Everybody Loves A Con
Man (Or Woman)-With Richard Gere’s “The Hoax” (2006) In Mind
DVD Review
By Book Critic Zack
James
The Hoax, starring
Richard Gere, 2006
Everybody loves a con man
(or at the headline states con woman as well although there tend to be fewer of
them in the deep rich history of this art form). Everybody that is except the guy
(or gal) being conned. That egg on the face person most definitely does not love
a con although he or she gets what they deserve in my book. I have seen some
beautiful work in my time. The time when Eddie Murray took some hungry greedy stockbroker
for a cool million when a million was something on non-existent stock, nada. Or
that time when Conrad Vedt a seemingly mild mannered non-entity took the local
syndicate for five mil and got away with it (although he did spent some serious
time looking over his shoulder before the coast was clear). The big one though
at least the one I was close to, knew some of the players, was when Jack Kiley
took down a couple of high-end Las Vegas gamblers for something like ten million
all by himself. The stuff of legends. And that brings us to the film under review
the rough film adaptation of writer Clifford Irving’s book about his big time
literary scam of the so-called billionaire when a billion was serious money Howard
Hughes “autobiography” The Hoax. (Although
the thought occurs to me why would you believe what a con artist has written
about himself-oh well.)
Clifford Irving, played
by Richard Gere, understood the first rule of the con-go big or don’t go at
all. It is not worth the time or energy to do the con for chicken feed although
I have known back in the old Acre section of my growing up town North Adamsville
guys to do cons for chicken feed. A serious con like the one Irving tried to
pull for a million bucks and maybe more if things had worked out on a
well-known if reclusive public figure working the literary scam which meant
bucking a high-end publishing company also meant possible jail time if the
thing went south on him. Which in the end as everybody now knows it did
dragging his wife and his closest collaborator down with him in the gutter-into
jail time.
Still you have to like the
brass of the guy taking a shot at immortality in the con artist pantheon-a
place not for the faint-hearted. First he had to get a big enough target for
his appetites which seemed to narrow down to Howard Hughes for no better reason
than he saw his name on a magazine cover and figured he could use that notorious
reclusiveness of Hughes’ to work his magic. Of course the second rule of the
con is to talk fast on your feet and be plausible which Irving did with relish
starting with his agent and working up the food chain to the big-time publishing
company executives. The dicey part or one of the dicey parts was that the potential
publishers advised by their platoon of lawyers were going to be looking for some
proof and a lot of the film dealt with working around that problem. But see the
third rule of the con or maybe it really is the first rule once you get a bead
on human nature as it has evolved over the last few millennia is to understand
how to play to a little greed or some
vanity advantage over your competitors. Bingo here.
The other dicey part which
in the end did Irving and his compadres in was the blow-back from the super
security conscious Hughes empire. Irving
almost had it made but just couldn’t work out that last kink about how to grab the
dough-the fatal check-which needed to be cashed with Hughes’ name on it. Tough
break. Yeah, everybody loves a con. Conrad Vedt, Jack Riley and Eddie Murray would
have been proud.
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