Inside Man

:

Critics' Reviews

Metascore
®
76
Generally favorable reviews
out of 100
'Inside Man' is a Lee Plus
By John Hartl, film critic, MSNBC

Spike Lee's career has needed a course correction for some time now. "Inside Man" may be just the script to do the trick.

Clever and commercial, with juicy roles for Denzel Washington, Clive Owen, Christopher Plummer and Jodie Foster, it's the kind of thriller that tricks you without making you feel you've been had. You may even feel compelled to see it again and retrace your steps.

The screenplay is the work of a first-timer, Russell Gerwitz, but it feels like the creation of a seasoned pro. While the opening reels suggest that it's just another bank-heist tale, nothing here is what it seems. If you were stimulated rather than put off by the complications and narrative twists of "Syriana" or "The Usual Suspects," you'll feel right at home here.

Owen plays the brains behind the heist, a man who is pretty sure he's worked out the perfect crime. He and his gang take over a Manhattan bank, picking up dozens of hostages along the way and appearing to raid the vaults. But something is not quite routine about this operation. Do they really want money, or is it something else?

While the maybe-robbery is unfolding, the movie flashes forward to bleached-out scenes of the hostages being examined and intimidated by an apparently compromised negotiator (Washington), who spends a lot of cell-phone time promising to get back to his sexually frustrated girlfriend. The hostages appear to be innocents caught up in the chaos, but could some of them be part of Owen's team?

Meanwhile, the bank's chairman of the board (Plummer) worries that the robbers will find his safe-deposit box, which contains material of an extremely sensitive nature. To protect himself, he hires an enigmatic power broker (Foster), who is chummy with the mayor and appears to have access to everyone who's anyone in New York.

Plummer is just as wonderfully creepy here as he was in "Syriana." Washington and Owen, clearly enjoying themselves, warm to the cat-and-mouse game their characters play throughout the movie. Only Willem Dafoe, as an emergency-services specialist, seems underutilized.

It's great to see Foster playing something other than a terrorized mother for a change (please, no more movies like "Flightplan" and "Panic Room," which threatened to turn this brilliant actress into a middle-aged scream queen). Her character in "Inside Man" is eerily professional and self-possessed; she's also quite funny, especially when she's trading stiletto-sharp quips with Plummer.

While this may not be a typical "Spike Lee Joint" (as Lee calls all of his movies), it's more satisfying than anything he's done in years. Not that it's unrecognizable. With its showy, dreamy cinematography, its Terence Blanchard score and Barry Alexander Brown's sharp editing tricks, "Inside Man" is clearly Lee's work.

But there's a respect for storytelling here, and an embrace of narrative discipline, that seems entirely and refreshingly new. If he seemed to lose his way in such failed (if personal) experiments as "Bamboozled" and "25th Hour," Lee is back on track this time.

More movies on MSNBC 

Spike Lee's career has needed a course correction for some time now. "Inside Man" may be just the script to do the trick.

Clever and commercial, with juicy roles for Denzel Washington, Clive Owen, Christopher Plummer and Jodie Foster, it's the kind of thriller that tricks you without making you feel you've been had. You may even feel compelled to see it again and retrace your steps.

The screenplay is the work of a first-timer, Russell Gerwitz, but it feels like the creation of a seasoned pro. While the opening reels suggest that it's just another bank-heist tale, nothing here is what it seems. If you were stimulated rather than put off by the complications and narrative twists of "Syriana" or "The Usual Suspects," you'll feel right at home here.

Owen plays the brains behind the heist, a man who is pretty sure he's worked out the perfect crime. He and his gang take over a Manhattan bank, picking up dozens of hostages along the way and appearing to raid the vaults. But something is not quite routine about this operation. Do they really want money, or is it something else?

While the maybe-robbery is unfolding, the movie flashes forward to bleached-out scenes of the hostages being examined and intimidated by an apparently compromised negotiator (Washington), who spends a lot of cell-phone time promising to get back to his sexually frustrated girlfriend. The hostages appear to be innocents caught up in the chaos, but could some of them be part of Owen's team?

