David O’Russell’s AMERICAN HUSTLE is a fictionalized look at
the so-called Abscam scandal in the late 1970’s and late 1980’s, in which an
FBI sting operation led to the arrest and conviction of several U.S. politicians
for accepting bribes. With much of the operation still classified, O’Russell
and his writing partner Eric Singer likely took a ton of liberties in writing
the script to bring it to the big screen. But any or all historical liberties
really don’t matter; AMERICAN HUSTLE has a lot more going than cops and
robbers.
Brilliant con-man Irving (Christian Bale) and his equally
brilliant con-woman/partner Sydney (Amy Adams) are forced to work for wild FBI
Agent Richie (Bradley Cooper) to uncover a world of dirty politicians. Caught
in the middle of it all is a New Jersey mayor (Jeremy Renner), and Irving’s
unpredictable wife Rosalyn (Jennifer Lawrence).
AMERICAN HUSTLE sets itself up as a basic sting-operation
film as cops and cons conspire together to take down the big fish through a
series of deceptions. As the plot unfolds, the film becomes less interested in
the politics and cons and the overall plot as the well-developed characters,
which we spend a lot of time with, bounce off of each other with their traits,
strengths, and faults. The steps towards the final sting operation come slow
and are often in the back seat, and the overall story feels muddled and clunky…but
what makes it work are great characters and the way they interact with each
other. David O’Russell clearly wants AMERICAN HUSTLE to be more about the
people than the surroundings, and the performances make it all tick.
Set in the late 1970’s, David O’Russell takes full advantage
of the period clothing, music, and way of speaking. He clearly channels his
inner-Scorsese in AMERICAN HUSTLE; using rock music, narration by different characters,
a few freeze frames and plenty of slow-motion. There is a great amount of style
in the film, which works perfectly since the 70’s were all about style anyway.
Some scenes seem to drag on a bit too long, and a lot of the characters jabber
on endlessly, and the film feels a lot longer than its two hours. But there are
still a lot of great and important themes that O’Russell weaves into his
narrative; love, marriage, friendship, the American Dream, doing the right
thing…and it all blends together nicely.
Acting is tremendous. Christian Bale absolutely vanishes
into the role and is nearly unrecognizable. His character is fat and balding
with a terrible comb over. The physical transformation he pulls here, as
shocking as it is, actually comes second to his great performance. Amy Adams
and Jennifer Lawrence are more sexed up here than they have ever been, and both
bring the (acting) goods. Adams, due to the nature of her con-woman character,
seamlessly switches from a British accent back to American, and Lawrence hits a
level she has not been to before. Jeremy Renner turns in his best work in quite
some time.
The finale comes about by way of some incredibly clever
twists and turns (and one magnificent cameo), while not forgetting to put the
characters into a few moral dilemmas. AMERICAN HUSTLE has a lot to say about
people, but not much about the history…and that’s OK.
BOTTOM LINE: See it
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