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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
A black light shining, Jul 15 2004
David Mamet is one of the few practitioners in today's film industry who can justly be called an auteur (that is, the "author" of a film, who has enough control over the project to bring his vision more or less intact to the screen). Auteurs, who had their heyday in the 1960s and '70s, are scarce in this era of corporatized $150 million blockbusters and calculated teen flicks. I can't think offhand of any other except Robert Altman, and I am becoming more and more impressed with Mamet. (I've never been unqualifiedly enthusiastic about Altman; see my review of Gosford Park if you're interested.)Both in his previous film, Heist, and in Spartan, Mamet shows a growing mastery of direction. Spartan is set in a rather sinister shadow-world of secret military operations ruled by unsavory civilians. It's an atmosphere that may make you cringe a little, but it's certainly germane to the storyline, and Mamet builds it up skillfully detail by detail. He even trusts the audience enough that for a few minutes at the film's beginning, you're not sure what you're watching or its meaning, only that it feels creepy. By the time it becomes clear what's at stake -- the president's daughter, a college student wasted on drugs, has been kidnapped, not for political reasons but by a sex-slave organization that doesn't even know who she is -- you understand why the secret mission to recover her is entrusted to the character played by Val Kilmer, tough enough to chew razor blades and for whom only accomplishing the mission matters. Mamet displays a knack here for mood painting through visuals and the apt musical score by Mark Isham. A black light shines through many a scene. I am emphasizing this side of Mamet's work because I don't think he gets as much credit for it as he deserves; what everyone remarks on is his dialogue. As usual, he puts plenty of abrasive poetry in the mouths of his characters, and adds little touches of eccentricity without getting carried away by them (as Altman so often does). He seems to be a good actor's director, too. Kilmer is certainly an asset, and Mamet gets strong performances out of a cast with few big names. Particularly striking is an actress I've never seen before by the name of Kristen Bell (I won't tell you her role because it might be a spoiler if I did). Mamet, for all his much-noted facility with surprises and switches, isn't as good at plotting as he is at dialogue. Spartan falls into genre cliches at times and includes unlikely events and coincidences. Even when the script gets formulaic, though, Mamet's special brand of cinematic chemistry rarely lets up.
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