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The Usual Suspects (1995) [Blu-ray]
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Rated: |
R |
Starring: |
Suzy Amis, Kevin Spacey, Kevin Pollak, Gabriel Byrne, Pete Postlethwaite, Giancarlo Esposito, Stephen Baldwin, Benicio Del Toro, Chazz Palminteri. |
Director: |
Bryan Singer |
Genre: |
Crime | Drama | Mystery | Thriller |
DVD Release Date: 02/13/2007 |
Tagline: Five Criminals . One Line Up . No Coincidence .
Who actually is Keyser Söze?
Oscar winners Kevin Spacey and Benicio Del Toro lead an all-star cast that includes Stephen Baldwin and Gabriel Byrne in the "freshest, funniest and scariest crime thriller since Pulp Fiction." (Rolling Stone). A band of small-time criminals becomes
entangled in the merciless scheme of an unseen underworld kingpin.
Storyline: Following a truck hijack in New York, five conmen are arrested and brought together for questioning. As none of them is guilty, they plan a revenge operation against the police. The operation goes well, but then the influence of a
legendary mastermind criminal called Keyser Söze is felt. It becomes clear that each one of them has wronged Söze at some point and must pay back now. The payback job leaves 27 men dead in a boat explosion, but the real question arises now: Who actually
is Keyser Söze? Written by Soumitra
Reviewer's Note: Reviewed by Greg Maltz on November 26, 2007 -- Boasting petty criminal characters conceived so brilliantly they achieve near-mythological status, The Usual Suspects is known for riveting suspense and action, an intriguing plotline
and a jaw- dropping twist at the end. It also features some of the most memorable lines of the 1990s: "How do you shoot the devil in the back--what if you miss?" Best of all, the Blu-ray version's 1080p resolution allows viewers to rediscover this gem on
a level that goes far beyond any DVD release. The characters, Roger "Verbal" Kint (Kevin Spacey), Dean Keaton (Gabriel Byrne), Michael McManus (Stephen Baldwin), Fred Fenster (Benicio Del Toro), Todd Hockney (Kevin Pollak), Dave Kujan (Chazz Palminteri)
and Kobayashi (Pete Postlethwaite) now appear with visual details and cues and not available on NTSC.
The film is set in the aftermath of a ship fire that totally burns the cargo and crew. Though meek and disabled, Verbal is the only survivor to walk away from the incident unscathed. He is taken into custody and grilled by the police. Brilliantly played
in a characteristic, understated style that earned Spacey an Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor, Verbal is cleared and allowed to leave. But before he can go, agent Kujan from US Customs shows up to interrogate him. Kujan is trying to build a case
against Keaton and he wants Verbal to testify in exchange for immunity. Verbal refuses, but Kujan still bullies Verbal into recounting his story of Keaton, McManus, Fenster and Hockney, leading up to the explosion on the ship.
What follows is a fantastic yarn of lies and half-truths sprinkled within the facts of the case. It is all masterfully portrayed as a series of flashbacks while Verbal and Kujan sip coffee and talk in the LA police station. The story begins six weeks
earlier in New York City as Verbal and the other four criminals are brought in to stand side-by-side in a police lineup. None of them are formally charged with a crime, and there are indications Keaton has actually gone straight prior to the roundup. But
before they are released, the five hatch a plan to get revenge on the corrupt NYPD and make a large sum of money in the process by robbing a police-protected jewel smuggler and leaking news of the police involvement to the press. Keaton is reluctant and
must be coaxed into it with the promise that no one will be killed in the heist. He agrees and the quintet pulls off the robbery to perfection. The acting and writing take chances that pay off, with each actor fully immersing himself in his role. Del Toro
creates a uniquely colorful persona in his portrayal of Fenster, Baldwin conveys a reckless abandon and lust for violence, Pollak shows steely courage and resolve, Byrne is a complex mesh of toughness with motives pulling him in all directions. Each actor
is at the top of his game.
The five criminals go to Los Angeles to lay low in the aftermath of the New York heist. There, they are enticed into another robbery that is also supposed to involve no killing. Unfortunately, this LA heist goes horribly wrong. As Verbal recounts this
carnage, its aftermath and the growing problems and hostility in the crew, agent Kujan receives a tip from one of his colleagues who has a survivor pulled from the water near the charred wreckage of the ship. The witness is badly burned and cannot speak
English, but insists that the man responsible for the destruction of life and property on the ship is named Kaiser Soze.
Armed with this news, Kujan confronts Verbal who reacts as if upset that Kujan has been tipped off about Soze. Verbal's story suggests that it may have been Soze who orchestrated the police lineup in New York and the robbery gone awry in LA. He picks up
the narration again as the five criminals meet a mysterious lawyer, Kobayashi, who indirectly gave them the LA job. It is Kobayashi who demands they ransack the ship and assassinate the crew. Kobayashi describes it as a very difficult job. "I do not
expect all of you to survive," he says. When Keaton and the others refuse, Kobayashi tells them he works for Soze who each of them has unwittingly wronged in the past. Soze is demanding the ship heist as a final favor in exchange for not harming the five
or their families or associates. To prove Soze's threat is real, Kobayashi produces envelopes for the five men containing a complete record of every one of their crimes, accomplices and family members. "Everyone I've ever worked with or did time with,"
Fenster says. "They know everything," Hockney says.
