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INFO
No
Fallen Angels Here
A
stupid crime gone terribly wrong
BY
MOLLY TEMPLETON
BEFORE
THE DEVIL KNOWS YOU'RE DEAD: Directed by Sidney Lumet. Written by
Kelly Masterson. Cinematography, Ron Fortunato. Music, Carter Burwell.
Starring Philip Seymour Hoffman, Albert Finney, Ethan Hawke and
Marisa Tomei. THINKFilm, 2007. R. 117 min. 
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| Hawke
and Hoffman in Before the Devil... |
If you are the sort of person who, when watching
a movie, likes to have a character which you can like, if not outright
identify with — not, as they say, that there's anything wrong
with that — you may want to skip Before the Devil Knows
You're Dead, the new film from 83-year-old director Sidney Lumet
(Network, 12 Angry Men, some several dozen other films).
A bleak, brutal chronicle of a family tearing itself apart, Before
the Devil (which takes its name from a phrase that begins "May
you be in heaven for half an hour…") offers only one potentially
likeable character; otherwise, it's full of fuckups, jerks, selfish
bastards, hapless fathers. It is a story of bad choices and worse
motivations: To plan to rob one's parents' jewelry store, as unhappy,
drug-addicted would-be mastermind Andy (Philip Seymour Hoffman)
and sad-sack Hank (Ethan Hawke), do, is bad enough, but to do it
for a relatively small amount of money because both are incapable
of pulling their lives together in a more legal fashion makes the
crime even worse.
Of course, it all goes terribly, terribly wrong,
and wrong in a way we get to see from numerous points of view as
Lumet and first-time screenwriter Kelly Masterson slice the story
into slivers of perspective, the handful of timelines connected
by some distracting, ugly cuts. The nonlinear structure works beautifully,
lining up Andy and Hank's story with that of their vengeful father,
Charles (Albert Finney), and patiently piecing together an ominous,
often taut narrative that lets no one off the hook for their actions.
This is not a film that will allow the audience to feel smugly above
its increasingly disheveled protagonists, but it's not easy to sympathize
with them, either. Still, while Before the Devil works as
a melodrama about the horrors that follow a handful of terrible
decisions, the story seems to take place in a strange void, its
timelines lacking a true connection to the characters' pasts. There's
nowhere to go but down after the crime is committed, but how Andy
and Hank got to such a selfish, lost point in the first place remains
a mystery, and one not solved by the lone scene in which Andy rails
against his father. Maybe it's not about the money after all. But
maybe what it's about is irrelevant: These are men who would have
fallen one way or the other, given the chance.
Before the Devil Knows You're Dead opens Friday,
Nov. 30, at the Bijou.
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