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Sexy Beast on DVD (2000)

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Average rating: 73%
1112310112059
3.5
from 2,966 members
 
Starring: Ray Winstone, Ben Kingsley, Ian McShane, Amanda Redman, James Fox, Cavan Kendall, Alvaro Monje
Director: Jonathan Glazer
Studio: FILM 4
Run time: 84 mins
Certificate: 18
User collections: The Greats Films Ever FULL STOP, Faves, CRIME DOES PAY!, 50 Cinematic Gems, Black hearted villains!, Videodrome Inspired, A Mixed Up Mix, fuked up films, Whimsy & Greed, Made in Britain
Genres: Audio Descriptive, Comedy, Drama
Languages: English, English Audio Description
Hearing-impaired: English
Released: 17/03/2008
Also Available on:  Also Available on: HD-DVD

Brief synopsis of Sexy Beast

Jonathan Glazer, the award-winning director of advertisements and music videos, presents his feature film debut with this lushly photographed, expertly written, and brilliantly performed convention-defying gangster film. SEXY BEAST jettisons the slickness of the LOCK, STOCK & TWO SMOKING BARRELS school in favor of intricate character development. In its opening shot, Gary "Gal" Dove (Ray Winstone)--a big-bellied ex-gangster with a cockney accent--is sunning himself pool side at his luxe villa on Spain's Costa Del Sol when a gigantic boulder hurtles down a hillside, almost killing him. This near miss serves as a troublesome portent, but it hardly affects Gal, who is immersed in his tranquil life with wife Deedee (Amanda Redman), who he adores with earnest fervor. However, Gal's peace is soon shattered by the arrival of Don Logan (Ben Kingsley, using his shaved skull, spare frame, and ramrod posture to pose as an anti-Gandhi), a brutal former accomplice looking to recruit Gal for a heist. A battle of wills ensues when Gal refuses to leave retirement, and the frighteningly intense Don refuses to take no for an answer. Glazer expertly heightens the film's tension using shifts in the pacing and flashbacks, while Kingsley and Winstone imbue their characters with gorgeous life.

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Critics Reviews

Rating of 4 stars out of 5 Radio Times

On the surface, this looks like just another Ray Winstone “gangster” movie — but appearances can be deceiving. Winstone is in relatively restrained mode as retired crook Gary, now living the life of Riley on the Costa del Crime. He's content to play second fiddle to a terrifying and transfixing performance by Ben Kingsley as Don, the psychopathic hardman sent to “persuade” him back to Blighty for one last job. Debuting director Jonathan Glazer made his name in advertising — he was the man behind the “Swimmer” and “Surfer” Guinness commercials — and his visual flair is evident here. The idyllic Spanish settings nicely counterpoint the growing sense of menace as cat-and-mouse games spiral towards an inevitable act of violence. The tension slackens a little in the film's later stages, when the riveting confrontation between the stars gives way to a slick but improbable caper subplot. But it's worth the ticket price just to see Kingsley, whose supreme acting skills produce a truly memorable screen psycho. Watching Gandhi will never seem the same again.

New York Times

"...[Kingsley's] performance jolts the movie like an exposed high-voltage wire....[Glazer] clearly has a knack for quick visual thinking and a snappy rhythmic sense..."

Rating of 1 
	  stars out of 4 Halliwell's Film Guide

Enjoyable thriller that immediately creates an atmosphere of ill-defined menace; but clumsy construction and odd, surreal episodes detract from its overall impact.

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Members Reviews

Reviews Voted Most Helpful

Rated - 5 starsLike a crocodile, fat crocodile

JediSi JediSi , 14/09/2007

Gal (Ray Winstone) is a retired gangster living a life of leisure in his Spanish villa. Then one day his peace is shattered by a visit from Don Logan, an old protégé, and man to be feared. Logan's intent is to lure Gal out of retirement for 'one last job' but Gal wants nothing to do with it.

Everything superfluous has been stripped away, it's concise , it's In your face, it's incredible.

Ray Winstone puts in another loveable badboy performance that he does so well, but the film is dominated by Kingsley who steals every scene he is in and creates one of the most menacing screen villains ever. A terrifyingly awesome performance.

