Out of Sight (1998)
Country: US
Technical: col 123m
Director: Steven Soderbergh
Cast: George Clooney, Jennifer Lopez, Ving Rhames, Dennis Farina, Albert Brooks, Don Cheadle, Catherine Keener, Michael Keaton, Samuel L. Jackson, Luis Guzmán
Synopsis:
A recidivist bank robber holds a federal agent hostage during a breakout, and falls in love with her. As they pursue their differing professional objectives, their paths cross tantalisingly.
Review:
More filmed Elmore Leonard, with its bungled violence, moral crooks and humorous supporting characters. This time we have a true craftsman at the helm who uses cinema and the chemistry of his stars to fashion a New Wave-inflected, chronologically scrambled take on impossible love, a work whose smooth self-assurance conceals a mess of cogs and springs working away underneath.
Country: US
Technical: col 123m
Director: Steven Soderbergh
Cast: George Clooney, Jennifer Lopez, Ving Rhames, Dennis Farina, Albert Brooks, Don Cheadle, Catherine Keener, Michael Keaton, Samuel L. Jackson, Luis Guzmán
Synopsis:
A recidivist bank robber holds a federal agent hostage during a breakout, and falls in love with her. As they pursue their differing professional objectives, their paths cross tantalisingly.
Review:
More filmed Elmore Leonard, with its bungled violence, moral crooks and humorous supporting characters. This time we have a true craftsman at the helm who uses cinema and the chemistry of his stars to fashion a New Wave-inflected, chronologically scrambled take on impossible love, a work whose smooth self-assurance conceals a mess of cogs and springs working away underneath.
Country: US
Technical: col 123m
Director: Steven Soderbergh
Cast: George Clooney, Jennifer Lopez, Ving Rhames, Dennis Farina, Albert Brooks, Don Cheadle, Catherine Keener, Michael Keaton, Samuel L. Jackson, Luis Guzmán
Synopsis:
A recidivist bank robber holds a federal agent hostage during a breakout, and falls in love with her. As they pursue their differing professional objectives, their paths cross tantalisingly.
Review:
More filmed Elmore Leonard, with its bungled violence, moral crooks and humorous supporting characters. This time we have a true craftsman at the helm who uses cinema and the chemistry of his stars to fashion a New Wave-inflected, chronologically scrambled take on impossible love, a work whose smooth self-assurance conceals a mess of cogs and springs working away underneath.