The Lookout (2007)
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Storyline
Taglines:
| 1: Whoever has the money has the power |
Plot Summary:
oseph Gordon-Levitt gives the best performance of his career and Jeff Daniels is equally outstanding in writer/director Scott Frank’s The Lookout, an immensely entertaining and mesmerizing story about a guy with brain damage who becomes involved in a bank robbery. Frank’s rookie directorial effort (he wrote the screenplays for Out of Sight, Get Shorty, and The Interpreter) is an amazingly genuine and absorbing film that pulls you in from the get-go and doesn’t let up until the ending credits scroll by.
The Story
At a bar sucking down a near-beer, Chris runs into a real smooth operator who introduces himself as a friend of Chris’ sister and someone who knew him and looked up to him back before the accident. Gary (Matthew Goode) has a way with women and Chris, whose brain no longer filters inappropriate statements before he can say them out loud, finds Gary’s bad boy demeanor and gorgeous female friends irresistible. Chris becomes attached to ex-stripper Luvlee Lemons (the very sexy Isla Fisher), a member of Gary’s clique who isn’t taken aback when Chris blurts out that he wants to see her naked.
The Cast
Gordon-Levitt was terrific in Mysterious Skin and Brick and proves with his starring role in The Lookout that he’s in it for the long haul. Playing Chris couldn’t have been easy as the character doesn’t understand or follow half of what’s going on around him. Yet Gordon-Levitt completely transforms into this tragic character, delivering a top notch performance that appears effortless. Surrounded by first rate performances from Jeff Daniels, Matthew Goode, and Isla Fisher, Gordon-Levitt’s take on this dysfunctional young man is completely riveting.
The Bottom Line
There’s a healthy helping of humor tossed into The Lookout, mostly supplied by Jeff Daniels as Gordon-Levitt’s wisecracking blind roommate. Writer/rookie director Frank also manages to flesh out each and every one of his characters, even the ones given just a handful of minutes on screen. Frank’s writing is right on, the dialogue rings true, and the film’s populated by characters you can easily imagine existing in every town.
The Lookout is an absolute must-see. It’s rare we’re treated to a film so well-written and well-executed that’s in no way gimmicky and has an intriguing story to tell. Don’t let this one slip in and out of theaters without giving it a look.
Rebecca Murray
Hollywood Movies Guide
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