect is a little tedious but successfully deconstructs the film's drama in a way that shows how such terrible events are directly linked to family dysfunction, old wounds between parent and child, between siblings, that fester into full-blown tragedy. Eighy-three-year-old director Lumet (Serpico) employs bleached colors and scenes of blunt sexuality and violence, adding to the moral rudderlessness and banality of this airless world. If Devil feels a little reductive and insistently grim, it is also a generally persuasive work by an old master. --Tom Keogh
User Reviews
A very chilling and engrossing film! - Rating: 5/5
I had a pretty good idea of the basic plot when I walked into the theatre. Two brothers (Philip Seymour Hoffman and Ethan Hawke) plan to hold up a jewelry store in a strip mall...and the store is owned by THEIR PARENTS. I also knew it bounced around in time a little.
What I didn't expect was such an unrelenting look at a whole bunch of magnificently screwed-up people! WOW! I was left almost breathless by the new depths to which these folks could sink. It was a family tragedy, but there sure wasn't anything noble about these characters.
Hawke is the younger brother, and he works for the same company as his brother, but in a fairly lowly position, and he can barely make ends meet. He's way behind on his child support, and his daughter is growing more and more aggravated with him because he can't follow through on his promises to her to do things like fund her field trip to go see THE LION KING on Broadway. He appears to be ever so slighly dim-witted, although that may just be the drugs. He lives in a rough apartment and has some pretty rough friends.
Hoffman is the older brother, and while on the surface he may appear to be a little more together (he has a fairly responsible accounting position in the company)...we actually see as the movie progresses that he's in some seriously deep trouble. His marriage to Marisa Tomei is very much on the rocks, and the only good times they had recently were on vacation in South America. He believes he can start a new life down there, and keep his marriage going...but how to fund such a move? He's also into some pretty hefty drugs and even his larger salary can't fund it all.
It's his idea to rip-off the parents. ("Hey, they're insured.") Hawke finally buys into it, and they enter into the plot. It isn't spoiling much (because we see it so early in the film) to say that things don't exactly go smoothly! I won't say more, so you can see for yourself.
So why are these two guys SO screwed up? We see some of this as more scenes between the boys and their parents are revealed. In particular, we see their relationships with their father, Albert Finney. He's an old man now, but we get the idea that when he was younger, he was pretty tough old bird, difficult to please, lacking in affection and just a real poor father. Scenes with mother Rosemary Harris are fewer and less illuminating. It's really a story about how men in a family can screw each other up. BEFORE THE DEVIL KNOWS YOU'RE DEAD takes this idea to EXTREMES.
Towards the end, the actions of Hoffman in particular become almost monumentally deranged. We believe that he is doing what he's doing...but it's hard not to gasp in dismay. He is truly a completely broken and desparate man. All sympathy we might have had for him is gone...just like any sense of a moral compass he might have had. And Albert Finney arguably goes even one step more off the path of righteousness at the very end.
Anyway, I hope you get that this is not a happy, light film. But it is powerful, astonishingly well acted and written, and an absolute must-see. It's a riveting time at the theatre!!!
Hoffman is brilliant...pure and simple. His work here easily equals anything he's done before. I don't know if the film will be an Oscar contender, because it has such a small audience...but it should be and absolutely Hoffman should be up for Best Actor. Hawke is also very good...he is a complete coward and makes up both sympathize him and despise him. He could be up for Best Supporting Actor. Finney is always an imposing presence...and he's very good here. Again, I can't tell you too much without spoiling the plot line, but let's say he goes very convincingly from distraught to enraged. Marisa Tomei does another masterful performance as the woman who unknowingly is the downfall of the men in her life (in some ways...don't accuse me of being a chauvenist...I'm just saying that a lot of the choices the characters make revolve around trying to please her). She gives a brave performance (she spends a lot of time in the nude) and is her usual mixture of sultry and defenseless. If her role in IN THE BEDROOM got her a nomination (which she deserved) then I think she could have another one here.
