Sunday Territorian

The flicks

Back in tune one last time for PITCH PERFECT 3 and ALL THE MONEY IN THE WORLD poses the question — who said you can’t put a price on family?

- LEIGH PAATSCH

ALL THE MONEY IN THE WORLD (M) Director: Ridley Scott (The Martian) Starring: Michelle Williams, Christophe­r Plummer, Mark Wahlberg, Charlie Plummer. Rating:

IN 1973, self-made oil billionair­e J Paul Getty was not just the richest man in the world. He was the richest man in the history of the world.

Now imagine you are J Paul Getty III, the tycoon’s grandson.

While on holiday in Rome, you’ve been kidnapped by Calabrian gangsters, who have issued a ransom demand of 17 million dollars for your return.

You know this amount should be pocket change for your grandpa. Old J Paul will pay off those pesky perps, and have you home safely in a day or so, right? Wrong. So begins All the Money in the World, a truth-is-far-freakier-than-fiction affair that takes a long sequence of agonising actual events, and lets their sheer strangenes­s speak for themselves.

This is the movie that made headlines a few months ago when director Ridley Scott made the radical decision to recast the linchpin role of J Paul Getty after production was well and truly complete.

88-year-old Christophe­r Plummer was recruited to replace the disgraced Kevin Spacey, and all relevant scenes were reshot inside a fortnight.

It must be said that Plummer is mesmerisin­gly great as Getty, to the point where it is impossible to imagine Spacey getting anywhere near the heights hit here.

As for the movie, it doesn’t always match the magnificen­ce of Plummer’s performanc­e.

It is not really the fault of veteran filmmaker Ridley Scott or his team. Rather, the facts that must be adhered to in telling this true story sometimes work against the cinematic ambition of the production.

A lot of All the Money in the World focuses on the plight of the abducted teen’s mother Gail (Michelle Williams), already estranged from the Getty clan when the kidnapping went down. Literally forced to beg her former father- in-law to intercede, Gail finds herself waiting a seeming eternity — often in the company of a conflicted Getty associate (a miscast Mark Wahlberg) — for the wily old scrooge to make any kind of meaningful move.

Incredibly, it takes over six months for this saga to reach its infamous boiling point (don’t look on the internet to see how it ends, whatever you do).

By this time Getty, has bargained down the ransom to a price he believes holds certain tax advantages for a man in his exalted position.

Never will you see a man worth so much behave so cheaply.

 ??  ?? Christophe­r Plummer as J Paul Getty and Mark Wahlberg as Fletcher Chase in a scene from film All the Money in the World
Christophe­r Plummer as J Paul Getty and Mark Wahlberg as Fletcher Chase in a scene from film All the Money in the World
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