Chicago Sun-Times

DOWN- HOME HEIST

The robbers of ‘ Logan Lucky’ may be simple folk, but they’re not stupid

- RICHARD ROEPER

Arriving months after the release of “Logan” and weeks before the release of “Lucky,” here comes “Logan Lucky,” a breezy and clever heist romp with no relation to the other two movies, which have no relation to one another. It’s just a weird coincidenc­e to have movies called “Logan” and “Lucky” and “Logan Lucky” all in the same year.

To quote the Eagles: Are you with me so far?

Directed by the versatile and prolific Steven Soderbergh, who since “retiring” from feature films a few years ago has been busy directing the fantastic HBO movie “Behind the Candelabra” and the brilliant TV series “The Knick” ( and working as the cinematogr­apher for “Magic Mike XXL”), “Logan Lucky” actually has quite a bit in common with Soderbergh’s star- studded hit “Ocean’s 11.”

Trade in the pearl- toothed slicksters played by George Clooney and Brad Pitt for a couple of twang- talkin’ dirtkicker­s played by Channing Tatum and Adam Driver, move the setting from glitzy Las Vegas to down- home North Carolina, and “Logan Lucky” plays like a scaleddown, biscuits- and- gravy take on the “Ocean’s” movies.

In fact, a TV news anchor reporting on the heist in “Logan Lucky” refers to it as the “Ocean’s 7- Eleven” caper.

Tatum ( a Soderbergh favorite) gives one of the most natural and likable performanc­es of his career as Jimmy Logan, a former high school football star with a slightly softened but still hulking physique, and a noticeable limp from the injury that cut short his gridiron career.

It’s the limp — an unreported “pre- existing condition” — that gets Jimmy fired from his job with a crew repairing a giant sink- hole directly underneath the Charlotte Motor Speedway.

This leaves Jimmy unemployed, nearly broke and in desperate need of a quick score so he can prove fiscal stability and maintain partial custody of his adorable and precocious daughter Sadie ( Farrah MacKenzie). The timing is especially crucial because Jimmy’s no- nonsense ex- wife ( Katie Holmes) has just announced she and her hubby are about to move the family to West Virginia. She’s aching for Jimmy to give her an opening to essentiall­y remove him from Sadie’s life.

Brainstorm! Jimmy hatches a brazen plan to steal the cash from the speedway’s undergroun­d network of money- transferri­ng pneumatic tubes. ( When the registers at concession­s throughout the enormous stadium fill up, cashiers drop the money in the tubes, and the bills are funneled into a giant vault.)

It’s not so different from Danny Ocean’s scheme to boost a fortune from the Bellagio’s undergroun­d vault. And just as Danny recruited a band of misfit associates with checkered pasts to pull off the elaborate heist, Jimmy enlists the aid of similarly dysfunctio­nal and

quite hilarious goofballs, including:

◆ Jimmy’s brother Clyde ( Adam Driver), a sad- sack bartender who lost the lower part of one arm on a tour of duty in Iraq and sports a ridiculous­ly ill- fitting prosthetic that looks like it was made for the Hulk.

◆ Their sister Mellie ( Riley Keough), a sharp- tongued hairdresse­r with behindthe- wheel skills just a notch below those of Baby Driver.

◆ The muscled, heavily tattooed explosives expert Joe Bang ( Daniel Craig), so named because this is the kind of movie unafraid to call a slightly mad bomber “Joe Bang.” As it happens, Joe Bang is behind bars, so the Logan brothers concoct a plan to break him out of prison so he can participat­e in the robbery, and then break him back in before anyone notices he’s missing.

Joe Bang’s idiot brothers ( Brian Gleeson and Jack Quaid), born- again crooks who now require a “moral reason” to rationaliz­e any further criminal activity.

Working from a smart ( if obviously derivative) screenplay by first- time screenwrit­er Rebecca Blunt and acting as his own cinematogr­apher, Soderbergh deftly juggles multiple, interweavi­ng storylines and sprinkles in a number of oddball characters, including Seth MacFarlane’s obnoxious energy- drink mogul, who is sponsoring a car in the Coca- Cola 600 at the speedway; Hillary Swank’s socially stiff FBI agent, and Dwight Yoakam’s image- conscious prison warden.

Some of the set pieces have at best tenuous connection­s to the main story line. Rioting prisoners take guards hostage — and then present a list of demands that will be tough to meet, due to George R. R. Martin’s “Game of Thrones” books falling behind the timeline of the HBO series. ( No, really.) A children’s pageant turns into a John Denver singalong, and that’s the fourth movie this year ( after “Alien: Covenant” and “Free Fire” and “Okja”) to prominentl­y feature the gentle, 1970s folk- rock musings of the late John Denver.

Even with all the deepfried humor and the sometimes over- the- hilltop accents ( Driver in particular pushes it with his vocal tics, but his accent grew on me), “Logan Lucky” almost never feels condescend­ing or Hollywood smug. More than one of these seemingly simple folks turns out to be whipsmart in a certain fashion.

Not everything works. MacFarlane’s turn as a Brit blowhard comes across as forced ( the dollar- store wig and cheesy mustache don’t help). And even when all is revealed in classic “Ocean’s” fashion, it feels as if a piece or two of the jigsaw puzzle is still on the floor somewhere.

Mostly, though, “Logan Lucky” is great fun and one of the most purely entertaini­ng movies of the year.

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 ??  ?? Jimmy ( Channing Tatum, right) recruits his brother Clyde ( Adam Driver) for a heist in “Logan Lucky.” BLEECKER STREET PHOTOS
Jimmy ( Channing Tatum, right) recruits his brother Clyde ( Adam Driver) for a heist in “Logan Lucky.” BLEECKER STREET PHOTOS
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