Film Review
Question: When is a homage not a homage? Answer: When it's
a blatant rip-off that offers nothing new and is so steeped in
clichés and obvious cinematic references that it ends up looking
like a pointless film compilation. Such appears to be the case
with Eric Besnard's second feature
Ca$h,
an overblown Hollywood mimic-a-thon which offers nothing more than the
shallowest imitation of a thriller sub-genre that now has limited scope
for originality. Norman Jewison's self-consciously arty
The Thomas Crown Affair (1968)
appears to be the main source of inspiration but it is hard to miss the
lazily slotted in references to other films, from George Roy Hill
The
Sting (1973) to Steven Soderbergh's
Ocean's Eleven (2001).
The sense of
déjà
vu is overwhelming, if not to say ever so slightly nauseating.
Despite the mouth-watering cast (Jean Dujardin, Jean Reno, Valeria
Golino, François Berléand and Alice Taglioni is one
line-up that most directors would kill for),
Ca$h offers nothing for the
discerning moviegoer and the lack of anything even remotely novel will
kill most viewers' interest stone dead within twenty minutes. Who
is mad enough to waste time watching a bland, poorly constructed copy
when they can see the (far superior) original? French cinema can
occasionally throw up a decent pastiche - as Michel Hazanavicius showed
with his magnificent spoof spy thriller
OSS 117: Le Caire nid d'espions
(2006) - but
Ca$h is just one
more reminder of how difficult it is to pull off this piece of high stakes cinematic fraud.
© James Travers 2013
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
When his brother, a small-time swindler, is killed by one of his former
victims, Cash decides to take revenge by organising a swindle of his
own. Unfortunately, he soon finds that he is up against an enemy
more dangerous than he had imagined - and the tables are soon turned
against him...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.