The Borneo Post

Richard Gere plays an ageing New York fixer in the funny, charming ‘Norman’

- — WP-Bloomberg

IN ' Norman', a delightful semi-screwball comedy from Israeli writer- director Joseph Cedar, Richard Gere plays the title character, an ageing New York gadfly whose eye is always on the main chance.

An inveterate dealmaker, name- dropper and chatter-upper, Norman isn't above chasing down a hot financial prospect during the latter's morning run. Wrapped in a camel-hair coat and natty-looking cap, he's oblivious to the bad vibes he creates, ending even the most mortifying encounter with a chipper “I'll call you!” ( Not incidental­ly, the film's subtitle is “The Moderate Rise and Tragic Fall of a New York Fixer.”)

As the film opens, Norman is trying to get a deal together with an elusive financier named Jo Wilf ( Harris Yulin), roping in Norman's lawyer nephew Philip ( Michael Sheen) to acquire an inn. Later, he attends a gas and oil conference where he sees an Israeli trade minister deliver a visionary talk, and he stalks him to an upper- crust boutique, where the minister, Micha Eshel ( Lior Ashkenazi) is eying a pair of expensive wingtips.

Cedar films the pivotal scene when Norman and Eshel meet from inside the shop, resulting in a wonderful piece of silent cinema that sets the tone for the rest of the film. As Norman's and Eshel's fates intertwine, the filmmaker evinces a superb sense of visual storytelli­ng, using imaginativ­e staging and camerawork to give “Norman” the feel of a modern- day fairy tale.

That approach is altogether appropriat­e considerin­g the nebulousne­ss of Norman's world, which runs on such intangible­s as relationsh­ips, favours and proximity to power. Combining the dry wit of a latter- day Woody Allen with a canny eye for reflective and layered surfaces, Cedar creates two utterly credible worlds: the one in which Norman operates, and the brickand-mortar reality in which everyone else is trying to make their own way.

Like Kevin Costner, Gere is making a gratifying­ly graceful transition from ‘ 80sera heartthrob to venerable character actor. Here, he delivers a crazy-mirror image of his sleek investment banker in 2012's ‘Arbitrage', lending Norman the avid, hungry expression of a lifelong sharpie, but also oodles of soul and vulnerabil­ity.

Ashkenazi is just as sympatheti­c as a politician whose transactio­nal notions of friendship don't necessaril­y make him a monster. An astounding­ly good supporting cast includes Steve Buscemi as Norman's rabbi, Josh Charles as an elusive millionair­e and Charlotte Gainsbourg as a young woman Norman meets on a train coming back from a pro-Israel lobbying conference.

One of the film's best, most visionary moments occurs at that gathering, which winds up catapultin­g Norman into circumstan­ces he might have only dreamed of, but that quickly spiral into a kind of nightmare. Peppering ‘Norman' with obliquely mordant observatio­ns about Middle East politics, Cedar effortless­ly propels the narrative into a sweetly pensive character study of a familiar archetype, which he invests with an angel's share of humanity and heart.

Is Norman a macher, a schnorrer or a mensch? Thanks to the filmmaker's sensitive touch and Gere's sympatheti­c performanc­e, he gets to be all three. And that calls for mazel tovs all around.

• Three stars. Rated R. At area theatres. Contains some obscenity. In English and Hebrew with some subtitles. 117 minutes.

• Ratings Guide: Four stars masterpiec­e, three stars very good, two stars OK, one star poor, no stars waste of time.

 ?? — Courtesy Niko Tavernise, Sony Pictures Classics ?? (Left-Right) Richard Gere as Norman Oppenheime­r and Lior Ashkenazi as Micha Eshel in ‘Norman: The Moderate Rise and Tragic Fall of a New York Fixer’.
— Courtesy Niko Tavernise, Sony Pictures Classics (Left-Right) Richard Gere as Norman Oppenheime­r and Lior Ashkenazi as Micha Eshel in ‘Norman: The Moderate Rise and Tragic Fall of a New York Fixer’.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia