A SIMPLE PLAN
RATING: 8 / 10 --> Great movie
Champion of the camera pyrotechnics, director Sam Raimi reins
himself in for this film, and takes on the impression of the Coen
brothers on a date with Alfred Hitchcock, in this good old
fashioned small town thriller that has everyone asking themselves
the same question..."Would I keep the money?"
PLOT:
Two brothers and a friend find $4.4 million on a crashed airplane
in a nearby snow-ridden forest. The boys agree to hang on to the
money until the spring, and see if anyone comes looking for it.
If nobody claims for it by them, they agree to share the spoils
among themselves, and never tell anyone else about it. Somewhere
along the line, their "simple plan" goes awry and the
plot thickens.
CRITIQUE:
Magnificent film blends all the best elements of a suspense with
a solid cast of players, a beautiful landscape a la FARGO (7/10),
and a labyrinth of twists and turns that will have you gnawing at
your fingernails in anticipation of the next morally-questionable
booby-trap. Sam Raimi has crafted one of the best thrillers of
the past few years, and does so without the aid of his
wonderfully creative camera tricks. This film works on all
cylinders because Raimi, and screenwriter Smith, groove the
characters out of real people with real problems and real
concerns on their minds. The people in this film are just like
you and me, and that is what makes this thriller so much deeper
and grittier than most. It's based in the reality of the moment,
and the consequences that each and every one of us could face in
the advent of a simple, everyday cover-up. One thing leads to
another in this film, and then another, and then another, until
the dark reality of the situation finally succumbs the group, at
which point, well...you'll see!
All of the actors in this movie are amazing, but Billy Bob Thornton pulls off another fantastic showing, as the hick brother who lacks in the brainpower but makes up for it via his abundancy of conscience. This movie is for all those people who love to sit in a theatre, watch a movie magically unfold before their very eyes, and chew on the stream of questions rattling off in their brains..."What's gonna happen next?"..."What would I do in a situation like this?"..."How the hell are they gonna get out of this one?"
This movie is fun and entertaining to watch because it doesn't give us all the answers up front. It slowly unveils the layers of the story asthe minutes of the film tick by, and the tension from the suspense sinks in. The cinematography of this movie is lush and creamy, the actors are rock-solid and the plot is a wonder in the science of twisting and turning. Forget all of those crappy big-budgeted, big-starred Hollywood pictures that are coming out this winter season, and go see a movie that truly embraces all of the good old-fashioned notions that make up a great suspenseful film. This film is a tasty delight for all those who love the mystery and the fascination of a cool thriller, and who enjoy watching real characters live out extraordinary circumstances.
So would I keep a sack of $4.4 million if I found it in the middle of a forest tomorrow? After seeing the degradation of human values that crossed the lives of every single person in this movie, I would say "no".
Unless of course...I had a simple plan to get away with it all..... :)
Little Known Facts about this film and its
stars:
Ben Stiller, John Dahl and John Boorman were three other
directors that
were at some point associated to the making of this film.
A scene with Billy Bob Thornton and Bill Paxton was lost by
Northwest
Airlines in January 1998 while in transit from Minnesota to Los
Angeles. The missing scene had been shot in Minnesota. The film
was
insured.
Sam Raimi requested some advice from his old friends who once
helped
him on his EVIL DEAD movies, the Coen brothers, in regards to the
shooting of this movie in the snow. When Raimi isn't directing or
writing, he's busy as the executive producer of the blockbuster
syndicated TV series "Xena: Warrior Princess" and
"Hercules: The
Legendary Journeys." He also co-wrote two films with the
Coen brothers.
The first was CRIMEWAVE (5/10), and the second was THE HUDSUCKER
PROXY
(6/10).
Bill Paxton's father plays the part of Mr. Schmitt in this movie.
"A Simple Plan", the novel also written by Scott Smith,
spent seven
weeks on the New York Times best-seller list in 1994. Smith
originally
conceived the project as a screenplay before choosing to write it
as a
novel. Smith wrote A SIMPLE PLAN while living in New Orleans. The
kernel of the idea for the novel was something he first came up
with as
a graduate student in a screenwriting course at Columbia
University's
writing program.
This film was filmed in the early months of 1998 in Delano,
Minnesota.
Review Date: December 20, 1998
Director: Sam Raimi
Writer: Scott B. Smith (based his own novel)
Producers: James Jacks and Adam Schroeder
Actors: Bill Paxton as Hank Mitchell
Billy Bob Thornton as Jacob Mitchell
Bridget Fonda as Sarah
Genre: Thriller
Year of Release: 1998
(c) 1998 Berge Garabedian