Duplicity (2009) Directed by Tony Gilroy
Duplicity (2009) Directed by Tony Gilroy
Duplicity (2009)
Directed by Tony Gilroy

(2 ½ out of 4)
The heavily convoluted plot of "Duplicity" goes something like this: After a series of coincidental encounters in various locations around the globe, MI6 Agent Ray Koval (Clive Owen) and CIA Spy Claire Stenwick (Roberts) cook up a con plan to dupe their bosses (Tom Wilkinson and Paul Giamatti) thereby earning 35 mil so they can live a no-stress life of passion in Rome or some other equally exotic location. Turns out things aren’t as easy as they seemed, and the plan (and thus, the plot) gets ever more complex by the minute.
“Duplicity” is easily picked apart: its screenplay could use some cleaning up, and there is not much thematic substance. After the intensity of “Michael Clayton,” I think Gilroy was ready to have fun and make a good romance caper without any deep intellectual meaning. On that level, the film succeeds-- to a point. It's frothy and sexy, basically focusing on two beautiful people running around New York. Unfortunately, the film is too densely plotted to be coherent; it’s tangled and messy. Think of memorable, light, and bantering romances like “To Catch A Thief” or “The Thomas Crown Affair.” Fun? Amusing? Entertaining? You bet. But they also have the smarts to know that simplicity is key.
Gilroy uses a technique to transition between scenes or periods in time that both perplexed and irritated me. The director splits the screen into three or four squares, each with a different image. Often, three out of the four images have nothing to do with the film, and so he then focuses back in on the one that does. These transitions do nothing to advance the plot, which leads me to believe this device is pure showing off. Yuck. This pretentious stylistic crutch just doesn’t work.
The whole of “Duplicity” borrows heavily from screwball comedies of the ‘30s and ‘40s, at least tonally; and, although it definitely has its problems, the movie never failed to entertain me. Clive Owen (unlike his female counterpart) handles Gilroy’s dialogue well and, as always, turns in solid work. So does character actor Wayne Duvall, who's been giving very fine supporting performances for a number of years. James Newton Howard’s score for the film is also effective, and features a stirring mixture of traditional strings and synthetic drum beats. It works as the best of scores do: it doesn’t distract, but isn’t so concealed that it’s unnoticeable.
Last Word:
Tony Gilroy’s sophomore directorial effort displays little ambition, and it’s not nearly as impressive as his debut, “Michael Clayton.” That being said, Owen and Roberts have good chemistry and as fluff entertainment for a Friday night, “Duplicity” isn’t half-bad.
Review By:
Chazz Lyons
IN REVIEW ONLINE
March 29, 2009
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