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The Flirty DozenPaid summer vacation makes for surprisingly snazzy sequel, Oceans TwelveDennis LimPublished on December 09, 2004Painstakingly documented viapaparazzi telephotography and Access Hollywood dispatches all summer long, the Ocean's Twelveshoot was, we know by now, a playground of lakefront villas and luxury yachts. Director Steven Soderbergh admits this was precisely the point—he says the idea for a sequel to Ocean's Eleven, his 2001 heist flick remake and worldwide mega-hit, originated when he was in Rome for a junket and fell in love with the city. Besides being in the spirit of the Rat Pack original (which allowed Frank, Dean, Sammy, et al., to rule the Vegas strip during production), this coolly hedonistic attitude gives Ocean's Twelvea seductive swagger and, thanks to some fancy footwork by the director and his A-list cast, even permits some self-implicating riffs on the pressures of fame, the difficulty of following up, and the senselessness of attempting an old-school heist—or an old-school heist movie—at this very late stage in the game. The minor miracle of Ocean's Twelve—a paid vacation for a bunch of people who don't need one—is that you never begrudge the film its brazen fabulosity, not least because it's so inclusive in its revelry: the movie noisily conveys the messy joy of its making, and insists that you have a good time as well. Despite the prevailing haphazardness, there's a wry, effortless confidence at work—the hallmark not just of Soderbergh's populist films but also of George Clooney and Brad Pitt's charm assaults, intermingling here to scarily potent effect. Funnier and sprightlier than Eleven, which exhibited a genial self-consciousness but never thought to challenge the genre textbook, Twelveis committed to not taking itself seriously. Clooney: cocksure The glamour factor is swoon-ingly high (Pitt in nipple-hugging gigolo shirts, Zeta-Jones in killer trench-coat-and-stiletto ensembles), and no one is overextended, given the reasonably democratic makeup of the large cast and the parade of juicy cameos: Topher Grace (excellent as always), Cherry Jones, Eddie Izzard, and many more. An expert handler of actors, Soderbergh is also well-versed in the construction of stardom. Twelve builds on Eleven's awareness of acting as confidence game. As in Full Frontal, albeit to more pungent effect, Soderbergh topples the fourth wall to toy with the notion, likewise advanced in Notting Hill, that a star of Julia Roberts' stature is always, on some level, playing herself. (Without giving too much away, Roberts gamely responds to the brief spasm of reflexiveness, with help from her Playerco-conspirator Bruce Willis.) Cheadle: Cockney OCEAN'S TWELVEWAS DIRECTED BY STEVEN SODERBERGH; PRODUCED BY JERRY WEINTRAUB, BRUCE BERMAN AND JOHN HANDY; WRITTEN BY GEORGE NOLFI, ROBERT NOLFI AND TED GRIFFIN; AND STARS GEORGE CLOONEY, JULIA ROBERTS, BRAD PITT, MATT DAMON, CATHERINE ZETA-JONES, DON CHEADLE, ANDY GARCIA, THE PROFESSOR AND MARY ANN. NOW PLAYING COUNTYWIDE.
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