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Ocean's Thirteen

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Ocean's Thirteen
File:Oceans13Poster1.jpg
Directed bySteven Soderbergh
Written byBrian Koppelman
David Levien
Produced byJerry Weintraub
StarringGeorge Clooney
Brad Pitt
Matt Damon
Andy Garcia
Scott Caan
Don Cheadle
Casey Affleck
Elliott Gould
Bernie Mac
Al Pacino
Ellen Barkin
Eddie Izzard
Narrated byGeorge Clooney
CinematographySteven Soderbergh
Edited byStephen Mirrione
Music byDavid Holmes
Distributed byWarner Bros.
Release dates
June 8, 2007
Running time
122 min.
CountryUSA
LanguageEnglish
Budget$85,000,000

Ocean's Thirteen is a 2007 film directed by Steven Soderbergh and starring an ensemble cast. It is the third (and reportedly final[1]) in the Soderbergh series following the 2004 sequel Ocean's Twelve and the 2001 film Ocean's Eleven, which itself was a remake of the 1960 Rat Pack film Ocean's Eleven. The latter was highly influenced by Jean-Pierre Melville's Bob le Flambeur (1955). All of the cast members reprised their roles from the previous installments except for Julia Roberts and Catherine Zeta-Jones. Al Pacino and Ellen Barkin joined the cast as their new targets.

This film was rated PG-13 by the MPAA.

The film was released on June 8, 2007,[2] although it was released in several countries in the Middle East on June 6.[3]

Filming began in July 2006 in Las Vegas and Los Angeles, based on a script by Brian Koppelman and David Levien.[4]

Plot Synopsis

Unlike the previous 2 films, what Ocean & his crew are stealing isn't revealed until the climax of the film.

Danny Ocean's (George Clooney) crew gather around a hospital bed where Reuben Tishkoff (Elliott Gould) lies after suffering a heart attack. A flashback to four weeks earlier shows Reuben meeting with Vegas' most hated businessman, Willy Bank (Al Pacino) on the construction site of their new hotel. After Reuben secures crucial deals for Bank, he is intimidated into giving up his part of the investment, a strategy often employed by the vindictive Bank in previous deals. The shock causes Reuben's heart attack.

The gang swears to take revenge on Bank by utterly ruining his hotel, "The Bank", on the night of its grand opening. They aim to rig the various games at the casino so the players will win instead of the house. Bank was forced to take some hostile investors onto his Board of Directors to open the hotel, and if the house does not make at least $500 million in the first quarter, Bank will be removed from the chairmanship of his own hotel. The team also wishes to destroy any chance of Bank's winning the prestigious Five Diamond Award, the highest distinction granted a hotel. All of Bank's other hotels have won this award, and he has purchased valuable diamond necklaces to commemorate the successes. He has already optimistically purchased a necklace for his new hotel as well.

The main problem they face now is the artificial intelligence security system which 'can not only think, but reason', Greco, for which they hire Roman Nagel (Eddie Izzard) to lend his technical expertise. Their only other problem is how to ensure that all the patrons of the casino leave the place after making their wins but before they can lose their money all over again. Roman reveals the system was designed by a former classmate of his, Greco Montgomery (Julian Sands) and that it's designed to monitor all gamblers' physiological responses upon winning to make sure that they weren't expecting it (indicating a legitimate win). The only way to bypass it is by a huge natural disaster or a magnetron. If the system senses any trouble, it will automatically lock down, and rebooting would take three minutes twenty-one seconds. They rent a large tunnel boring machine, so it will induce an artificial earthquake underneath the hotel by generating the same resonance as the building. This is supposedly the drill that dug the Channel Tunnel from the British side.

