Date: Fri 27-Aug-1999
Date: Fri 27-Aug-1999
Publication: Bee
Author: CAROLL
Quick Words:
Thomas-Crown-Russo-Brosnan
Full Text:
NOW PLAYING: An "Affair" To Remember
By Trey Paul Alexander III
The release of The Thomas Crown Affair , a remake of the 1968 film starring
Steve McQueen and Faye Dunaway, ushered in a wave of press coverage and
articles on '99 leading lady Rene Russo, whose femme fatale turn here at age
45 was tagged to strive a significant blow on several fronts: her bold
prancing in a suggestive, shimmery black sheath of a gown during a dance
sequence showed that actresses over 40 need not be relegated simply to
character parts; her pairing with 46-year-old co-star Pierce Brosnan marked a
courtship of peers rather than Hollywood's more typical May-December match-ups
(such as Sean Connery and Catherine Zeta-Jones in Entrapment ; and the duo's
potent on-screen chemistry could teach some of Tinseltown's young
whippersnappers a thing or two.
All this makes for good print and interesting reading, but the fact remains
that Russo and Brosnan aren't flag bearers for reality here. The Thomas Crown
Affair isn't notable because it features "real people," but because it boasts
extremely attractive actors in lavish settings, surrounded by luxurious things
and draped in stylish clothes. Reality? Not by a long shot. But as
entertaining movie fantasy, it works quite well.
The premise revolves around a smooth New York City billionaire, Thomas Crown
(Brosnan), whose favorite pastime is swiping art masterpieces out from under
well-guarded galleries. He meets his match -- in more ways than one -- in the
cagey, indefatigable insurance investigator Catherine Banning (Russo), who
joins forces with city detectives to try to pin the burglaries on the
unflappable Crown. A cat and mouse game ensues between Crown and Banning as
her sleuthing takes her further and further into the appealingly opulent
lifestyle of the enigmatic financier.
The most talked about segment of the film -- the sequences in which Brosnan
and Russo make it all too conspicuous that they've been working out -- comes
in the middle portion of the movie as Banning and Crown become more intimate.
Quite frankly, it is too explicit to make its point. But the story does
legitimately ask the question, at this turning point in these characters'
relationship, can these two people, each with a sizable measure of deception
up their sleeves, go beyond the physical aspects of their attachment and grow
to know and, more importantly, trust one another emotionally?
In fact, it is this facet of The Thomas Crown Affair , and the proficient
manner in which it is conveyed by the cast, that breathes fresh life into the
flick. Despite their sanguine veneers, both Banning and Crown are fragile
individuals with eccentricities that the movie seeks to explain... or, at
least, to somewhat rationalize. To this end, Dunaway has a cameo as Crown's
shrink, a sideline commentator on what the rich bachelor's motivations may be.
In the other corner, Banning's conscience is most unexpected: a down-to-earth,
pragmatic detective (Denis Leary) who also envies her high-fashion, affluent
lifestyle. Leary, to his credit, declines to rest solely on his trademark
snide, caustic humor and shows a surprisingly versatile side to his acting in
this very layered performance.
As for the two leads, Brosnan and Russo click nicely and their match is
powered largely by the confidence they convey in both their characterizations
and themselves as skilled performers. Brosnan, playing off his recent
big-screen success as James Bond, effectively plays Crown as if he were Bruce
Wayne without the Batman fixation, and Russo radiates a type of winning
charisma that would make past co-stars Gibson, Costner, Eastwood and Travolta
proud.
The Thomas Crown Affair is rated R. It contains profanity and, in the
aforementioned middle segment, explicit sexuality.