Everybody Loves A Con-Except When
They Are The Conned-When At First You Practice To Deceive, Part II-Giuseppe
Tonatore’s “The Best Offer” (2013)-A Film Review
DVD Review
By Laura Perkins
The Best Offer, starring Geoffrey
Rush, Donald Sutherland, Jim Sturgess, Sylvia Hoeks, directed by Giuseppe
Tonatorem 2013
Greg Green who has been the site
manager of the on-line edition of this publication since 2017 has as part of
his new regime, as a part of a policy that he had initiated when he was chief
editor at American Film Gazette for
many years encouraged his writers to let the reader into some of the internal
workings of on-line publication. I have taken him up on that proposition as a
matter of completeness since I believe that this review of 2013’s The Best Offer is in kindred spirit to
another recently reviewed film in this space, 1991’s Deceived. In that review I
mentioned, based on my own personal experience, that every woman stands in
unfocused fear and trepidation that the man she starts a serious relationship
is for real, is not a con artist, a holy goof psycho con artist in that film
and just an ordinary one in my case. Then this film came along which under
ordinary circumstances would go to Seth Garth but which Greg switched up after
seeing what I had written about in Deceived.
(Seth the obvious choice because he has been the one over the years who has
used the expression “everybody loves a con except the one being conned” the
most and done a number of reviews where the con was central to the action of
the film like in The Sting back in the
1970s.)
What intrigued Greg about my prior
review was that I took a very strong stand that this idea related especially to
women and wondered how I would deal with a case where as in The Best Offer a man was the subject of
the con, a non-psycho con but a con nevertheless. (Greg apparently missed my
note that men could tell their own takes on this proposition, but I was dealing
with women.) Here is how the con worked, a beautiful con according to Sam
Lowell who watched it with me and saw where the thing was heading long before I
caught on to the “grift” (a Sam expression from corner boy days as a youth so
he says). Virgil Oldman, played by sad-faced Geoffrey Rush, was a high -end top
auctioneer for a major auction house who also had via his companion in crime,
Billy played by now ancient Donald Sutherland, accumulated a gallery full of
the best the art world had to offer in female portraits going back to at least
the Renaissance. Their own scam was to downgrade the artist who painted the
thing and grab a masterpiece for cheap money. Nice.
This accumulation of female portraits
locked away from prying eyes and who knows what else had much to do with
Virgil’s finicky ways and fear of women. That fear, subtly using that unspecified
origin fear is what sets the whole con
up once he got a strange commission to auction off a valuable villa full of
high-end paintings and fine furniture. The strange commission from a young
woman who allegedly suffered from agoraphobia in the extreme as she led him on a
merry chase before they finally met. The key here is Virgil’s kinship with a
fellow odd-ball, a fellow person uncomfortable with dealing with people. Her
turning out to be drop-dead beautiful was an add-on although the homely as sin
Virgil should have at least had a few defenses up. In any case he got lured in
little by little helped by the machinations of a master tinkerer, Robert,
played by Jim Sturgess, who also was giving lovelorn Virgil advise on how to
woe this young woman who has sparked his interest. Finally Virgil woos the
young woman, Claire, played by fetching and fragile Sylvia Hoeks, who blossomed
under his tutelage. A number of incidents, including a brutal street robbery by
thugs near the villa bring Claire out into the world. Virgil will take his
credits for her resurrection, including a few romps in the hay. And she will
not object.
Once Virgil felt that Claire felt
comfortable in his high-end digs after bringing her along from her cocoon and a
few nights of high-end love-making he brought her into his inner sanctum-the
room full of female portraits which had previously sustained him. From there it
was all downhill as Virgil decided to retire and devote himself to Claire and
her well-being. One day he came home to put another painting in his collection
room. Bingo-no paintings except one that Billy painted, you remember Billy who
helped Virgil with their own con scheme. A painting allegedly of Claire’s mother
which was in her possession as she and Virgil were going round and round. Shocked,
Virgil finally realized that he has been set up by a cabal led by Billy
assisted by Robert and Claire and a few incidental characters. That sends him
to a mental institution and later to Prague where he foolishly expected the
perfidious Claire to show up since she expressed an interest in a certain place
in that town. A beautiful con according to Sam but to me just an extension of
my idea about every woman that now applies to every man-he must have a
deep-seeded dread that the woman he is dealing with is not real, is a con
artist-or worse.
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