The Score

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You could bring a legal case against The Score for misrepresentation. It came billed to me as a “heist-musical”. I was deeply intrigued, having never watched a film combine such genres before. Sadly, it is neither a heist film — taking place after some unspecified ‘score’ — or much of a musical either — people standing in rooms while singing instead of providing the pleasures that such a genre usually dictates. Essentially, a play-set-to-film that features a few songs, it keeps the audience in a constant state of anticipation while delivering little to no payoff. Set in a cafe for most of its runtime, it’s like being promised a gourmet steak but the food arrives late and straight out of the microwave.

Mike (Johnny Flynn) and Troy (Will Poulter) have just stolen £20,000. One of their key dealers isn’t with them, so they have to wait at a secluded café for the drop. Like Reservoir Dogs (Quentin Tarantino, 1991), it’s all about how they act while waiting for the final resolution as opposed to the nuts and bolts of the so-called heist. The dynamic is tested when Troy falls for pretty café worker Gloria (Naomi Ackie), threatening their need for a low profile. The remaining 90 or so minutes combines a love story, crime “suspense” and several musical interludes.

Musical music need not carry the plot forward, although it can help to integrate music and story together. It doesn’t necessarily need to be catchy either, as long as it is sung with passion and heart. The songs here, written by Flynn, are created in his usual faux country-mode, using monosyllabic utterances in place of words, layered guitar lines and encompassing themes of love and striving to be free. Shot more akin to Les Misérables (Tom Hooper, 2012) than La La Land (Damien Chazelle, 2016), songs are caught in close-up rather than in a traditional one-shots. Dancing and movement is minimal.

Charisma is sorely lacking, both in the underproduced music and in the undercooked performances. Johnny Flynn seems like a lovely person, but when in the wrong hands, he has a rather underwhelming screen presence. His semi-sardonic personality and self-deprecation, sometimes at odds with his rugged good looks, can be a strength in a film like Emma (2020) — one of the few Jane Austen adaptations that truly bounces off the page — but he is handled poorly here, the viewer unable to determine the arc or heart of his character. Will Poulter suffers similar issues — he can be intense and brooding in anything from the Maze Runner series to Black Runner: Bandersnatch (Charlie Brooker, 2018), but let loose and his energy quickly sputters. Together, the two actors occasionally hit sparks — especially when Flynn is allowed to constantly criticise Poulter’s compulsive actions and when Poulter strikes back — but most of the time they feel mismatched, both indulging their worst acting impulses.

There’s a solid, non-musical short film in all this. But there’s a reason the bus scene in Hitchcock’s Sabotage (1936) didn’t last 100 minutes. There’s only so much suspense that the audience can care for. After my initial disappointment regarding the misrepresented premise, The Score quickly exhausted my patience.

The Score plays in the First Feature Competition at the Tallinn Black Nights Film Festival, running from 12th – 28th November.

American Animals

This movie is going to be a lot like I, Tonya (Craig Gillespie, 2018), I thought. Another reenactment of a recent crime interspersed with talking heads interviews from the present. Another biopic attempting to do redeem a wrongdoer (four wrongdoers, in this case). After all, they are just nice people who made one silly (criminal) mistake in their lives. I was wrong. The films couldn’t be more different.

I, Tonya is single perspective movie of the infamous attack on figure skater Nancy Kerrigan (which left her with a broken leg and unable to compete), all told from the point-of-view of her rival Tonya Harding. The director Craig Gillespie dodged accusations of condoning abuse by making it very clear from the very beginning of the movie that this is indeed a one-sided account. American Animals is far more complex.

The director Bart Layton, who also penned the movie script, blends the conflicting perspectives of the four young criminals who tried to conduct a shambolic heist in the library of the Transylvania University (in Kentucky, not Romania!). The outcome is a multilayered and profoundly moving film that neither romanticises nor demonises the four foolish and clumsy thieves. The multitude of perspectives is such that one point one of the criminals (Spencer) questions whether his very own recollections are in fact someone else’s. Human memory is both fallible and gullible!

Warren Lipka (Evan Peters), Spender Reinhard (Barry Keoghan), Chas Alleb (Blake Jenner) and Eric Borsuk (Jared Abrahamson) lead a comfortable yet mostly uneventful life in Kentucky. One day Warren decides to throw a “little spice in their gumbo” by planning an audacious heist. They decide to steal the original edition of Charles Darwin’s On The Origin of Species and other historical books from said library, which is guarded by the elderly and avuncular Betty Jean Gooch (Ann Dowd). They want to conduct the crime without hurting the victim.

Unlike in I, Tonya, the talking heads interviews are conducted with the real people instead of actors. All of the four young man regret their crime. They give slightly different accounts of what happened, with different levels of remorse, feelings of guilt and accountability. Betty’s account is also included in the film (unlike I, Tonya, which never interviewed Nancy Kerrigan, who found the movie insulting). There is no spoiler: you will work out quite quickly how the film ends. The inescapability of the future reigns. It’s quite easy to infer that the criminals were caught and the punishment wasn’t extremely harsh, because the events took place in 2003 and the interviews are not conducted from prison (meaning that they must have already served their sentence). This is a the type of crime that became famous not its level of cruelty, but its sheer incompetence instead.

The deceptive lure of crime prevailed above reason in the lives of these four young men. They intended to take a forbidden shortcut to the American Dream, and failed tremendously at their attempt to do so. The four criminals are so inept that they searched for “how to conduct a heist” on their computers and even use their own mobile phone in order to communicate with a key stakeholder. They don wigs in order to look older, but they just look silly instead. Their planning is shambolic. Their behaviour is knee-jerk and instinctive. Just like the animals on Charles Darwin’s much coveted book.

American Animals is neither a cheap and conventional action movie nor a comedy about clumsy criminals. Instead, this is a lighthearted yet surprisingly complex study of human fallibility. It is out in cinemas on Friday, September 7th.

Click here in order to find out about the best heist films ever made, include this writer’s very favourite.