Genre: Comedy
Director: F Gary Grey
Starring: John
Travolta, The Rock, James Gandolfini, Uma Thurman, Vince Vaughn,
James Woods, Christina Milian
RunTime: 1 hr 52 mins
Released By: 20th Century Fox
Rating: PG
Released Date: 31 March 2005
Synopsis:
John Palmer returns as Chili Palmer in Be Cool, a sequel to
the original comedy smash Get Shorty. In Be Cool (based on
the novel by Elmore Leonard), Chili abandons the fickle movie
business to bring his signature brand of wiseguy skills and
negotiations tactics to the music industry.
Movie Review:
Be cool? It tries. Cool? Not quite. The underused actors in
a mishmash of glitz and glam pave the way for a superficial
telling of the music industry.
The
plot sounds cool enough. Chili Palmer (John Travolta), movie
producer extraordinaire decides to quit the movie industry
and move into the music industry. In trying to do so, he discovers
an up and coming singer, Linda Moon (Christina Milian) and
gets her to sign a contract with a flailing record company
headed by newly-widowed Edie Athens (Uma Thurman). But, throw
in some angry Russian hit men, some crazed four-eyed assassin
who shoots the wrong guy, (Robert Pastorelli in his final
role) angry rival record producer, a posse that has muscles
bigger than their heads, a serious Cedric The Entertainer,
white boy trying to be black and laughs like the mother from
That 70’s show, (Vince Vaughn) a gay vain pot for a
bodyguard (The Rock) and a plethora of cameo appearances,
you’ll get exactly what this review seems like now,
a mess.
Chili
Palmer is warned many times in the film that the music industry
is different and that it’s much more dangerous than
the movie industry. Seriously, the film goes nowhere near
that territory. What ensues instead is a cat and mouse game
between Chili and Nick Carr (Harvey Keitel) that seemed smart
at first but would have left the whole Ocean’s Twelve
gang laughing in stitches. John Travolta is not the Chili
Palmer of 1995. If F. Gary Gray thought making him dance with
Uma Thurman was a sure-fire ticket to get John Travolta back
to stardom, oh boy was he wrong. The dance sequence was nothing
compared to the pair’s turn in Pulp Fiction and instead
of a sizzle, all the audience will get is a fizzle.
While
Travolta was recognizable for he was the lead in this, the
rest of the cast seemed uncomfortable and out of place. Uma
Thurman fresh (or not so) from Kill Bill, shriveled into the
background, Vince Vaughn was not at his comedic best and there’s
a reason why Cedric The Entertainer is called Cedric The Entertainer.
This was not one of the reasons. Perhaps, the only shining
grace to come out from the film must be The Rock’s parody
of himself. His screen time was just nice to make him look
scorching. Thankfully, for a lot more of him would have made
it distasteful.
The
film tries to be cool but fails. Sadly, it becomes a leave-your-brains-outside-the-theatre
movie. This sequel does not do Elmore Leonard’s novel
justice. Alas, Be Cool is not entirely boring for it has its
fair share of laughs with its dark humour lest you’re
the easily bored type; I believe you’d walk out of the
theatre. If you’re choosing one movie for the week,
be cool and do the right thing. Choose another movie.
Movie
Rating: C
Review by Mohamad Shaifulbahri
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