Not easily bullied, the quintet decides to strong-arm Kobayashi, murdering two of his associates and bringing him to a construction site to assassinate him. But he has already outwitted them by involving Keaton's girlfriend and showing Keaton that she is
now in Soze's control. He threatens that, should any harm come to him, the girl will meet with an unsavory violation before her death, as will other friends and family of the quintet. Kobayashi is not afraid of death because if he does not do Soze's
bidding, his fate would be worse than death and he promises theirs will be too. Now thoroughly spooked, the quintet realizes it is pointless to kill Kobayashi, as he is just a middleman. Fenster decides to flee LA, but doesn't make it. As the rest of them
learn of his death and bury the body, they decide they have no choice but to comply with Soze's demands to storm the ship.
But who is Kaiser Soze? Did he orchestrate the police lineup in New York, and pull all the strings ever since? Is the cargo of the ship drugs or only human cargo? Why did Verbal survive unharmed while so many others did not? Did Keaton really die, as
Verbal insists, or did he slip away, as Kujan believes? Is Verbal telling the truth? Much is revealed in the final moments of the film, which wash over the viewer like an enormous wave of recognition. Snippets of dialogue from earlier in the film are
montaged over the complex score, providing spine-tingling clues about exactly what part of Verbal's yarn was fact and what was fiction. The final snippet of dialogue, followed by a fortissimo string finale is especially powerful: "and like that...he was
gone."
Whether it is attributable to lies in Verbal's yarn or odd casting decisions, several characters in The Usual Suspects add to the film's mystique. Chief among these is the Irish Postlethwaite cast as the Japanese Kobayashi. There is a strong clue at the
end that the name Kobayashi is used solely to mislead Kujan. But Kobayashi is not the only instance of a character's name failing to match his appearance. Another example is McManus' contact in LA, Redfoot, which one would expect to be the name of a
Native American. But Redfoot appears to be caucasian. Again, at the end there is an indication that Verbal used Redfoot to avoid giving Kujan a real name. Strange ethnic inconsistencies crop up constantly. Kaiser Soze is said to be Turkish, possibly with
a German father. These mixed-up character portraits add a layer of complexity to the plot, but one must always consider the source, Verbal Kint, and his motives.
The dynamic between Kujan and Verbal itself is pure entertainment. A kind of cat-and-mouse game, nuances are thrown into the proceedings that make it more interesting and add depth to the characters. Even the way the interrogation is filmed is unique.
Verbal didn't achieve his nickname for no reason. He knows how to run his mouth and Kujan has a difficult challenge in corralling him. Underlying the interrogation is Kujan's suspicion of Keaton and his belief that Keaton manipulated Verbal. But Verbal is
hard to pin down and Kujan occasionally resorts to bully tactics.
The Blu-ray version of The Usual Suspects is an important release of a modern classic. The amazing plotline and well-defined characters are given new life that was for the most part inaccessible in NTSC. Through the increased definition, the mythological
stature of Kaiser Soze comes through far more powerfully and the film takes on an epic scope. Considering its odd cast and the convoluted story, the epic feel relies mostly on the interaction between strong characters, the writing and the violent action
sequences that are choreographed with drama and precision. Adding The Usual Suspects is an easy recommendation for any Blu-ray library.
Cast Notes: Stephen Baldwin (Michael McManus), Gabriel Byrne (Dean Keaton), Benicio Del Toro (Fred Fenster), Kevin Pollak (Todd Hockney), Kevin Spacey (Roger 'Verbal' Kint), Chazz Palminteri (Dave Kujan, US Customs), Pete Postlethwaite
(Kobayashi), Giancarlo Esposito (Jack Baer, FBI), Suzy Amis (Edie Finneran), Dan Hedaya (Sgt. Jeffrey 'Jeff' Rabin), Paul Bartel (Smuggler), Carl Bressler (Saul Berg), Phillipe Simon (Fortier), Jack Shearer (Renault), Christine Estabrook (Dr. Plummer).
IMDb Rating (09/03/16): 8.6/10 from 744,839 users Top 250: #25
IMDb Rating (07/25/14): 8.7/10 from 548,748 users Top 250: #23
IMDb Rating (10/23/09): 8.7/10 from 240,918 users Top 250: #22
Additional information |
Copyright: |
1995, MGM / UA |
Features: |
• Original Theatrical Trailer. |
Subtitles: |
English SDH, English, Spanish |
Video: |
Codec: MPEG-2 (18.82 Mbps) Resolution: 1080p Aspect ratio: 2.35:1 Original aspect ratio: 2.39:1 |
Audio: |
ENGLISH: DTS-HD Master Audio 5.1 (48kHz, 24-bit)
FRENCH: Dolby Digital 2.0
SPANISH: Dolby Digital 2.0
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Time: |
1:46 |
DVD: |
# Discs: 1 -- # Shows: 1 |
ASIN: |
B00000F214 |
UPC: |
027616063335 |
Coding: |
[V4.5-A4.0] MPEG-2 |
D-Box: |
Yes |
Other: |
Producers: Bryan Singer, Michael McDonnell; Directors: Bryan Singer; Writers: Christopher McQuarrie; running time of 106 minutes; Packaging: HD Case; [CC]. Rated R for violence and a substantial amount of strong
language.
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