Opis:
It's not quite as clever as it tries to be, but The Game does a
tremendous job of presenting the story of a rigid control freak trapped
in circumstances that are increasingly beyond his control. Michael
Douglas plays a rich, divorced, and dreadful investment banker whose
48th birthday reminds him of his father's suicide at the same age. He's
locked in the cage of his own misery until his rebellious younger
brother (Sean Penn) presents him with a birthday invitation to play "The
Game" (described as "an experiential Book of the Month Club")--a
mysterious offering from a company called Consumer Recreation Services.
Before he knows the game has even begun, Douglas is caught up in a
series of unexplained events designed to strip him of his tenuous
security and cast him into a maelstrom of chaos. How do you play a game
that hasn't any rules? That's what Douglas has to figure out, and he
can't always rely on his intelligence to form logic out of what's
happening to him. Seemingly cast as the fall guy in a conspiracy
thriller, he encounters a waitress (Deborah Unger) who may or may not be
trustworthy, and nothing can be taken at face value in a world turned
upside down. Douglas is great at conveying the sheer panic of his
character's dilemma, and despite some lapses in credibility and an
anticlimactic ending, The Game remains a thinking person's thriller that grabs and holds your attention. Thematic resonance abounds between this and Seven and Fight Club, two of the other films by The Game 's director David Fincher.
For the follow-up to his dark crime thriller SEVEN, director David
Fincher decided to remain in a film noir vein. The result is THE GAME, a
fast-paced cinematic roller-coaster ride that stars Michael Douglas as
Nicholas Van Orton, a joyless San Francisco investment banker who
receives an unusual birthday present from his estranged younger brother,
Conrad (Sean Penn). The gift enrolls Nicholas in CRS (Consumer
Recreation Services), a company that designs elaborate real-life games
for each specific participant. As the game begins, the reluctant
Nicholas becomes the victim of a series of pranks that quickly turn
malicious and dangerous. Stripped of his finances and convinced that he
can trust no one, Nicholas realises that this game may be an attempt to
steal his fortune and leave him for dead. In a desperate bid to regain
his life, Nicholas infiltrates CRS in order to uncover the secrets of
the mysterious organisation. Douglas is perfect playing the uptight
businessman Nicholas, cleverly riffing on his Oscar-winning performance
as the cold-blooded Gordon Gekko in WALL STREET. Fincher's Kafkaesque
carnival show is an exercise in taut filmmaking that mischievously pulls
a seemingly endless supply of rugs out from under both Nicholas and,
even more impressive, the viewer.
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