The Hamilton Spectator

Aaron Sorkin deals a winning hand in Molly’s Game

- RICHARD ROEPER Chicago Sun Times

Hollywood hardly ever gets it right with films about poker, or movies with a pivotal scene involving a poker game.

The poker scene on the train in “The Sting,” the showdown between Steve McQueen and Edward G. Robinson in “The Cincinnati Kid,” the multimilli­on-dollar game in “Casino Royale” — are all filled with glaring missteps.

“Rounders.” Now there’s a poker movie that gets it right. It understand­s the mechanics, the gamesmansh­ip, the power of the bluff and, yes, the luck involved.

Now comes “Molly’s Game,” and although it is not a poker movie per se in that the lead character does not play the game, it IS a story steeped in the poker culture, and I’m pleased to report writer-director Aaron Sorkin never misdeals a hand.

Whether you’re a self-appointed semi-expert such as myself or you wouldn’t know a flush draw from a made hand, “Molly’s Game” works as a slick and shiny glimpse into life in the fast lane, a sobering cautionary tale, and a brilliant character study of a whip-smart, driven young woman who is quick to recognize the strengths and flaws of others, but has to hit rock bottom before she faces some tough truths about herself.

Jessica Chastain’s Molly narrates her story. In a typically witty and dry, Sorkin-esque prologue, we see how Molly’s career as an Olympic freestyle skiing hopeful was snapped with one devastatin­g injury, much to the disappoint­ment of her military-intense father (Kevin Costner), who has demanded academic and athletic excellence from his children since they were toddlers.

Still in her early 20s, Molly moves to Los Angeles, to soak up some sun and have some fun and put some distance between her and her father. She winds up working as a personal assistant to a classic Hollywood d-bag ( Jeremy Strong), who puts Molly in charge of organizing a weekly high-stakes poker game populated by A-list actors, trustfund goofs and newly minted millionair­es.

In Molly’s book, she names some of the players, including Tobey Maguire, who comes across as a particular­ly

snotty little s---. In the movie, Molly introduces us to “Player X,” a hugely popular young actor seemingly based on Maguire.

Under Molly’s supervisio­n, the game grows exponentia­lly in terms of the stakes and the trappings. She moves the game to a suite in a luxury hotel, plying the players with gourmet food and high-end liquor. She increases the buy-in, which means she’ll make more in tips.

And when things get dicey in L.A., Molly takes her act to New York and organizes the most exclusive regular private poker game in the country.

The thing about these games is, they’re not exactly legal, and when Molly finds herself tangling with some Russian gangsters who want a piece of the action, the FBI becomes VERY interested in Molly’s game.

Idris Elba swats his American accent to and fro in interestin­g fashion but is otherwise fantastic as Charlie Jaffey, a high-end attorney who takes Molly’s case even though her assets have been seized, she’s broke and she’s facing almost certain jail time. The skilled veteran character actor Bill Camp stops us in our tracks as Harlan Eustice, a conservati­ve “grinder” who methodical­ly crushes the high-stakes game until one bad hand puts him “on tilt” and sets off a horrifying­ly tragic (and yet completely believable) chain of events.

Costner has a let’s-lay-our-cardson-the-table moment with Chastain that is pure Sorkin in that we all wish we could talk with such rapidfire clarity. It’s so theatrical we should be holding a copy of Playbill in our hands as we watch the two of them parry with each other, but it also results in some of the best pure acting Costner has ever done.

Joe Keery from “Stranger Things” does nice work as a wild and loose player known as “Trust Fund Cole.” Graham Greene is perfect as Judge Foxman, who hears Molly’s case. Chris O’Dowd’s Douglas Downey is a sad charmer, but he seems like an unnecessar­y character — until he doesn’t.

Jessica Chastain gives a nomination-worthy performanc­e as Molly, a strong and sometimes admirable but also deeply flawed character. Few actors on the planet can shift gears as effortless­ly as Chastain, who perfectly captures Molly’s chameleonl­ike ability to adapt to situations and to rationaliz­e her worst behaviour.

And yet Chastain never lets us lose sight of the fact Molly is a good person at heart, and even when the cards are stacked against her, she deserves a chance to get a fresh deal.

 ?? MICHAEL GIBSON, STXFILMS ?? Jessica Chastain as Molly and Idris Elba as lawyer Charlie Jaffey in "Molly’s Game."
MICHAEL GIBSON, STXFILMS Jessica Chastain as Molly and Idris Elba as lawyer Charlie Jaffey in "Molly’s Game."

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