Rusty (Brad Pitt) and Danny set about polluting a hotel room with biochemicals and bedbugs. In the lobby, a disguised Saul (Carl Reiner) is in line to check in. He "accidentally" drops a Five Diamond Award folder, catching the attention of Bank's aide, Abigail (Ellen Barkin), who immediately rushes to assist Saul. In line behind them, the genuine Five Diamond Award reviewer (David Paymer), who is supposed to be anonymous, is rudely jolted and then given the chemical-treated room by a bribed clerk. For the rest of his stay, the team ensures that he is treated as if he were an unwanted guest at a one-star hotel — he is not able to eat at the best restaurant so that the team can feed him a contaminated dumpling in the Chinese Restaurant (that gives him food poisoning), has his room filled with a noxious smell, gains multiple rashes from bedbugs, and is finally evicted from the hotel early by brutish security guards (Virgil and Turk in disguise). Before he leaves, the unhappy reviewer confronts Bank without revealing his identity and walks off.

Virgil Malloy (Casey Affleck) is sent to a Mexican factory to make the rigged dice. Upset by the terrible working conditions at the factory, he leads the workers on strike for better pay. The team sends Virgil's brother Turk (Scott Caan) to get the factory running again, but instead Turk joins the strike. The team eventually pay the factory workers their requested raise ($36,000 for the entire labor force, amounting to a $3.50 per week increase) and the factory reopens.

Disaster strikes when the drill intended to simulate the earthquake breaks down. As the replacement drill (the one that dug the Channel Tunnel from the French side) is only available for purchase and exceeds their budget, they have no choice but to make a deal with their old enemy Terry Benedict (Andy Garcia) for funding; Benedict claims he has a rivalry with Bank because Bank's new hotel is blocking his pool from sunlight. Benedict requests that, in return for his financial aid, they double his investment plus steal the diamond necklaces that Bank has purchased in expectation of his Five Diamond accreditation; Ocean, Rusty and Linus reluctantly agree. Soon after, Benedict even plays along with the plan when he coerces Banks into buying a rigged domino table, run by Frank (Bernie Mac), posing as a domino dealer. The diamonds are housed in a glass case in the penthouse and are worth $250 million collectively.

Yen (Shaobo Qin) is introduced as Mr. Weng, a high-roller and rich businessman, and Linus (Matt Damon), disguised with a distinctive nose, as his business manager. Yen the acrobat infiltrates the elevator shafts and air conditioning ducts and discovers that accessing the diamonds from the floor or ceiling will be borderline impossible. The new plan to access the diamonds is for the disguised Linus to seduce Abigail, who has access to the room with the diamonds. When opening night arrives, Linus uses pheromones to seduce her, leading him to the diamond room for privacy. Inside, he inconspicuously places small explosives around the base of the column containing the jewels.

Downstairs, the FBI enters and arrests Livingston (Eddie Jemison), as he has been caught rigging machines. An agent (Bob Einstein) tells Bank that a new set of machines will be coming in shortly. Roman then brings in the rigged machines, putting them in place of the genuine machines. Prints on the machine are matched with Livingston’s, and the casino comes up with a list of known associates- Ocean's Eleven. The list, with pictures, is downloaded to the computer in Bank's office. Basher (Don Cheadle), dressed up as the stunt man for the hotel's opening show that evening, distracts Bank from the computer while Virgil and Turk modify the downloaded names and faces so that the team's cover is preserved.

The infiltrated dice from Turk and Virgil's Mexican factory are distributed throughout the casino. When the team activates their equipment, disguised as Zippo lighters, the dice will flip and stop, manipulating the outcomes of games. Also, a slot is rigged to pay a huge progressive, and Rusty leaves the final dollar coin for the next person who trips the win (since the monitoring system is still active at this point).

With the drill turned on, a mock earthquake begins and Bank rushes to the Greco system. His tampered mobile phone acts as a magnetron, shutting down Greco for three minutes. Bank is trapped in the security office and the rigged games can now be played. Team members in the casino, including Danny, Rusty, Saul, Yen, Frank, and a recovered Reuben, all make sure that everyone who plays at the casino wins, so the casino pays out millions. When the system reactivates, a stronger earthquake is simulated, prompting everyone in the casino to cash in their chips and evacuate, taking away all the money with them.

