The Oklahoman

‘AMERICAN ANIMALS’

- — Michael O’Sullivan, The Washington Post

R 1:56 HHHH

There are a few intriguing questions raised by “American Animals,” a fact-based drama about the four college-age men who, in 2004, attempted a misguided heist of rare books — including John James Audubon’s “Birds of America,” said to be worth $12 million — from the library of Transylvan­ia University in Lexington, Kentucky.

Why did they do it? What have they learned from it? And will anyone really want to watch a movie about such foolish people who, during one abortive attempt to make off with the oversize volume of ornitholog­ical prints, disguise themselves — badly — as elderly men?

The answer to the last question, at least, is yes. Written and directed by Bart Layton, “American Animals” is fascinatin­g, funny and, in the end, deep.

The answers to the other two questions are more elusive.

“American Animals” is lightly fictionali­zed. The words “This not a true story” appear on-screen at the start, only to have the “not” disappear, indicating a relationsh­ip with the truth that acknowledg­es both its aspiration­al qualities and its unknowabil­ity.

“American Animals” is based on interviews with the perpetrato­rs: in this case, Spencer Reinhard, Warren Lipka, Eric Borsuk and Chas Allen, whose often contradict­ory accounts of their crime are peppered throughout the film, guiding us through the re-enactments, even as they call them into question. At times, the four men briefly appear alongside the actors who portray them (respective­ly, Barry Keoghan, Evan Peters, Jared Abrahamson and Blake Jenner), lending the film an additional patina of surrealism. They are not just tellers of the tall tale, Layton suggests, but participan­ts in and witnesses to it.

At its core, “American Animals” is most interested in this question: What is it about these four examples of the American millennial — all products of Lexington’s elite high schools — that led to their sense of entitlemen­t and impunity?

“American Animals,” while an entertaini­ng version of a heist film at times, is no “Ocean’s 8.” Its signature moment occurs not during the re-enactment of the inept crime, or its planning and antic aftermath. Rather, it comes in the middle of one of Lipka’s interview scenes, when the ex-con, now in his 30s and out of jail, is stunned into tearful, inarticula­te silence while reflecting on his own capacity for — and ultimately inability to explain away his rationale for — evil.

Starring: Barry Keoghan, Evan Peters, Jared Abrahamson and Blake Jenner (strong language throughout and some drug use).

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