Synopsis : Poker Face Movie
POKER FACE
A yearly high-stakes poker game between childhood friends turns into chaos when the tech billionaire host (Russell Crowe) unveils an elaborate scheme to seek revenge for the ways they've betrayed him over the years. But as his plans unfold, a group of thieves hatch plans of their own breaking into the mansion thinking it is empty. The old friends quickly band together and the years of playing the game help them win their way through a night of terror.
Cast: | Russell Crowe, Liam Hemsworth, RZA , Brooke Satchwell, Aden Young, Steve Bastoni, Daniel MacPherson, Paul Tassone, Elsa Pataky, Jack Thompson |
Director: | Russell Crowe |
Studio: | Screen Media Films |
Producer(s): | Gary Hamilton, Jason Clark, Keith Rodger, Mark David, Ryan Hamilton |
Writer(s): | Stephen Coates, Russell Crowe |
Official Site: | pokerfacemovie.com |
Actor, movie star, and director Russell Crowe is not a billionaire, but he’s likely been in closer proximity to billionaires than most of us. One figures that kind of exposure might have informed his performance here as a tech billionaire—who gives his profession as “gambler” to a would-be portrait painter—arranging an eccentric sendoff for himself in “Poker Face.”
It’s not one of Crowe’s most virtuosic performances, but it does have a comfortable, lived-in feel, despite the considerable anxiety his character, Jake Foley, is feeling. Or may be feeling. He doesn’t entirely let on, which is the point of the title. The movie begins with Crowe’s character in his early teens, bicycling with best buddy Drew, to the local swimming hole. The local AUSTRALIAN swimming hole, I might add. You know, one that’s off the lip of a cliff, and has a waterfall attached. At any rate, it is there that young Jake and his young buddies learn how to play and how to win at cards, in a sequence that bristles with tension at first but then dissipates into a “isn’t it great to be young and heedless” celebration to the tune of Indoor Garden Party’s “Fight Another Day.”
Except the aforementioned setup is also in play—a trio of armed robbers is on its way to the house to abscond with some of that art. Foley and pals, accompanied by a trusty assistant and eventually by Drew, now played by RZA—sans an Australian accent, but again who’s counting—wind up in the house’s panic room. Armed only with an automatic pistol with one bullet in it (long story). So they determine to wait out the more heavily armed baddies.
But oops, then the second wife and the teen daughter show up. Attention must be paid, action must be taken. Written by Crowe and Stephen M. Coates, "Poker Face" wants to be an awful lot of different things over the course of a commendably short running time. (It’s an hour and thirty-nine minutes, but the credits start at more like an hour-twenty-eight.) The contemplation of mortality drama, the revenge puzzle, the captivity thriller—they all get a whirl here. And it’s all topped off with the Unified Theory of the Good or At Least Redeemable Billionaire. Even if you can sense the fun Crowe is having with the camera setups in certain scenes, "Poker Face" is simultaneously a lot and not all that much.
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