Logan Lucky is entertaining blue-collar heist movie
Review by Katie Walsh of the Tribune News Service
The trailer for Logan Lucky, the new film from Steven Soderbergh, his first after his short-lived retirement, announces that its from the director of Oceans 11, 12, 13, and Magic Mike. None of his many other films are needed to position Logan Lucky for audiences. This is Soderbergh at his most fun, working in slick heist caper mode, featuring his muse of the moment, Channing Tatum.
Since Tatums physical talents are the inspiration for Magic Mike, its ironic that Soderbergh has saddled his character, Jimmy Logan, with a bum knee, an injury that killed his NFL dreams and continues to impede his job prospects. Tatum lumbers and limps around Logan Lucky, portraying a charming lunkhead type, and using his comedic talent to power this light-hearted crime comedy.
Jimmys brother, Clyde (Adam Driver), is also physically impaired, saddled with a prosthetic hand. Hes an Iraq vet, and incongruously works as a bartender, though he mixes a mean one-handed martini. Their setbacks in life make their sister Mellie (Riley Keough) wonder about a Logan curse, but they pay that no mind. These two determined brothers may not seem like the sharpest tools in the shed, but dang if they arent dogged in their pursuits. Its surprising, but Tatum and Driver make a perfect on-screen pair.
At one point, a character makes reference to Oceans 7-11, which could have been a perfect pithy tagline for this film. This is a decidedly blue-collar heist film, devoid of Sin City glam, focusing on real, if heightened characters. Casinos? Nah, theyre robbing the biggest show in town NASCAR. Laid off from his construction job due to liability issues from his knee injury, Jimmy just wants enough money to stay close to his daughter, Sadie (Farrah Mackenzie), a spunky pageant princess with heart.
They recruit an incarcerated inmate, Joe Bang, a savant of homemade explosives, to bring the firepower to their plan to rob a vault of concessions cash underneath the motor speedway. The trailer cheekily announces, and introducing Daniel Craig as Joe, and its appropriate; Craigs unrecognizable, inspired, Southern-fried performance is as far from 007 as you can get.
The screenplay is credited to a Rebecca Blunt, a writer who doesnt seem to exist. Some have theorized that Soderberghs wife, former E! host and novelist Jules Asner might have written it, or Soderbergh himself. He has never shied away from using a pseudonym. Nevertheless, the story is so clearly Soderberghian, it had to have sprung from him or his inner circle.
In his heist films, Soderbergh is preoccupied with systems of places - the Rube Goldberg machines and mathematical equations that make things run. Logan Lucky is no different, focused on the careful and clever planning and execution, always with a trick up its sleeve, a shocking reveal of the secret plan inside the plan. The script does get too caught up in the plan, unfortunately losing momentum at the climax.
There are also a few characters around the edges that feel extraneous to the central story - an annoying energy drink pusher played by Seth MacFarlane with a cockney accent; a gravely toned FBI investigator played by Hilary Swank. But for all its issues, Logan Lucky is just so warmheartedly enthusiastic, its hard not to get swept away with this group of not-so-average Joes.
LOGAN LUCKY 3 out of 4 stars Cast: Channing Tatum, Adam Driver, Daniel Craig, Riley Keough, Katie Holmes, Hilary Swank Director: by Steven Soderbergh Running time: 1 hour, 59 minutes Rated: PG-13 for language and some crude comments.