Money Monster goes
to dramatic lengths to find what it’ll take to make a cable news show do some
actual reporting. It starts when a smooth-talking business news host (George
Clooney) – think an even more buffoonish Jim Cramer – starts his daily stock
tip program. He usually offers up some buzzword advice and hyperbolic
recommendations to buy and sell. But not today. An angry young man (Jack
O’Connell) sneaks on set with a gun and demands the man behind the anchor’s
desk strap on a homemade explosive vest. He wants time on the air to demand
answers. He’s furious about Wall Street greed, the rigged system of a casino
economy legalizing fraud – he’s definitely a Bernie bro – and despondent over a
glitch in a certain stock’s price that wiped out his life’s savings.
The once-cocky host sweats with a gun to his head. The
director (Julia Roberts) is trapped in the control room capably keeping crew
running like usual. Lights, cameras, mics, and the rest must continue moving
without a hitch, the better to keep the dangerous intruder calm while police
(led by Giancarlo Esposito) gather outside, debating how to get in without
setting off the bomb. With little setup, the screenplay quickly launches into
this tense scenario. Writers Jim Kouf (Rush
Hour), Alen DiFiore (The Bridge),
and Jamie Linden (Dear John) build a
convincing cable news environment, a hectic and frivolous place that falls
silent when real danger enters the frame. As the man with the gun shouts and
threatens violence, the crew scrambles to find him his answers.
An engaging effort of slick competence, Money Monster is the sort of meat-and-potatoes topical movie star
thriller that used to be a staple of Hollywood filmmaking. Now, outside Oscar
season, it’s mostly found on tiny VOD budgets or on TV, so it’s nice to see
this old fashioned form of glossy, well intentioned, reasonably involving drama
play out on the big summer screen. Here we have the likes of Clooney and
Roberts playing perfectly to type in a plot that’s tautly structured and built
on sturdy genre foundations while engaging with some interesting ideas floating
around the news these days. It’s about Wall Street corruption and the news
media industrial complex, and somehow makes it into the stuff of entertainment
without going too obvious or too hypocritical. This is a diverting movie that
works out genuine and legitimate class frustrations in the guise of a ticking
bomb plot.
Roberts deploys producers and reporters to discover the
secrets behind the man’s grievances, while on camera two very different men –
poor and out of options, controlling what little he can through intimidation;
rich and out of touch trying to talk his way out of the worst situation of his
life – come to a cautious understanding. They’re stuck in one place, while in
the world beyond the studio people are watching the events unfold with rapt
attention. Some are amused, others angered. Still others are getting a little
nervous, like a slimy C.E.O. (Dominic West) whose dastardly company IBIS (a fitting
name for a bad corporation, like BS, IBS, and ISIS rolled into one acronym) was,
through mysterious and sketchy business practices, responsible for the market
fluctuation that left the hostage-taker with nothing.
There are clearly delineated good guys and bad guys here,
but there are some welcome moments where expectations are upended in small
ways. A scene where negotiators bring in the hostage-taker’s tearful girlfriend
goes in a surprising direction, and the movie’s not unwilling to see the situation
from a variety of angles. Someone seemingly in the wrong can come over to the
other side, and vice versa. Directed with a steady hand by Jodie Foster, the
events unfold with clarity, cinematographer Matthew Libatique’s camera finding snappy
simple frames as the studio simmers with tension and many outside – techs,
journalists, cops, PR people, hackers, bankers, and so on – scramble to figure out
how to bring the danger to an end. The plot is involving on a surface level,
while the simmering ideas underneath are just broad enough to be crowd pleasing
and just specific enough to avoid feeling too condescending.
In the end it succeeds on the strength of its lead trio of
performers, who bring a capable sense of weight and believability to their
characters actions and decisions. Clooney could play a perfect wealthy dope in
his sleep, here bringing unctuous charm covering repressed decency as a market
mouthpiece who slowly grows a conscience at gunpoint. Roberts is security and
stability under pressure as an expert manager trying to maintain some semblance
of order and safety, speaking carefully and soothingly through her boss’s earpiece,
helping him see the bigger picture. And O’Connell is a fine vessel of
frustrated millennial economic angst, jumpy and tense, wound up with hopeless
rage, smart but treading water in a dead end minimum wage job just to make ends
meet. This story, with sensationalistic elements and vigorous political points,
is too conventional and interested in small humane shadings to be a trashier
satire or a sharper indictment. Instead it relaxes into thriller mechanics, looking
at its characters with compassion and condemnation while finding its way to a
logical conclusion.
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