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Category:    Home > Reviews > Con Man (aka Cannes Man)

Con Man (aka Cannes Man)

 

Picture: C     Sound: C+     Extras: C-     Film: C+

 

 

In yet another movie about movies, Con Man (aka Cannes Man, 1995), we are in a comedy about the Cannes film festival where the person in the film is trying top sell the idea of the film we are actually watching.  Though Seymour Cassel is great as the fictional old manipulator Sy Lerner, and we have guest appearances by actors who were obviously doing this on the side to kill time, it is nothing we have seen before.  There are some chuckles, but most of it is nominal.

 

Director Richard Martini at least took advantage of access to big names like Dennis Hopper, Benicio Del Toro (before he was as known as well as he is now), Dennis Hopper, Treat Williams, and James Brolin.  Filmmakers behind the camera who show up include Robert Evans, Jim Sheridan, Harvey Weinstein, and Bryan Singer.  At least he has some good taste, but the gags only go so far.  The more you know, the better watching it is.  Too bad it is not more, but Seymour Cassel is great, so that is a plus.

 

The full screen image is average, with a softness and graininess that is unusually dull and lacking in detail.  This did not affect color as much, but is disappointing.  The Dolby Digital 5.1 AC-3 sound is also a disappointment, sounding like an obvious remix of simple stereo.  Too bad it has some compression and was never intended for this, especially being so dialogue-based to begin with.  As for extras, the DVD says there was supposed to be a commentary, but with whom was not specified. Since it is absent, it is a moot point.  It also says there is a trailer, but there are actually two for this film and four for other upcoming Vanguard titles.

 

You also get a brief martini interview and Johnny Depp/Jim Jarmusch outtakes, but that’s it.  The use of Thus Spake Zarathustra, so closely identified with Stanley Kubrick’s 2001: A Space Odyssey (1968), is especially pointless throughout the film.  This is one only for the most interested viewers.

 

 

-   Nicholas Sheffo


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