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Tip Sheet

Year Released 2008

Duration 123

21

Editorial Review

Maths genius Ben is drawn into a card-counting scheme on the tables in Vegas, winning money to pay his college fees. Until things go wrong.

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Image: 21

Movie Summary

Movie Genre:

Drama

Rated:

M

Director:

Robert Luketic

Starring:

Jim Sturgess, Kate Bosworth, Kevin Spacey, Laurence Fishburne




Editorial Review

Aussie Robert Luketic is so over pink. After establishing himself as Hollywood's go-to guy for any script that dotted its "i"s with hearts, the Legally Blonde director has ditched pastels for something more boysy. Based on a true story, 21 follows Ben Campbell (Sturgess), a handsome college nerd who is inveigled into a group of teenage card-counting blackjack players led by his maths lecturer (Spacey). So follows a journey of riches won and lost, sexual awakening and really good suits.

The nerd who gets a taste of the cool life is a cinematic stalwart, so it stands to reason that Ben's first few outings in Vegas provide the film's zippiest scenes. His fellow scammers are a job lot of characters, allowed only two facial expressions each, but their propensity for taking on new identities every time they hit the tables makes them fun to be around.

Luketic places the film in capable hands with his two leads. Bosworth is sweetly determined as love interest Jill, a combination of mutual exclusives: maths genius and prettiest girl in school; a career-gambler father and a happy childhood. But it's Sturgess who makes the movie. The young Brit, who threw heart and lungs into Across The Universe, has an everyman appeal that gives the movie a sturdy centre. Spacey is clearly enjoying himself immensely as the preening Svengali, while Laurence Fishburne makes an insufficiently threatening villain, as a security guard outdated by technology.

Being a film about dodgy gambling, 21 can't resist some sleight of hand in the final act, but it's an obvious con that won't draw any gasps from its big reveal. This is a film that's at its most enjoyable when it knows not to play beyond its means.

Olly Richards

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