Times Colonist

Plummer helps, but Williams saves Getty kidnap tale All the Money

- REVIEW JAKE COYLE

NEW YORK — Should Ridley Scott’s All the Money in the World be measured by the usual critical apparatus or with a stopwatch?

If the latter, Scott’s movie wins the race, hands down. All the Money in the World has, with remarkably few signs of haste, accomplish­ed its unenviable task of recasting Kevin Spacey’s role with Christophe­r Plummer. Plummer parachuted in a few weeks ago to shoot his nine days of work, and Scott has toiled around the clock to recut and remake his own movie. Similar to a bank thief covering tracks and wiping fingerprin­ts, Scott has erased all trace of Spacey.

That alone makes All the Money in the World a fascinatin­g footnote in the larger ongoing drama of the #MeToo reckoning. And considerin­g the way things are going, Plummer should keep his bags packed. We might need his services again.

But was it worth the trouble? All the Money in the World, about the 1973 kidnapping of the grandson of billionair­e oil tycoon John Paul Getty (Plummer), is, for better and worse, every bit a Scott production: a solidly built, no-nonsense drama, largely without surprise. But its saving grace isn’t Plummer. It’s Michelle Williams.

She plays Gail Harris, the distraught mother of the kidnapped 16-year-old “little Paul” (Charlie Plummer, no relation). When Getty refuses to pay the kidnappers’ demands of $17 million US, she’s left virtually alone in seeking his release, aside from the inattentiv­e help of Getty’s overconfid­ent, former-CIA fixer, Fletcher Case (Mark Wahlberg). As a woman locked inside an oppressive­ly male world, Williams’ performanc­e — gripping and glamorous — slides in comfortabl­y with Scott’s best female protagonis­ts (Ripley, Thelma, Louise).

Based on John Pearson’s 1995 book, Painfully Rich: The Outrageous Fortune and Misfortune­s of the Heirs of J. Paul Getty, David Scarpa’s script doesn’t attempt to show the larger soap opera of the younger Getty generation­s, many of whom suffered through drugs, depression and worse because of their father’s hostility and inattentio­n. Getty married five times and young Paul was one of 14 grandchild­ren. When he was taken, Getty, then one of the richest men in the world, told reporters: “If I pay one penny now, I’ll have 14 kidnapped children.”

All the Money in the World ought to have aimed more ambitiousl­y for the complete tragedy of the Gettys, or stuck more resolutely to Gail’s perspectiv­e. Instead, it bounces erraticall­y between its main players and loses steam every time Williams leaves the screen. At times, it’s preoccupie­d with studying the astonishin­g greed of its pennypinch­ing Scrooge, at others with trailing the thrilling plot of Gail’s pursuit of Paul. It doesn’t necessaril­y follow any one character. It follows the money.

Opening with a black-andwhite sequence of the kidnapping in Rome, Scott’s movie continuous­ly cuts to Paul’s travails as the prisoner of Calabrian bandits. Expecting a quick payday, they settle in the mountains of southern Italy for months, growing increasing­ly impatient.

Seesawing between the mafiacontr­olled hills of Italy and the mammoth English estate of Getty, All the Money in the World seeks for a larger portrait of people prioritizi­ng money over basic human decency — of putting the art of the deal above all else, you might say. When first told of the kidnapping, Getty doesn’t even look up from the stock ticker.

It’s hard not to spend some of the film’s running time wondering what Spacey might have brought to the movie. I suspect his performanc­e would have been icier, and perhaps smacked of stunt. (Spacey donned copious makeup and prosthetic­s to age him into the role.) Plummer, on the other hand, quite naturally feasts on the part, fully embodying Getty’s privilege and power.

At 88, Plummer has spent much of his superlativ­e late period playing King Lears presiding over the ends of their empires. Give him a mansion and a backstory, and he’ll go to town (just as he did this year in the Second World War thriller The Exception). But the miserly Getty of All the Money in the World, so totally focused on his fortune, makes the Grinch look like a philanthro­pist.

Aside from the audaciousn­ess of its last-minute facelift, All the Money in the World is fairly routine. If Scott was replacing stars, he might as well have yanked Wahlberg, too. The story doesn’t suit the action star’s considerab­le gifts, and he’s out of place from the start.

Still, the extreme measures taken by Scott are fitting. The restless director is driven by an obsession for work not so different than Getty’s. (This is the second film Scott has directed and the 10th project he’s produced this year. He’s 80.) When a crisis took his movie hostage, Scott immediatel­y intervened at an estimated cost of $8 million. The lesson holds: Just pay the ransom.

 ??  ?? Christophe­r Plummer and Charlie Shotwell in Ridley Scott’s All the Money in the World.
Christophe­r Plummer and Charlie Shotwell in Ridley Scott’s All the Money in the World.

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