Reviewed by: Misty Wagner
CONTRIBUTOR
Moral Rating: | Very Offensive |
Moviemaking Quality: |
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Primary Audience: | Adults |
Genre: | Crime Adventure Romance |
Length: | 1 hr. 53 min. |
Year of Release: | 2008 |
USA Release: |
May 15, 2009 (select—4 theaters) May 29, 2009 (limited—wider) DVD: September 29, 2009 |
What is true love and how do you know when you have found it? Answer
Thieves in the Bible: Theft, Robbery, The two thieves
Lying in the Bible
Orphans in the Bible
DEPRESSION—Are there biblical examples of depression and how to deal with it? Answer
What should a Christian do if overwhelmed with depression? Answer
Featuring | Rachel Weisz (Penelope), Adrien Brody (Bloom), Mark Ruffalo (Stephen), Rinko Kikuchi (Bang Bang), Robbie Coltrane (Curator), Maximilian Schell (Diamond Dog), Ricky Jay (Narrator—voice), See all » |
Director | Rian Johnson—“Brick” (2006) |
Producer | Endgame Entertainment, Ram Bergman Productions, Ram Bergman, Douglas Hansen, Wendy Japhet, Tom Karnowski, James D. Stern |
Distributor |
“They’d never let the truth come between them.”
Stephen and Bloom grew up bouncing from foster home to foster home. By the time Bloom was 10 and Stephen 13, they found themselves in their thirty-eighth home. The boys learned, through a conditional and flawed system, that they were all the other had, the only people they could truly count on…
Twenty-Five years later, Stephen (Mark Ruffalo) and Bloom (Adrien Brody) are the most successful pair of gentlemen thieves the world has known. Conning their way into millions with the aid of their mostly silent sidekick Bang-Bang (Rinko Kikuchi—who does a fantastic job, despite her lack of lines), Stephen finds worth and satisfaction in weaving all levels of dramatic elements into their ruses while Bloom finds himself aching for a form of reality that isn’t scripted by his older brother. Vowing to go out on his own (which turns out to be merely hiding away with a supply of liquor and his own depression) Bloom walks away from Stephen and the con-artist business.
DEPRESSION—Are there biblical examples of depression and how to deal with it? Answer
What should a Christian do if overwhelmed with depression? Answer
Months pass and Stephen tracks down Bloom, convincing him to head to New Jersey for one last con. The “big one.” The one which Stephen continually refers to as The Perfect Con. Reluctantly, Bloom hears Stephen out, eventually agreeing more out of his curiosity about the con’s target Penelope (Rachel Weisz). Penelope is the soul heir to her deceased fathers enormous, oil funded, estate.
Surprisingly, I feel there is quite a lot. Though, through most of the film it may seem like the relationship between Stephen and Bloom is not a good one—as the film develops that perception changes.
The character of Penelope is so unconditional and forgiving—a truly graceful and selfless character. Joyously optimistic, there is something so refreshing about watching Penelope’s scenes.
It isn’t as much the little moments of the film which caught, entertained or touched me, but more the currents beneath the surface. As a film which flows with a sort of film noir feel, vibrantly styled and enchantingly soundtracked, it’s quite easy to be swept up in moments of “The Brothers Bloom.” This truly is a movie that will give you laugh-out-loud moments coupled with the tear inducing ones. Many critics have cited the film for a lack of character depth, but, in my back-to-back viewings, I found quite the opposite. Without giving anything away, the relationships between the core characters do grow quite deep—revealing much about the characters themselves in the process. For example, the audience is granted very brief glimpses into the painful childhoods of the Brothers Bloom as well as Penelope—and how those hurts shaped them into the people they are today.
Though the relationship between Bloom and Penelope develops quite tenderly, it is the depth of the relationship between Stephen and Bloom which I felt carried the film. At times romantic and endearing, the story is more of a bond between two brothers.
Beautifully filmed and quite intoxicating at times, “The Brothers Bloom” perhaps takes itself a bit too seriously. One could say it is a little too artsy. It’s easy to criticize a film which tries to pull off so much in under two hours, but overall I truly enjoyed this movie.
See list of Relevant Issues—questions-and-answers.