A boat has been destroyed, criminals are dead, and the key to this mystery lies with the only survivor and his twisted, convoluted story beginning with five career crooks in a seemingly random police lineup.
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Review By Rebecca Flint Marx
A slick triumph of casting and wordplay, The Usual Suspects
was one of the most fiendishly intricate American films of the 1990s.
Relentlessly stylish and growing more convoluted by the frame, the film
invited its audience to take part in the confusion, to attempt to
discern illusion from reality as if watching a magician's act. What
makes The Usual Suspects
remarkable is that fact and fiction never evolve into distinct
entities, entwining in an almost indiscernible jumble to baffle the
viewer. Like the all-important but (largely) unseen Keyser Soze, Suspects'
genius rested in holding its audience hostage to the intangible, making
it equally impossible to believe what you've seen or dismiss what you
haven't. In turn, the film is shamelessly manipulative, demanding the
audience's complete involvement and undivided attention; a bathroom
break carries the risk of losing the plot entirely. As the men caught up
in the film's labyrinthine intrigue, Kevin Spacey, Gabriel Byrne, Benicio Del Toro, Kevin Pollak, and Stephen Baldwin fit their roles perfectly, demonstrating an ensemble casting coup. Spacey,
who won an Oscar for his portrayal of Verbal Kint, is particularly
impressive, managing to be pathetic, off-handedly irreverent, and
cunning all at once. The qualities on display in his performance make
him the poster child for the film's overall tone: shifty, garrulous, and
altogether not to be trusted, Spacey's Kint embodies the film's compulsive, charming will to deception. Director Bryan Singer
handles his characters and the film's many twists with the ease of a
devious master puppeteer, mixing liberal doses of film noir, humor, and
intrigue with refreshing audacity. The result was one of the most
accomplished thrillers of the decade, a mystery whose wild manipulations
came courtesy of a director whose hands were very tightly gripped
around the controls.
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