FILM-FORWARD.COMReviews of Recent Independent, Foreign, & Documentary Films in Theaters and DVD/Home Video
Directed by: Wayne Kramer. Produced by: Sean Furst & Michael A. Pierce. Written by: Frank Hannah & Wayne Kramer. Director of Photography: Jim Whitaker. Edited by: Arthur Coburn. Music by: Mark Isham & Diana Krall. Released by: Lions Gate. Country of Origin: USA. 101 min. Rated: R. With: William H. Macy, Alec Baldwin, Maria Bello & Ron Livingston. DVD Features: Commentary by: director/co-writer Wayne Kramer, co-writer Frank Hannah & director of photography Jim Whitaker. Commentary by: Kramer & composer Mark Isham. The Sundance Channel’s Anatomy of a Scene. Storyboards. Bios.
Bernie Lootz (Macy) is a “cooler” in a Las Vegas casino run by Shelly Kaplow
(Baldwin). When a gambler’s at the craps table, Bernie walks by, congratulates him with
a pat on the shoulder, and instantly the luck is gone, and the chips are scooped up by the
dealer. For Shelly, Bernie’s contagious misfortune is indispensable to the casino. But
Bernie, down on his luck, wants to leave and start a new life. Among the many changes the young casino
guru Larry (Livingston) wants to make would be to turn the casino into another
Disney-style family attraction, where the cooler is replaced with subliminal tapes that
whisper “Lose, lose, lose” under soft music.
Luck, in this movie, aside from being very real and very mysterious, is also, somehow, a
state of mind - Shelly and Bernie are convinced of this. Shelly must fend off Larry while
convincing Bernie to stay, without giving such a boost to the cooler’s spirits that he starts
feeling viable and lucky again. Natalie (Bello), a waitress, is
Shelly’s (and Bernie’s) last hope. Previously indifferent, she offers to sleep with Bernie
before he leaves; he gives in and suddenly his runaway cat
returns, his dying plants start to revive, and - best of all for everyone but Shelly - his
corrosive touch at the blackjack table no longer sticks. The story, often funny, ultimately
uplifting, turns on some great writing and fine performances by the entire cast.
Baldwin is startling as a conflicted casino don; Bello is superb as the seductress who
gives herself over to her fate; and Macy takes an exciting leap from self-doubting loser to
confident lover. With his leap, a film apparently about luck turns out to be about karma.
Joel Whitney, poet/screenwriter, teaches at Fordham University
DVD Extras: The Cooler boasts one of the most impressive ensembles of 2003, so it is a letdown that the cast
is almost completely absent from the extras. Alec Baldwin received his first Oscar nomination
for the film, and while it is entertaining to listen to director Wayne Kramer praise his skills on
both commentaries, it would have been more enjoyable to hear Baldwin’s own reaction to his
greatest critical success. Nonetheless, the director provides some insightful pieces of trivia,
including the fact that the movie was shot in only three weeks and the set was a real casino
closed for renovations. The Anatomy of a Scene would prove more interesting if it wasn’t
simply a reiteration of these and other facts covered in the commentaries. Michael Belkewitch
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