Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Chastain holds winning hand in ‘Molly’s Game’

- The Ann Hornaday

The Washington Post

The screenwrit­er Aaron Sorkin makes his directoria­l debut with “Molly’s Game,” and it’s a promising one at that. Swift, stylish, toughminde­d and sharp-tongued, this engaging fact-based drama, about a young woman who at one point ran the richest poker game in the world, is worth recommendi­ng if only to see its star, Jessica Chastain, at the top of her nerviest, most icily self-controlled game.

Ms. Chastain plays Molly Bloom, who despite her fictionaln­ame was a real-life woman who was a highly ranked competitiv­e skier before she moved to Los Angeles in the early 2000s. There, she came under the tutelage of an ambitious real estate investor and impresario who organized weekly poker games for the likes of Tobey Maguire, Ben Affleck and Leonardo DiCaprio, among other high rollers. Watchful, dispassion­ate and preternatu­rally immune to the flirtation­s of the wealthy men in her orbit, Molly learned the ropes, struck out on her own and, inevitably, flew too close to the sun, eventually running afoul of the Russian mob and the U.S. government.

Adapted by Mr. Sorkin from Ms. Bloom’s memoir with the screenwrit­er’s signature percussive eclat, “Molly’s Game” provides a crisp, rapid-fire tutorial, not just in the psychosoci­al dynamics of the elite gambling world, but in Molly’s own Starring: Jessica Chastain, Idris Elba, Kevin Costner. Rating: R for coarse language, drug use and some violence. demons and almost pathologic­al drive, which we learn right away have their roots in a difficult relationsh­ip with her demanding father, played with crusty reserve by Kevin Costner. As a protagonis­t, Molly’s an almost irresistib­le archetype: bright, competitiv­e, charismati­c and deeply wounded.

It’s the kind of character Ms. Chastain has played before, in such films as “Zero Dark Thirty” and “Miss Sloane” Here, she adds dashes of vulnerabil­ity and compassion that turn an otherwise downbeat, even pitiless story into something, if not inspiring, at least slightly more meaningful than a dramatic fall from grace.

Mr. Sorkin does a terrific job of evoking the hothouse atmosphere of card games that might sound glamorous when boldface names are involved but also reek with the pitiful, dope-sick air of thinly veiled compulsion. Michael Cera delivers a slyly arrogant performanc­e as a swaggering actor who may or may not be based on Mr. Maguire; far more compelling are regulars played by Bill Camp, Brian d’Arcy James and ChrisO’Dowd, who personify the most sobering realities of the addiction that Molly exploits just as surely as if she were shooting them up every night.

Edited with alacrity and punctuated by “Big Short”ish montages and illustrati­ve asides, “Molly’s Game” bristles with brittle intelligen­ce that gives way to blunt-force comeuppanc­e as Molly’s position becomes more perilous. The action slows down a bit when she’s in conference with her attorney, played by Idris Elba in a turn that relieves the snapcrackl­e-pop vibe with silky, seductive frissons.

“Molly’s Game” only lets the air out of the balloon toward the end, during a pivotal encounter in Central Park that spells out everything way too obviously, even for the cheap seats that Mr. Sorkin so often refuses to pander to. That’s when viewers might realize that, as entertaini­ng as the tale has been, every character in the film seems to have spoken in the same cadence, with Mr. Sorkin’s own operatic self-assurance, humor and perfectly turned phraseolog­y.

Still, “Molly’s Game” is worth the ante: It pays off, both as slick, adult-oriented entertainm­ent and morality tale.

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