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Dom Robinson reviews

Snatch

Stealin' Stones and Breakin' Bones

Distributed by

Columbia TriStar


Snatch is a film that improves as it progresses.

Guy Ritchie intertwines two stories. One, Franky Four Fingers (Benicio Del Toro) has gone AWOL with a perfect 86-carat diamond and since Doug the Head (Mike Reid), who pretends to be Jewish, can't be trusted to get it back, Cousin Avi (Dennis Farina) makes tracks for London to find it with the help of local hardman Bullet-Tooth Tony (Vinnie Jones).

On the other side of the fence, two-bit unlicenced boxing promoters Turkish (Jason Statham) and Tommy (Stephen Graham) are in debt to gangster Brick Top (Alan Ford), who runs an illegal bookies and is happy to chop you up and feed you to the pigs if you don't pay up, so they're forced to organise a dodgy bare-knuckle fight with "One Punch" Mickey O'Neil (Brad Pitt) doing their bidding, although while he's meant to take a dive in the fourth round he has his own agenda.

Vinny (Robbie Gee) and Sol (Lennie James) are a couple of losers caught up in trying to get the precious stone, whose replica handguns don't quite cut it when it counts, Boris the Blade (Rade Serbedzija), universally acclaimed as a "sneaky fucking Russian", who can get you anything you need, is also after the prize booty and there's cameos from Trainspotting's Ewen Bremner and Lock Stock and Two Smoking Barrels' Jason Flemyng.

Of course, the question is, is it as good as Lock Stock and Two Smoking Barrels ? Nearly, is the answer. It took me until around 40 minutes into the film to really warm to it and it didn't feel like the characters were as clear-cut as in that film, but although it doesn't take a genius to realise that Snatch is like that one but with a change in plot device, some actors and a few names, you do find yourself in comfortable home territory and can settle down for some spectacular scenes involving coincidence, mistaken identity and double-crossing. Perhaps a couple more viewing might push the film score up a notch.

Finally, the best line in the film comes from the delivery, of Cousin Avi to Doug the Head, with: "Shut up and sit down, you big, bald fuck!"


The picture looks a little washed out throughout the film, but that's the style used and not a criticism of the transfer. There are artifacts occasionally noticeable in dark scenes, but on the whole the 1.85:1 anamorphic widescreen presentation looks superb. The average bitrate is a great 7.25Mb/s, occasionally peaking over 9Mb/s.

The sound is in Dolby Digital 5.1 with frequent use of all speakers when director Guy Ritchie is trying to be more than a bit flashy with the visuals as well as with yet another soundtrack to die for including The Stranglers' Golden Brown, The Specials' Ghost Town, 10cc's Dreadlock Holiday as well as his own lady wife's Lucky Star.


Whereas neither release of Lock Stock and Two Smoking Barrels had a great deal of extras, this one certainly does.

Disc one contains a feature-length Director/Producer Commentary, Weblink and a Stealing Stones Feature Option which inserts three deleted scenes back into the film in their appropriate place when the diamond symbol appears.

Disc two is where the real spicy meatballs are unleashed. Jump to a Song plays back the snippets of music heard throughout the film but are listed as the scenes in which they appear rather than by track names, there's a 4:3 two-minute International Trailer, a 4:3 60-second Teaser Trailer and four brief TV Spots, each in 16:9 anamorphic widescreen.

24 minutes of Interviews are included in the form of soundbites from Ritchie, Vinnie Jones, Dennis Farina and many other key cast members, as are scores of pics in the Photo Library all set to the theme music and there's a humourous "Making Of" which runs for 25 minutes.

The Production Notes provides plenty of info about the story, the cast and crew, there are six Deleted scenes with optional commentary from Ritchie and they last a total of nine minutes, Filmographies for principal cast and crew members, three Storyboard comparisons with multi-angle option so you can watch either the film, the storyboards or both together, five minutes of raw Behind-the-scenes (B-roll) footage of work in progress, plus some inventive hidden extras which are easy to find and worth a good laugh, the best being the cornucopia of cuss words.

The disc contains 28 chapters, moving menus with music and subtitles in English and, of all languages, Hindi.

DVD Trivia: At-a-distance, seeing Brad Pitt on the cover I can't help but think of one half of Chas N Dave.

FILM CONTENT
PICTURE QUALITY
SOUND QUALITY
EXTRAS



OVERALL

Review copyright © Dominic Robinson, 2001.

Visit the Official Snatch Website

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