Meanwhile, the bank's chairman of the board (Plummer) worries that the robbers will find his safe-deposit box, which contains material of an extremely sensitive nature. To protect himself, he hires an enigmatic power broker (Foster), who is chummy with the mayor and appears to have access to everyone who's anyone in New York.

Plummer is just as wonderfully creepy here as he was in "Syriana." Washington and Owen, clearly enjoying themselves, warm to the cat-and-mouse game their characters play throughout the movie. Only Willem Dafoe, as an emergency-services specialist, seems underutilized.

It's great to see Foster playing something other than a terrorized mother for a change (please, no more movies like "Flightplan" and "Panic Room," which threatened to turn this brilliant actress into a middle-aged scream queen). Her character in "Inside Man" is eerily professional and self-possessed; she's also quite funny, especially when she's trading stiletto-sharp quips with Plummer.

While this may not be a typical "Spike Lee Joint" (as Lee calls all of his movies), it's more satisfying than anything he's done in years. Not that it's unrecognizable. With its showy, dreamy cinematography, its Terence Blanchard score and Barry Alexander Brown's sharp editing tricks, "Inside Man" is clearly Lee's work.

But there's a respect for storytelling here, and an embrace of narrative discipline, that seems entirely and refreshingly new. If he seemed to lose his way in such failed (if personal) experiments as "Bamboozled" and "25th Hour," Lee is back on track this time.

More movies on MSNBC 

91
ENTERTAINMENT WEEKLY: Lisa Schwarzbaum
The jazzish score, by Lee's music man, Terence Blanchard, is typically intrusive. But the mood is right, the twists are new. And with one casting inspiration, Inside Man furthers the rising stardom of Chiwetel Ejiofor (Serenity).Read Full Review »
88
USA Today: Claudia Puig
Inside Man may be a cat-and-mouse game, but it's far from predictable. What could have been a straightforward thriller is unusually clever, visually captivating and unfailingly entertaining.Read Full Review »
88
Boston Globe: Wesley Morris
Washington hasn't been this relaxed in years. When he feels like it he can be the most charismatic star in the movies.Read Full Review »
80
NewsWeek: David Ansen
The movie crackles with the serio-comic tension of thin-skinned New Yorkers thrown together in a crisis.Read Full Review »
80
Washington Post: Stephen Hunter
A deft, tense, pure thriller, the movie has great star turns and is brilliantly directed, but it began as an extremely well-crated screenplay by Russell Gewirtz. It's professionally entertaining.Read Full Review »
80
Salon.com: Stephanie Zacharek
It's Foster who rules the movie like an ice queen.Read Full Review »
80
The New York Times: Manohla Dargis
Filled with playful noise and nonsense, clever feints and digressions, Inside Man has a story to tell, but its most sustained pleasures come from its performances, especially the three leads.Read Full Review »
80
LOS ANGELES TIMES: Kenneth Turan
Smartly plotted by newcomer Russell Gewirtz and smoothly directed by, of all people, Spike Lee, Inside Man is a deft and satisfying entertainment, an elegant, expertly acted puzzler that is just off-base and out-of-the-ordinary enough to keep us consistently involved.Read Full Review »
80
Slate: Grady Hendrix
The best Spike Lee movie to come along since 1992's "Malcolm X." It's also the first Spike Lee movie since "Malcolm X" to star Denzel Washington, and just as Jimmy Stewart and Alfred Hitchcock brought out the best in each other, Denzel and Spike need each other like vermouth and gin.Read Full Review »
75
Philadelphia Inquirer: Steven Rea
Lee transforms a generic cops-crooks-and-hostages scenario into a smart, sharp heist movie by the sheer force of his love for, and knowledge of, the city where he lives.Read Full Review »
See all Inside Man reviews at metacritic.com »