Upstairs, the FBI agent disrupts Linus and Abigail, revealing Linus was using her to steal the diamonds and replace them with replicas. As Linus is then taken away, the agent is revealed to be his successful criminal father, who is also in on the scheme. As the two reach the helipad to leave, Francois Toulour (Vincent Cassel), alias "the Night Fox" (the antagonist from Ocean's Twelve), reveals himself, after following the whole crew from the start in a partnership with Benedict. Held at gunpoint from Toulour, Linus hands over the diamonds. Toulour throws him the gun, which is revealed to be empty, then base-jumps off the casino roof.

Basher lands the helicopter, and the team detonates the explosives, freeing the diamond case from the floor. The helicopter takes off, detaching the glass case carrying the real diamonds from the building. It is revealed that Linus never switched the diamonds. Danny confronts Bank, who has lost a total of $500 million dollars from the whole ordeal, not including the necklaces, telling him he broke the rules and needed to learn from what he's done; he also states that Bank obviously isn't going to go to the police and that there's no point in Bank threatening him, because all the people Bank could hire to destroy Danny like Danny more than Bank. As the helicopter flies off, an aghast Bank watches shell shocked. As Francois also witnesses this, he discovers his set of diamonds are fake and throws them away.

The team celebrates as the fireworks Bank had organized go off on the stroke of midnight, and Reuben is given the deed to 4.6 acres of land on the Las Vegas Strip. Danny pays a final visit to Benedict, chiding him for his trickery, telling him they were aware of Toulour's presence and informing him that the 72 million dollars promised to Benedict had been donated in Benedict's name to the children's charity "Camp to Belong".

Danny, Rusty, and Linus meet at McCarran airport and watch Benedict being featured on The Oprah Winfrey Show- a reference to a previous scene in which Rusty finds Ocean in his apartment watching the show and crying- for his apparent generous donation, before going their separate ways. Before leaving the airport, Rusty sits down to play a game of slots presumably rigged by Livingston. After rigging the machine to deliver a progressive jackpot on the next play, Rusty gives his seat at the machine to the beleaguered hotel reviewer. Rusty smiles as he walks away, hearing the man scream that he had won the $11 million jackpot as everyone crowds around him and cheers. This is alluded to earlier when several characters are debating how much money they would need to be paid in order to suffer as the reviewer did.

Cast

The Eleven

Others

and Seth Green makes a cameo appearance at the beginning of the film.

Cons described

Like in the previous movies there are several references to cons or other practices using just a person's name with no description of what it means. Here are the explanations for some of them:
Billy Martin - When they give Bank a second chance to do the right thing it's referred to as a Billy Martin. Billy Martin was a famous second baseman and manager. Martin was fired (or quit) as the manager of the New York Yankees in 1978. He was rehired as manager in 1980, given a second chance.
Irwin Allen - This con involves the mark being manipulated using the threat of a natural disaster. Irwin Allen was a television and film producer known for his work on disaster movies. His nickname was "The Master of Disaster."
Susan B. Anthony - This is not exactly a con (at least not directly). When the Susan B. Anthony dollar coin was widely used, people would often mistakenly drop it into a slot rather than a quarter (due to their similarity in size and appearance). Therefore the "Susan B. Anthony" semantically refers to a coin that has more value than what the slot player thinks, but in the context of the movie refers to the trick in which a large payout is rigged for the next player. In the movie it happens twice; each time the characters leave an actual coin (the "Susan B. Anthony") at a slot machine that has been rigged to give the maximum jackpot to the next player. The coin, of course, has nothing to do with the mechanics of the trick (it is an ordinary coin), but simply acts as a catalyst.
The Brody - A false nose worn by Matt Damon's character is referred to as the Brody. This is a reference to actor Adrien Brody known for having very striking looks, including a unique nose, which he has broken three times doing motorcycle stunts.[citation needed]
Gilroy - In the movie a Gilroy is a very powerful "accelerator," a chemical which gives off a smell that causes a woman to become very aroused. As it is used on Matt Damon's character the name Gilroy may be a reference to screenwriter Tony Gilroy who wrote the screenplays for all three of Damon's Jason Bourne series of movies as well as for George Clooney's upcoming movie Michael Clayton, which Gilroy also directs. This may also refer to the city of Gilroy ,CA, which is known for its pungent garlic fields which can be smelled from miles away.

