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| Matchstick Men was a fantastic con movie. I absolutely love con movies because I find my own ignorance to be astounding. I always think to myself, “Man, that could be me falling for that trick.” Review by Melinda
Ledman |

(2003) Film Review by Melinda Ledman |
| This page was created on September 8, 2003
This page was last updated on
December 28, 2004
—Review
—Trailers, Photos
—About this Film
—Spiritual Connections
—Forum
Dial up modems will take a few moments |
| CREDITS |
| Directed by Ridley Scott
Book by Eric Garcia
Screenplay by Nicholas Griffin & Ted Griffin
Producers
Sean Bailey ... producer
Giannina Facio ... co-producer
Ted Griffin ... producer
Jack Rapke ... producer
Charles J.D. Schlissel ... co-producer
Ridley Scott ... producer
Steve Starkey ... producer
Robert Zemeckis ... executive producer
Cast - in credits order
Nicolas Cage ... Roy
Sam Rockwell ... Frank Mercer
Alison Lohman ... Angela
Bruce McGill ... Frechette
Other credited cast listed alphabetically
Bruce Altman ... Dr. Klein
Steve Eastin ... Husband
Beth Grant
Jerry Hauck ... Taxi Cab Driver
Lynn Ann Leveridge ... Bank Clerk
Tim Maculan ... Pharmacist
Daniel Villarreal ... Car Wash Employee
Melora Walters
Original Music by Hans Zimmer
Additional music James Michael Dooley and Geoff Zanelli
Cinematography by John Mathieson
Editor Dody Dorn
USA / PG-13 / 116 min
This film is rated PG-13 by the MPAA for "thematic elements, violence, some sexual content and language."
For rating reasons, go to FILMRATINGS.COM, and MPAA.ORG.
Parents, please refer to PARENTALGUIDE.ORG |
| TRAILERS AND CLIPS |
| —Trailers |
| BOOK |
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Matchstick Men
by Eric Garcia
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| POSTER |
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Matchstick Men
27 in x 40 in
Double-sided poster plain, or
Framed | Mounted |
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| SYNOPSIS |
Meet Roy (NICOLAS CAGE) and Frank (SAM ROCKWELL), a couple of pros at the small-time con. As in con artists. Grifters. Matchstick Men. Take your pick.
What Roy, a veteran of the grift, and Frank, his ambitious protégé, are swindling - er, make that selling - these days are "water filtration systems," bargain-basement water filters bought by unsuspecting people who pay ten times their value in order to win bogus prizes like cars, jewelry and overseas vacations…which they never collect. These scams net the flim-flam men a few hundred here, another
thousand there, which eventually adds up to a lucrative partnership.
Roy's private life, however, is not so successful. An obsessive-compulsive agoraphobe (and chain-smoker) with no personal relationships to call his own, Roy is barely hanging on to his wits, and when his idiosyncrasies begin to threaten his criminal productivity he's forced to seek the help of a psychoanalyst (BRUCE ALTMAN) just to keep him in working order.
While Roy is looking for a quick fix (i.e. pills), his therapy begets more than he bargained for: the revelation that he has a teenage daughter - a child whose existence he suspected but never dared confirm. What's more troubling, 14-year-old Angela (ALISON LOHMAN) wants to meet the father she never knew.
At first, Angela's appearance disrupts her neurotic father's carefully ordered routine. Soon, however, with his own unique spin on parenthood, Roy begins to enjoy a relationship he never dreamed of having with his daughter. But while he develops paternal feelings for the 14-year-old, she's developing a fascination with Daddy's questionable career. Finally, at Angela's insistence and against his better judgment, the overprotective
con artist begins teaching her some tricks of the trade and, much to his ambivalent mix of surprise, pride and dismay, she displays a remarkable gift for the grift.
Now, like a kid with a new toy, Angela wants in on the partnership. But that could seriously jeopardize Roy's peace of mind - not to mention his whole way of life. |
Review
by
MELINDA LEDMAN BLOG
HJMLedman@yahoo.com.
Melinda Ledman is a graduate
of Baylor University with a Bachelor’s degree in English.
During college, she worked on the film Letter From Waco (director
Don Howard), which won the award for best documentary feature in
the 1997 South by Southwest Film Festival. After she and her husband
Rob had their first child in September 2002, she began free-lance
writing full time. In addition to writing reviews, she most enjoys
writing original screenplays. She gratefully serves God after 12
years of alcoholism, and appreciates grace and freedom on a whole
new level. |
Matchstick Men was a fantastic con movie. I absolutely love con movies because I find my own ignorance to be astounding. I always think to myself, “Man, that could be me falling for that trick.” And I love that it isn’t me. Lies and deception have always intrigued me because I can’t imagine how people pull them off successfully. The few
attempts that I have made at lying have failed miserably, and I was the only one to suffer. Case in point with the movie. The lies and deceptions only last so long before one’s quality of living suffers a blow. Roy’s quality of life is severely diminished when we meet him, and he could choose a different life. But, like most of us, we don’t take a good look until a crisis comes. Why is a crisis necessary? Why don’t we look at the road blocks that try to stop us
before disaster? The reality is that the game has to end somewhere, and usually isn’t in our favor. From what I could tell, there were at least four major road blocks that Roy smashed through before realizing that his own words were true: Crime pays, just not very well.
