"The Grifters" is a lurid, tense film that explores the lives of three con artists and their relationships to each other. While the violence, language, and sexual situations may offend some people, it does not detract from the film's message, which is that crime doesn't pay. The life of a grifter may be eventful, but it is ultimately dismal.
"The Grifters" stars Roy (John Cusack) as a young grifter, working 'short cons' on innocents such as bartenders and sailors. His mother Lilly (Anjelica Huston) works the racetracks for a sadistic mobster (Pat Hingle). Mother and son have an uncomfortable relationship, partly due to Roy's need for independence, but mostly due to his unresolved Oedipus complex. Roy's girlfriend is Myra (Annette Bening), a ruthless and manipulative con artist, who sees Roy as a potential partner for her specialty, 'long cons' to be perpetrated on desperate businessmen. Myra and Lilly soon take a dislike to each other, and tensions are further increased by Roy's mistrust of Myra.
The character of Myra was the most interesting
for me. She really is a monster, and the more
evil an action is, the more she seems to enjoy
it. Roy is so independent and mistrustful that he
tries to convince Myra and Lilly that he is a
salesman, but he doesn't fool either of them.
Lilly is the film's shrewdest character, but she
is undermined by her avarice and her love for her
son. The complex relationships of these three con
artists creates tense and unpredictable plot
developments.
"The Grifters" has several excellent supporting
roles for veteran character actors. Pat Hingle
plays a crafty, sinister mobster, Henry Jones is
a know-it-all motel clerk, and Eddie Jones is the
grifter who makes Roy his apprentice. Stephen
Tobolowsky plays a jeweler who is perhaps the
film's only honest character.
"The Grifters" received several Academy Award
nominations: Best Actress (Huston), Best
Supporting Actress (Bening), Best Director
(Stephen Frears), and Best Adapted Screenplay
(Donald Westlake). (82/100)
THE GRIFTERS is an intense character study of a group of people caught up in a world where nobody can be trusted. Stephen Frears presents this cool an...More at Family Video
Academy Award winning actress Anjelica Huston (Best Supporting Actress, Prizzi s Honor, 1985), John Cusack (Serendipity), and Annette Bening (American...More at Buy.com Marketplaces
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