Trivia

  • At the begining of the movie when Reuben and Danny are discussing Reuben's deal with Bank, Danny advises that he and Rusty are worried. Reuben quips that "at least he won't have to do jobs to keep his hotel solvent. This is in reference to Rusty's hotel in Oceans 12.
  • In a Conversation with Al Pacino, George Clooney begins "what I want - What is really important to me". The same line said by Al Pacino in The Godfather.
  • A couple of characters in the movie, including George Clooney, make a reference to shaking Frank Sinatra's hand. Frank Sinatra played Danny Ocean in the original Ocean's Eleven.
  • At the end of the movie Brad Pitt says to George Clooney "Try to keep the weight off between jobs." This may be a reference to Clooney gaining weight for his role in Syriana. Clooney responds by saying "Settle down. Have a few kids." This is a reference to Brad Pitt and his girlfriend Angelina Jolie; the two have adopted several children.

Reaction

Box office performance

The film did substantially well on its first weekend, notching the top spot. Despite being opened in 250 more theaters than Ocean's Twelve, it had a slightly weaker opening weekend than the former, pulling in $36 million, compared to Twelve's $39 million opening weekend.[5] [6] However, the film had much stronger competition than its predecessor, competing with big summer blockbusters, Pirates of the Caribbean: At World's End and Shrek the Third (in their third and fourth weeks respectively), the opening Surf's Up and Hostel: Part II, and the surprise box office hit, Knocked Up (in its second weekend). Considering the unusually strong competition, the film had an impressive opening. As of 2007-08-10 Ocean's Thirteen has taken in $116.3 million in the U.S alone. Overseas the film has made $169 million pushing its total worldwide gross to $285.3 million.

Critical reception

Critical reception to the movie has generally been positive with some critics liking the movie's style while others criticizing it for its over-complexity. Joel Siegel, in what would turn out to be his last review for Good Morning America, raved on the movie, saying that if it had been the first movie, there still would have been a sequel. IMDb users gave it a 7.3 rating. On the internet movie website Rotten Tomatoes, the movie has received an overall 69% score, while on Yahoo! Movies, it garnered an average B grade. [7][8]

References

  1. ^ ""Ocean's 13" Definitely The Last?". Retrieved 2007-06-17.
  2. ^ "Movie Insider: Ocean's Thirteen (2007)". Retrieved 2006-07-14.
  3. ^ "Bahrain Cinema Company homepage". Retrieved 2007-06-06.
  4. ^ "Ocean's 13 to Start on July 21". Retrieved 2006-07-14.
  5. ^ ""Ocean's Thirteen" steals No. 1 spot at box office". Yahoo! Entertainment News. Online News. 2007-06-10. Retrieved 2007-06-10. {{cite news}}: |first= missing |last= (help); Check date values in: |date= (help)
  6. ^ "The Summer Box Office Gets All Wet". Box Office Mojo. Online News. 2007-06-10. Retrieved 2007-06-10. {{cite news}}: |first= missing |last= (help); Check date values in: |date= (help); Text "last Douglas" ignored (help)
  7. ^ "Critic Reviews on Yahoo! Movies". Yahoo! Movies. News Corporation. June 10, 2007. Retrieved 2007-06-10. {{cite news}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  8. ^ "Reviews on the movie's page on Rotten Tomatoes". Rotten Tomatoes. News Corporation. June 10, 2007. Retrieved 2007-06-10. {{cite news}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)

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