They don't quite make them like this anymore.
“Bad Times at the El Royale” features an ensemble of human
characters with a streak of seedy secrets and intentions converging upon the
rarely patronized El Royale, a hotel located at the California/Nevada border that
has fallen into a state of disrepair since its heyday of bustling popularity,
during which it was utilized by Richard Nixon as an intelligence gathering
instillation via spying on patrons of political interest.
The hijinks of dangerous conflicting agendas and potentially
lethal misunderstandings that ensue touch on themes of grey morality and murky
ethics being bound by the complexities of human behavior and motivation along
with the unfortunate factors that contribute to our identity and where the
lines in the sand are drawn in terms of worthiness of redemption.
While the themes can ultimately be fairly sobering and
succeed more often than not in granting its narrative a touch of extra and much
needed depth and weight, the true value of “Bad Times at the El Royale” is the
constant sense of unpredictability that remains abundant as a cast of top notch
major stars and character actors alike get to add some career highlights to
their demo reels in a tight and tense neo-noir 1970s period piece serving as a
great example of the sort of back to basics blockbuster filmmaking that Hollywood
needs to aspire towards moving to.
It’s most certainly the sort of blockbuster that you don’t
get to see very much of these days; little in the way of flashy special
effects, CGI, or out of place violent excess. This film is all about its own
high concept, carried out by a tried and true cast of actors that know how to
turn sharp dialogue into real onscreen human beings among a stylistic
atmosphere, and seeing what happens after taking a step back.
The movie is basic, to the point, and mostly delivers on
just that sense of entertainment on the back of prime filmmaking that it
promises.
Drew Goddard has long proven himself to be a sharp writer
but his ability to juggle genuinely strong performances with the uncanny
Hitchcock-esque atmosphere of the titular setting while keeping the dramatic
flair of each twist and turn of the plot rooted within the depths of a
compelling yet unpredictable cast laden with hidden depths occasionally glimpsed
but rarely spelled right out are beginning to put him in a class of his own as
far as I’m concerned.
Goddard’s sharp screenplay and camerawork would have gone miles
towards making the movie solid in their own right but in this production, his
cast is easily his best asset.
Jeff Bridges really steps up to bat, laying on his charm as
a kindly appearing priest that would have all too convincingly hidden his
darker true nature if you weren’t inherently suspicious of him based purely on
his choice in hotels. Meanwhile, Jon Hamm plays a government agent masquerading
as a traveling salesman, while once again proving in a dead on period accurate
representation of the sort of cloying, head strong, charismatic middle American
white married man with obvious hints of era accepted subconscious racism and
sexism, why he deserves a better career than he currently has.
The most noteworthy of its stars however are Lewis Pullman and Cynthia
Erivo.
Erivo plays an aspiring singer, put down by her gender and
race to pursue her dream career with the level of freedom she desperately desires
and gradually reveals herself to be almost numb to the insanity that she has
been surrounded by as a result of a lifetime of being institutionally beaten
down by the greed of self serving men in power. It’s the sort of part that
could easily fall flat by seeming too cold, cruel or detached but Ervio manages
to strike a tender balance between being jaded while not wanting to hurt other
with her exasperated attitude towards how the world works, especially when
confronted with genuine kindness.
Pullman’s subdued performance as the hotel concierge also
shines in its own way, presenting a more comedic but fairly inoffensive image
of a young man clearly trying to get by with an almost detached sense of reality
until the revelation of a drug habit and the source of his behavior towards
perpetuating it wrap around towards making him one of the most sympathetic and
unexpectedly badass characters of the entire ensemble.
Hopefully this becomes the start of promising film careers
for the both of them.
Despite the excellent effect of actor chemistry, atmosphere,
and sharp focus, “Bad Times at the El Royale” does have its unfortunate
stumbling points.
Chiefly among these points is that the strength of the
execution sadly doesn’t fully justify its fairly lengthy 2 hour and 15 minute runtime.
The film definitely starts to run out of steam about 10 minutes before the
finish and while it still ends on a generally satisfying note the drag does
become noticeable.
Furthermore, while there isn’t quite a bad performance in
the bunch per se, the utilization of each character can be a bit unbalanced.
The things that they do with Hamm kind of comes off as lost potential while
Dakota Johnson’s arc in the plot could have used a little bit more expounding
upon, preferably in a way that got her a bit more socially interactive with the
others if only for a single scene.
The unfortunate side effect of her story not coming together
as sharply as some of the others, as demonstrated by the excellent chemistry
between Erivo and Bridges, is that when it takes center stage it becomes a lot
less interesting than what we’ve already sat through, along with wasting a
solid performance by Christ Hemsworth and creating a disposable performance for
the otherwise talented Cailee Spaeny.
Unfortunately, the biggest flaw of “Bad Times at the El
Royale” is that one more round of punch up on the script and one more pass in
the editing room of this highly polished product could have taken it to near
perfection. Fortunately, its current level of polish shines brilliantly and
demands your attention.
7 Wretched Hives of Scum and Villainy out of 10
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