The man who said I'd rather be lucky than good saw deeply into life. People are afraid to face how great a part of life is dependent on luck. It's scary to think so much is out of one's own control. There are moments in a match when the ball hits the top of the net and for a split second it can either go forward or fall back. With a little luck it goes forward and you win. Or may be it doesn't and you lose.
Chris Wilton (Jonathan Rhye Myers) is a tennis coach from Ireland who comes to London and happens to meet a wealthy family through Tom (Matthew Goode) whom he coaches. Tom's sister Chloe (Emily Mortimer) seems to develop a liking for mild-mannered Chris, probably more out of sympathy for his poor background than any strong chemistry between the two. Chris obviously doesn't let go of the chance to be with the wealthy Hewitts. Things take a turn when he is invited to a family party and he meets Tom's sexy fiancee, Nola (Scarlett Johansson). What did he just walk into?
Chloe makes sure that her father would give Chris an opportunity at his business empire to get him out of his poverty and bring him into their social circle. All this happens in the first half hour of the movie which would make one wonder if it's real. Chris instantly develops a strong sexual attraction towards Nola and keeps on trying to get in, while not being a little concerned about the fall it might bring upon him which could be just as fast as his rise. Strangely, he keeps getting away with it. For an ambitious person like Chris, we never know what's in it for him. Nola is just a struggling actress. May be he sees something common about both their situations while being part of a super-rich family? Anyway, it's a Woody Allen movie. Things just happen.
Soon after Nola is dumped by Tom, Chris is driven by his deep lust for Nola and before we know it, they are in an affair. The man who cannot conceive with his wife seems to get Nola pregnant. And things go down hill. Nola doesn't want an abortion for the "third time" (apparently she had already done it with her two previous ex-es) and keeps bugging Chris to leave Chloe and live unhappily ever after.
The only way out for Chris seems to be to have a grand plan of killing both Nola and her innocent neighbor and make it look like a burglary-gone-wrong. And once again, Chris gets away with it even though the detective is so close in seeing through his motives. But then, it was about luck, isn't? The only person in this whole drama I feel bad about is the detective. He was so close and so right in connecting the dots that people might call him paranoid. In a final scene we see Chris justifying his actions in a hallucination, while saying-
(To Nola)- You can learn to push the guilt under the rug and go on. Otherwise it overwhelms you.....(To the neighbor) -The innocent is sometimes slain to make way for a grander scheme. You were collateral damage...(To his unborn child) - To never have been born is the greatest boon of life.
Well said. Amen. In other words, that's the beauty of a Woody Allen movie- it's not about justice. It's about reality. Or luck.
Rating - 7/10
Chris Wilton (Jonathan Rhye Myers) is a tennis coach from Ireland who comes to London and happens to meet a wealthy family through Tom (Matthew Goode) whom he coaches. Tom's sister Chloe (Emily Mortimer) seems to develop a liking for mild-mannered Chris, probably more out of sympathy for his poor background than any strong chemistry between the two. Chris obviously doesn't let go of the chance to be with the wealthy Hewitts. Things take a turn when he is invited to a family party and he meets Tom's sexy fiancee, Nola (Scarlett Johansson). What did he just walk into?
Chloe makes sure that her father would give Chris an opportunity at his business empire to get him out of his poverty and bring him into their social circle. All this happens in the first half hour of the movie which would make one wonder if it's real. Chris instantly develops a strong sexual attraction towards Nola and keeps on trying to get in, while not being a little concerned about the fall it might bring upon him which could be just as fast as his rise. Strangely, he keeps getting away with it. For an ambitious person like Chris, we never know what's in it for him. Nola is just a struggling actress. May be he sees something common about both their situations while being part of a super-rich family? Anyway, it's a Woody Allen movie. Things just happen.
Soon after Nola is dumped by Tom, Chris is driven by his deep lust for Nola and before we know it, they are in an affair. The man who cannot conceive with his wife seems to get Nola pregnant. And things go down hill. Nola doesn't want an abortion for the "third time" (apparently she had already done it with her two previous ex-es) and keeps bugging Chris to leave Chloe and live unhappily ever after.
The only way out for Chris seems to be to have a grand plan of killing both Nola and her innocent neighbor and make it look like a burglary-gone-wrong. And once again, Chris gets away with it even though the detective is so close in seeing through his motives. But then, it was about luck, isn't? The only person in this whole drama I feel bad about is the detective. He was so close and so right in connecting the dots that people might call him paranoid. In a final scene we see Chris justifying his actions in a hallucination, while saying-
(To Nola)- You can learn to push the guilt under the rug and go on. Otherwise it overwhelms you.....(To the neighbor) -The innocent is sometimes slain to make way for a grander scheme. You were collateral damage...(To his unborn child) - To never have been born is the greatest boon of life.
Well said. Amen. In other words, that's the beauty of a Woody Allen movie- it's not about justice. It's about reality. Or luck.
Rating - 7/10