Writer-director David Mamet is up to his old tricks again. In fact, if the title
were not already taken, he might have named this film House of Games. As it is, he
named this new film The Spanish Prisoner, a term described as the moniker for "the
oldest con in the world." Mamet seems intent here on creating a labyrinthine Hitchcockian
thriller, along the lines of The Man Who Knew Too Much or North by Northwest. Campbell
Scott makes an excellent Jimmy Stewart-style Everyman -- seemingly a patsy ripe for
duping. But the key word here is "seeming," as the film takes great pains to point
out on numerous occasions. Mamet sets up the situation in a way that encourages the
viewers to consider all the angles. Good guy, bad guy; is she or isn't she? We're
invited to mull every possibility, as though the mental game of trying to uncover
the magician's sleight of hand is the real endgame and the fluffy rabbit is mere
window dressing. And to a certain degree that's true. However, The Spanish Prisoner
seems an almost purely theoretical exercise, with Mamet as the con man whose sole
goal is to make us believe anything he wants. It feels rather manipulative and makes
us feel a bit too conscious of the trickery at hand, especially given all the film's
explicit warnings that things are rarely what they seem, and conversely, that things
are usually exactly what they seem to be. And with Campbell Scott practically walking
through this whole thing with a "kick me" sign on his back, he's the perfect foil
for all this push me/pull me action. Add to this structural artifice the calculated
clip of Mamet's unique dialogue blocking, and the result is a work that never lets
us escape the knowledge that it is a work of pure fabrication. The Spanish Prisoner
is populated with constructs rather than a sense of flesh-and-blood characters. We
never fear for any of these characters or worry whether the crop duster is going
to mow them down. Nevertheless, taken for what it is, The Spanish Prisoner is actually
quite a lot of fun. The performances are all solid, and the cat-and-mouse storyline
is always a diverting amusement. (And who ever suspected that David Mamet had a script
in him that could pass PG muster?) But for such a lot of supposedly smart people,
these characters do an awful lot of dumb things.
--Marjorie Baumgarten
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