Neurotic Tendencies – From the beginning, Roy is depicted as an obsessive compulsive person who cannot function without medication. Although he is obsessed with cleanliness, he is also a chain
smoker. He hates the outdoors and is constantly grunting, winking, and ticking from the stress of being a criminal. Now, this should be a pretty obvious road block to someone heading in the wrong direction, especially when the neurosis infringes upon their work. Roy experiences an attack during an ordinary con transaction which he and Frank have performed numerous times. But, Frank must whisk him away before they got caught. When his pills turn up missing, he becomes totally dysfunctional
and hides out cleaning his house for days. He visits a new psychiatrist who gives him soy pills instead of legitimate medication. When Roy discovers the fake pills, his doctor replies directly, “Your neurosis is small time. Your conscience is another story.” Throughout the story, his compulsions are tied to his conscience. When he is with his daughter, opening up and living freely, the ticks disappear. But as soon as stress, danger or changes come, the ticks return. Had
he faced his neurosis and admitted that the life of a criminal was affecting him physically, he might have turned around. But he didn’t. He drove right through.
Getting Caught – Roy gets caught several times, although not necessarily by his victims. First, his daughter catches him after discovering a gun and money in his doggie bank. He reluctantly
tells her that he is a criminal. He admits to her that the life of crime isn’t glamorous because he often has to steal from people who don’t deserve it. But this admission doesn’t stop him from doing it. In fact, he later concedes to let Angela in on a scam with him. Roy also gets caught by the psychiatrist. After numerous sessions, the doctor asks him, “What would you do if you had to change careers?” Roy says, “What, if I wasn’t an antiques
broker?” “No, if you weren’t a criminal.” The psychiatrist catches him in the lie. And since Roy has just had a blowout with his daughter, he decides to make a clean start. However, in an excellent plot twist, he is caught again, but this time by a former victim. He is forced back into the life of crime, and in true to life fashion, he falls into his criminal ways quite naturally. Roy might have made the hard decision to suffer through the consequences of being
an honest man after this incident. But, he didn’t. He drove right through.
A Positive Influence – Sometimes the roadblock isn’t so much a hindrance to our actions, but a persuasion to go another direction. Angela, his daughter, happens to be both. A double-edged
sword, she inspires him to do better with his life, but then drags him down. At first, her position as his daughter creates a positive influence on Roy’s life. He is forced to deal with his “career” from the perspective of being a parent. Does he want to corrupt her? Does he even want to tell her the truth? And finally, does he want to use her in his own scams? It’s a terrible decision to have to make. When she asks him to show her a con game, he replies, “You’re
a bright, innocent, beautiful girl and I don’t want to ruin that.” But she wants to be ruined. The adventure is too taunting, and he gives in. Later he guiltily admits to the psychologist that their little scam was the most fun they have had together. To some degree, he sees her as a protégé, a talented offspring of his talented self, and perhaps even like a new toy he can have fun with. He could have made the decision to not corrupt her and to do the honest
thing. But he didn’t. He drove right through. Now, he does make the right decision later. He gets out of the business after a scam has gone bad and he parts ways with Angela. But just as Roy decides to do the right thing, the other blade of the sword makes its impression and she gets involved again of her own free will. She toys with his conscience throughout the story and her positive influence is only exacted when he considers his influence as a parent. At any time, he could
decide to stop the games, to leave his life of crime, or even to set her free of his world, but he doesn’t. The paternal road block isn’t strong enough for him. He drives right through.
Spoiler Warning: If you haven’t seen the movie and don’t wish for the ending to be spoiled, do not read any further.
The Double Cross – The final road block, and the one that makes him change, is the ultimate double cross in the last 10 minutes of the film. I absolutely loved it! I have to admit, this was one of the best movie endings I have seen this year. I didn’t see it coming, although I should have. I was too wrapped up in the father/daughter story line to think twice about Frank, who constantly expresses
gratitude and love for Roy. I thought I had Frank figured out, that he was a pretty good guy, and I was glad that Roy had one friend in the world he could count on… Whoosh!! There goes the rug! I thought of Angela’s words to Roy, “I don’t think you’re a bad guy.” He replied, “That’s what makes me good at it.” That’s what made Frank good at it too. At first, I was very disappointed for Roy. Experiencing parenthood is one of
the most marvelous, life changing things that can happen to a person. You expect it to change you, and it does. To know that the entire thing was a farse, especially at the hands of Frank, gave me little hope for Roy in the end. Honestly, after the whole scam was revealed, I expected some kind of counter-scam from Roy. I thought the story would end on a light-hearted payback note. But fortunately, the double cross was a dead end for Roy. It was a better ending because it was more true
of life. When you lose everything, you have to question what it was that attracted you to those things in the first place. You have to ask if you want to rebuild and redevelop the things that were your life before. Roy decides he does not. There is nowhere else to go on a dead end road, so he turns around. He heads back to the grocery store clerk and starts all over.
I really loved this ending because it is the story of my life and the story of so many other peoples’ lives. If you have ever lost it all and come to the end of yourself, you know the pain it took to get
there. Whether it was suffering, betrayal, stupid mistakes, consequences of your own decisions, or even a series of divine roadblocks, you usually decide you don’t want to take that journey again. It was there that I chose Christ, just like Roy chose to embrace a new life. Roy forgives those who hurt him, claiming, “You didn’t take it from me, I gave it to you,” And he states that he sees life differently now. Thank God for the roadblocks along the way! I have
developed eyes for seeing some of the signs now, and I’m grateful when God tries to keep me from harm. Sometimes I listen, but sometimes I drive right through. It is the nature of humanity. But one thing is sure: If God cares enough to put up road blocks for us, He must care about where we are going in life.
“Although the Lord has given you bread of adversity and water of affliction, your teachers will be hidden no more; with your own eyes you will see them. And you will hear a word behind you saying, ‘This is the way, walk in it,’ whenever you turn to the right or to the left.” - Isaiah 30:21
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