‘Before the Devil’ restores faith in crime movies
Sidney Lumet’s latest is a masterpiece of betrayal and deception
![]() Thinkfilm Philip Seymour Hoffman and Ethan Hawke star as two brothers who devise a plan to rob their parent's jewelry story in "Before the Devil Knows You're Dead." |
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Of course, those two brothers are played by Philip Seymour Hoffman and Ethan Hawke, so there’s a certain squirmy pleasure in watching them flirt with catastrophe. Much of the dread-inducing excitement in “Before the Devil” — and despite the characters’ misery, it’s one of the most exhilarating moviegoing experiences in a long while — comes from the many surprises in Kelly Masterson’s extraordinary script, so suffice it to say that the plot deals with the sleazy siblings deciding to knock off a jewelry store belonging to their parents (Albert Finney and Rosemary Harris). Disaster ensues.
After Tarantino’s genre-remixing “Reservoir Dogs” and “Pulp Fiction” inspired a legion of inferior knockoffs, two tropes that many film lovers became quite skittish about seeing combined were “heist movie” and “narrative that plays with the timeline.” But a great film can certainly vindicate genres that have been botched by lesser filmmakers.
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Thankfully, there’s nothing depressing or grim about this movie — watching people trapped in a hell of their own making is as entertaining in “Before the Devil” as it is in, say, “Oedipus Rex” or “Wuthering Heights.”
Helping things along are Lumet’s taut direction and a legion of terrific performances. Hoffman is the modern master of playing ambitious losers, and the film gives him ample opportunity to be the architect of his own doom. Hoffman’s Andy is also the world’s worst older brother, constantly hectoring the spineless Hank (Hawke) with taunts like “baby” and “f---ot.” (When Andy tells Hank he’s taking the majority of the proceeds from the robbery, Hank mewls, “I want more,” to which Andy snaps, “So does Oliver Twist.”)
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“Before the Devil Knows You’re Dead” won’t do much for anyone’s feelings about human nature, but it will definitely restore your faith in gritty crime movies. Don’t let this relatively little movie slip between your fingers.
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