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Nueve reinas (2000)
The Ulysses of con movies
The kind of very tight movie that spans no more than a day or two, where a set of characters grind through a "quest", be it a job a heist or a journey to find themselves. Through their journey they meet colorful side characters, make perilous encounters and fight destiny to accomplish ancient drama-tier endeavors. And Nine Queen hits all the marks of the genre, while being a masterful crime thriller.
Con movies have this low profile action, very subtle, from Ocean's Eleven to Catch me if You Can, all the beauty lies in the cons, the tricks, "los trucos" as we hear very early in the film, during the amazing introduction.
In this kind of story, exposition is scarce, dropped here and there through dialogue. We see a cigarette lighting up another one. The man behind the smoke, mid-sized young man yet already balding, high brow, naive looks yet a hint of something underneath, walks into a grocery store. Inside, he notices another man, whom he tries to avoid, as he crouches to check some cans. He takes one, hides it behind his elbow, takes another one, stands up, puts the first one in his pocket and goes to check out. Establishes friendly contact with the cashier, has no change only a 50 bill, she agrees to break it anyways, he finally finds change in his pockets, puts it on the cash she gave him, counts it confusingly, then proposes to give her a 100 as he takes the loose bills. She got shortchanged and didn't even notice, but the other man did, as he poses as a policeman and begins to fake the arrest of the conman...
Cons outsmarting cons, outsmarting big wigs, outsmarting the game, outsmarting even fate, Nine Queens leads you from street hustle to forged antiques trafficking in an odyssey through Buenos Aires, one encounter at the time, in the manner of the classic Ulysses, birth act of this "one day story" genre that became a staple of postmodern storytelling.
The Hummingbird Project (2018)
Positive Surprise
This is a perfect example of what I call a "Soft Thriller", and a great one too : soft thrillers have the story structure, codes, gimmicks and narrative techniques of a "classic" thriller, but present a cast of everyday folks going to extreme lengths to achieve their endeavours, be it linking New York to Kansas City with a high-speed fiber line.
The Mc Guffin : 16 ms speed. This number comes up about twenty minutes in the movie, when the two main characters portrayed by Jesse Eisenberg and Alexander Skarsgard have their first on-screen meeting with their investor. After lots of technical squabbles and character development, here comes the first twist : the game is down the the milisecond, who gets even half a jiffy of advance beats the market.
Anton, the brains, lays out the plans and tells the investor that the line will operate at 17 ms speed, only for Vincent, the business-savvy, to jump in front of him and reassure the investor that the line will as promised operate at 16 ms. Cut to the elevator, Vincent is already planning ahead while Anton is panicking about this damn milisecond : there is no more to "scrap from the code", it can't be done. Too late, Vincent has his mind set. The line will work at 16 ms, or they lose everything.
Vincent's Icarus complex, carried by Anton's wings and his dream of retiring far away from the hassle, leads the movie from character to character, each more interesting than the last, from the first land owner to the last unexpected frontier of unbridled american capitalism, quite a clever twist and well executed. And as all classic drama heroes, Vincent's wings burn when he gets too close to the sun, although they are not his.
The whole cast is on point, and by on point I mean that Salma Hayek, Jesse Eisenberg and Michael Mando doing their thing fits their characters perfectly, and the occasional overacting adds an almost surreal feel to some scenes without tainting the whole experience. This is only achieved by a great script and direction, the keystone of which is Anton's character.
Smart people written by smart people, that's chat we wanna see. Enough of the Sherlocks and Sheldons, let's see some more Antons, Chigurh or Zaleski. Everything happens inside, off script. No smartass monologue, no being sassy, only erratic eve movements and sudden epiphanies. For a good chunk of the film, Anton grinds through microseconds and microseconds to get to that 16 ms speed, all leading to the epiphany of epiphanies, which I see a lot of people on here criticizing but I that found actually hilarious.
No thriller without a villain, and Eva Torres as a fierce business woman going the extra mile to prove her ego over Anton's is an interesting idea, although not explored enough. Maybe because Eva's ego is not the issue, but Vincent's. Halfway through the film, an unexpected twist completely changes the stakes for him, making the endeavour not a business matter anymore, but a very personal one. Or more so, he makes it a personal one despite what common sense would dictate, and all the way through the end this matter is addressed in a way I haven't seen in a while.
Hummingbird project is a great soft thriller, well read as you will see for yourself if you have any interest in telecommunications, and technology serves the plot as is instead of being a prop like in many other movies. From futuristic neutrino messaging projects of Anton's to the very lo-fi SSH phone hacking, Hummingbird is a movie of it's time and tackles all sides of the financial tech world, even going into some marxist corners as a bartender who asked Anton about his work asks him then about the "lemon farmers in Zimbabwe".
A sort of meet-cute although not heavy handed, this scene is a pivotal moment for Anton and his involvement in the job. After a bit of banter about him being a CIA agent and her calling the KGB on him, he finally opens up and explains to her with some role-play what he achieves with this milisecond : she is an investor and he is trading for her. Alright, a lemon company then. With his milisecond, Anton gave her 10$ ahead of the other investors. All of this for 10 bucks ? All of this for ten bucks a second, which adds up to a lot in a whole year, as he explains to her almost proud. Then what about the lemon farmers, what do they get ? "They are irrelevant". How can they be when they grow the damn lemons ? Yes, how can they be irrelevant ...
Great characters, great plot, lots of interesting twists, ethic dilemmas and on par dialogue, Hummingbird deserves it's 7/10, and would have gone up to an 8 with a more creative photography direction and editing.