Ian McShane does a suprisingly good job as Teddy, and I only wished for more dialogue from the stunning Amanda Redman. All in all, an absolute gem of a movie that you won't be able to take your eyes off.

  23 out of 31 people found this review helpful
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Rated - 4 starsRetirement plan gone wrong

LD from Herts , 21/02/2004

Ray Winstone and Ben Kingsley are just great in this film.

Ray is contentedly retired in a beautifull Spanish Villa with his adoring wife, happily away from the London gangsterland scene they left behind. His peace is shattered, first by a rock, and then by an ex 'colleague' (Kingsley) who demands he return for one last job.

Winstone manages to convey his gangster hardness at the same time as the man who just wants to be left alone to lounge by the pool all day, keeping company with his wife.

Kingsley is gripping as the man on the edge of insanity.

  15 out of 15 people found this review helpful
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Rated - 5 starsSuperb British Gangster film

Gary Copnall from Croydon, England , 21/10/2004

Be warned, if you dislike massive amounts of swearing and gory violence then this film isn't for you. However, if you like superb acting, especially from Ben Kingsley, an excellent script and some very creative editing, then this will be a banquet for your senses.

I really enjoyed this film, Ben Kingsley was truly terrifying as Don Logan, a psychotic killer tasked with recruiting Ray Winstone to do one more job following his retirement to Spain.

The tension between these two is superb and really keeps you on the edge of your seat. Throw in a few bizarre fanatasy sequences relating to Winstones inner thoughts and you have a truly magical film. Highly Recommended.

  11 out of 11 people found this review helpful
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Rated - 4 starsSexy feast

Simmy from West Yorkshire , 10/03/2004

This goes to show that with a cast including Ray Winstone, Sir Ben Kingsley, Ian McShane, James Fox and Amanda Redman we Brits can still churn out good movies. Ian McShane can flit between TV and movies with ease and he is a right old nasty piece of work here. The star of the film, however, is Sir Ben Kingsley. His neurotic, paranoid, tight as a drum Don Logan should have won awards.

  10 out of 12 people found this review helpful
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Most Recent Reviews

Rated - 3 starsSexy Beast

A customer from Dunstable , 03/07/2008

Really good film with action and humour

  1 out of 1 person found this review helpful
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Rated - 4 starsTOP MOVIE !!!

A customer from GLASGOW , 31/08/2005

Ex-criminal Ray Winstone's idyllic retirement is disrupted when Ben Kingsley asks, nay demands, that he do one more job. Another Brit-gangster flick. No wait, come back!

While there may come a time when Ray Winstone is known for playing bespectacled nuclear physicists rather than cockney criminals it has to be said that this is most definitely not it. Nor is the casting of Winstone the only predictable thing about Sexy Beast, being the tale of retired Costa Del Crime blagger Gary 'Gal' Dove (Winstone) tempted out of retirement for one last job.

Where Sexy Beast starts to deviate from the norm is in the casting of Ben Kingsley as Don Logan, the man doing the tempting. Given that Logan is a full-on 24/7 psychopath who rapidly sets about putting a hob-nailed boot through the blissful existence which Gal has created with wife DeeDee (Redman) the obvious approach would have been to cast someone capable of physically going-head-to-head - not to mention belly-to-belly - with Winstone.

Yet, like Anthony Hopkins in the Hannibal movies, what Kingsley lacks in brute strength he more than makes up for in the mind games department. The nerve-rending scenes in which the onetime Gandhi attempts to wear down his reluctant 'friend' show that director Glazer's graduation from directing pop promos is well overdue. To expand more plot-wise would be to spoil the fun except to say that, while things go predictably awry, they do so in a nicely unpredictable manner.

Mention should also be made of the excellent supporting cast, not least Ian McShane who puts in the kind of out-there-where-the-trains-don't-go performance that will make you look at those 'Lovejoy' repeats in an entirely new light.

Verdict

Stands head and shoulders above the late 90s flurry of British gangster movies. Stylish and confident and built upon a fearsome performance from Ben Kinglsey.

  6 out of 6 people found this review helpful
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