Director Sidney Lumet may be getting on in years...but my goodness, he sure doesn't hesitate to step right into some very murky and unpleasant waters. His film is super specific, has a wonderful sense of place and he also gives his great cast the space they need to "do their stuff." No quick edits, or blitzkreig pacing when it doesn't suit. He believes we will be gripped by the story, and he's right.
This is not a film for the kids! Nor is it a film for someone looking for a glossy Hollywood film. It's pretty brutal and uncompromising. But I couldn't tear myself away, and the audience I saw it with was clearly as mesmerized as I was. GREAT stuff!!!
One of the best I've seen this year. - Rating: 5/5
Two Brothers (Hoffman and Hawke) Andy and Hank, desperate for some cash, decide to rob their parent's jewelry store. They decide to split the money that is in the safe. The day of the robbery, Hank uses a accomplice instead, that has disastrous results and ends up making their father (Finney) seek vengeance on the people that had done him wrong. What you reap, you sow.
I have been a fan of Lumet since I saw Dog Day Afternoon, and heard Al Pacino utter "Attica", I was impressed with the way the film had been with the opening song, then silence afterwards. It showed the director had a talent that I liked. The director had this air of originality around him as the film went on. Directors, when they age, tend to lose their magic of their earlier films, and end up making not as good films. Lumet has a brilliant porfoilio of works that range from 12 Angry Men to Serpico to Network. This can be added as it is a work that is alike but different in so many ways. He takes the film places that have not been gone before. It is a biting movie that plays out as a Greek tragedy that takes place in modern day society. The film is vicious.
The performances in this film were outstanding. Personally, I am not that big a fan of Ethan Hawke, as he is a decent actor, but his performance in the film was heavy. He uses desperate and pathetic as his adjectives to push his performance forward towards great. The performance, though, was outdone by Philip Semyour Hoffman, as yet again, he adds to his long list of characters that are weak willed, and He steals the show by making his character so outlandishly distant from reality.
I also liked the film transfer as it gave it a clean, sharp look. It is indeed the wave of the future. Also, the only real problems I had was with Marisa Tomei's peformance. Also, why did her breasts appear every 2 minutes? they deserved their own credit for appearing so much, and I disliked the weird scene transitions, as they came out of nowhere some points. But, after those minor flaws this film is really one that could be overlooked, and it needs to be seen by upcoming directors as it shows how exactly to direct a really masterful crime thriller with some of the best actors.
See it before it's too late.
A thrilling and powerful film. - Rating: 5/5
"Before the Devil Knows You're Dead" is one of the most thrilling crime dramas of recent years, proving that the octogenarian Sidney Lumet is just as brilliant a director as he ever was. Philip Seymour Hoffman and Ethan Hawke, looking like Francis Bacon caricatures of themselves, play financially strapped brothers who decide to solve their cash flow problems by robbing their parents' jewelry store. Needless to say, the robbery goes very, very wrong. The tense, fragmentary screenplay fills us in bit by bit as to the robbery, the events leading up to it and its aftermath, showing us not only the brothers' growing desperation but the family rivalries and character weaknesses that made the final tragedy inevitable. The final scene, a grotesque mockery of the perfect crime the brothers envisioned, suggests that apples never fall far from the tree. Like a crazed, three-way cross between "Memento," "The Asphalt Jungle" and "Death of a Salesman," "Before the Devil Knows Your Dead" keeps viewers on the edge of their seats from beginning to end. Hawke gives an indelible portrait of a pathetic loser (even his young daughter pegs him as such) and Hoffman is even better as the domineering elder brother, whose masterful calm is only skin-deep. The supporting players match the leads; Albert Finney, as Hoffman and Hawke's father, plays the last half of the film in a whirlwind of disbelieving grief and anger, his face twisted into a gargoyle mask of pain. Rosemary Harris gives a poignant performance as the family matriarch, while Marisa Tomei and Amy Ryan are impeccable as Hoffman's wife and Hawke's ex. "Before the Devil Knows You're Dead" can justifiably be considered as the best movie in Lumet's career. Considering that his other movies include "Twelve Angry Men," "Network" and "Dog Day Afternoon," that's saying something.
