Four stars. Rated PG-13, and somewhat harshly, for brief profanity and crude language
By Derrick Bang • Originally published in The Davis Enterprise, 8.25.17
Director Steven Soderbergh appears
to have been bitten by the Fargo bug.
The droll, slow-burn Logan Lucky could be described as a cross
between Soderbergh’s Oceans 11 and
that iconic 1996 crime thriller — and its more recent, and ongoing, television
adaptation — with additional regional absurdity supplied by an impudent
original script credited to “Rebecca Blunt.”
The quotes are intentional,
because no such person exists. As yet, this film’s writer hasn’t been
identified, although sources have suggested Soderbergh, or his wife Jules Asner,
or several other possibilities. Certainly Soderbergh is no stranger to
pseudonyms; indeed, he employs two for Logan
Lucky, having supplemented his director’s duties as both cinematographer
(under the name Peter Andrews) and editor (as Mary Ann Bernard).
The narrative here certainly
displays Soderbergh’s long-established dry wit and arch sense of humor, and the
film is guaranteed to delight viewers who appreciate the methodical build-up
and eccentric characters that more frequently populate British quasi-comedies.
The storyline takes its time
while bringing the primary characters to the stage. The setting is small-town
West Virginia, where divorced, down-on-his-luck Jimmy Logan (Channing Tatum)
never gets to spend enough time with doting young daughter Sadie (Farrah
Mackenzie, cute as a button). Jimmy’s intentions are good, but circumstances
always interfere, much to the displeasure of ex-wife Bobbie Jo (Katie Holmes),
now married to the insufferably wealthy — and insufferably smug — Moody (David
Denman).
Jimmy spends considerable time
commiserating with his brother Clyde (Adam Driver), who lost an arm during war
service in Iraq, and now tends bar at a local dive rather oddly dubbed the Duck
Tape. Clyde is convinced that every member of their clan is doomed by a
longstanding “family curse,” hence his missing arm, and Jimmy’s injury-related
limp, with similar misfortune stretching back generations.
Their sister Mellie (Riley
Keough) sniffs at such nonsense, and well she should; there’s certainly nothing
amiss in her life. Far from it: Aside
from being a talented and popular hairdresser, Mellie is obsessed by cars to a
degree that extends way beyond being able to quote make and model stats like a
baseball fan; she also can hot-wire anything — and always carries the necessary
supplies for such endeavors — and knows local traffic patterns, night and day,
with the facility demonstrated by taxi-driving Stan Murch, in Donald Westlake’s
marvelous Dortmunder novels.