Spartan movie review & film summary (2004) | Roger Ebert (2024)

Reviews

Spartan movie review & film summary (2004) | Roger Ebert (1)

Now streaming on:

"Spartan" opens without any credits except its title, but I quickly knew it was written by David Mamet because nobody else hears and writes dialogue the way he does. That the film tells a labyrinthine story of betrayal and deception, a con within a con, also stakes out Mamet territory. But the scope of the picture is larger than Mamet's usual canvas: This is a thriller on a global scale, involving the Secret Service, the FBI, the CIA, the White House, a secret Special Ops unit and Middle Eastern kidnappers.

Advertisem*nt

Such a scale could lend itself to one of those big, clunky action machines based on 700-page best sellers that put salesmen to sleep on airplanes. But no. Not with Mamet, who treats his action plot as a framework for a sly, deceptive exercise in the gradual approximation of the truth.

Before I get to the plot, let me linger on the dialogue. Most thrillers have simple-minded characters who communicate to each other in primary plot points ("Cover me." "It goes off in 10 minutes." "Who are you working for?") "Spartan" begins by assuming that all of its characters know who they are and what they're doing, and do not need to explain this to us in thriller-talk. They communicate in elliptical shorthand, in shop talk, in trade craft, in oblique references, in shared memories; we can't always believe what they say, and we don't always know that. We get involved in their characters and we even sense their rivalries while the outline of the plot is still murky. How murky we don't even dream.

Val Kilmer, in his best performance since "Tombstone," plays a Special Ops officer named Scott, who as the movie opens is doing a field exercise with two trainees: Curtis (Derek Luke), and Jackie Black (Tia Texada). He's called off on assignment after the daughter of the president is kidnapped. The Secret Service was supposed to be guarding her, but ... what went wrong is one of the movie's secrets.

Ed O'Neill plays an agent in charge of the search for the daughter, William H. Macy is a political operative from the White House, and it turns out that the daughter, Laura Newton (Kristen Bell), was taken for reasons that are not obvious, by kidnappers you would not guess, who may or may not know she is the president's daughter. Kilmer's assignment: Go anywhere and get her back by any means necessary. Curtis and Jackie want to get involved, too, but Kilmer doesn't want them, which may not be the final word on the subject.

And that is quite enough of the plot. It leaves me enjoying the way Mamet, from his earliest plays to his great films like "House of Games," "Wag the Dog," "Homicide" and "The Spanish Prisoner," works like a magician who uses words instead of cards. The patter is always fascinating, and at right angles to the action.

He's like a magician who gets you all involved in his story about the King, the Queen and the Jack, while the whole point is that there's a rabbit in your pocket. Some screenwriters study Robert McKee. Mamet studies magic and confidence games. In his plots, the left hand makes a distracting movement, but you're too smart for that, and you quick look over at the right hand to spot the trick, while meanwhile the left hand does the business while still seeming to flap around like a decoy.

Advertisem*nt

The particular pleasure of "Spartan" is to watch the characters gradually define themselves and the plot gradually emerge like your face in a steamy mirror. You see the outlines, and then your nose, and then you see that somebody is standing behind you, and then you see it's you -- so who is the guy in the mirror? Work with me here. I'm trying to describe how the movie operates without revealing what it does.

William H. Macy, who has been with Mamet since his earliest theater days, is an ideal choice for this kind of work. He always seems like the ordinary guy who is hanging on for retirement. He's got that open, willing face, and the flat, helpful voice with sometimes the little complaint in it, and in "Spartan," he starts out with what looks like a walk-on role (we're thinking David found a part for his old pal) and ends up walking away with it. Val Kilmer, a versatile actor who can be good at almost anything (who else has played Batman and John Holmes?), here plays lean and hard, Sam Jackson style. His character is enormously resourceful with his craft, but becomes extremely puzzled about what he can do safely, and who he can trust. Derek Luke, a rising star with a quiet earnestness that is just right here, disappears for a long stretch and then finds out something remarkable, and Tia Texada, in the Rosario Dawson role, succeeds against all odds in actually playing a woman soldier instead of a sexy actress playing a woman soldier.

I like the safe rooms with the charts on the walls, and I like the casual way that spycraft is explained by being used, and the way Mamet keeps pulling the curtain aside to reveal a new stage with a new story. I suppose the last scene in the film will remind some of our friend the deus ex machina, but after reflection, I have decided that, in that place, at that time, what happens is about as likely to happen as anything else, maybe likelier.

Now playing

Clipped
Brian Tallerico

The Imaginary
Carlos Aguilar

Last Summer
Christy Lemire

Glenn Kenny

Brats
Brian Tallerico

Music
Glenn Kenny

Film Credits

Spartan movie review & film summary (2004) | Roger Ebert (9)

Spartan (2004)

Rated R

102 minutes

Cast

William H. Macyas Stoddard

Ed O'Neillas Burch

Tia Texadaas Jackie Black

Derek Lukeas Curtis

Kristen Bellas Laura Newton

Val Kilmeras Scott

Written and directed by

  • David Mamet

Latest blog posts

Chaz Ebert Calls for Candidates and Elected Officials to Give a f*ck and Pledge to Restore Civility to Political Discourse

1 dayago

Shelley Duvall’s Five Best Performances

1 dayago

Osgood Perkins Wants to Rattle You with Longlegs

1 dayago

2 daysago

Advertisem*nt

Comments

Advertisem*nt

Advertisem*nt

Spartan movie review & film summary (2004) | Roger Ebert (2024)
Top Articles
Fortnite Level Leaderboard
Siriusxm The Heat Top 35 List
How To Start a Consignment Shop in 12 Steps (2024) - Shopify
Camera instructions (NEW)
Gamevault Agent
Online Reading Resources for Students & Teachers | Raz-Kids
The Daily News Leader from Staunton, Virginia
Robot or human?
The 10 Best Restaurants In Freiburg Germany
Don Wallence Auto Sales Vehicles
DL1678 (DAL1678) Delta Historial y rastreo de vuelos - FlightAware
Cinepacks.store
Nestle Paystub
Large storage units
Es.cvs.com/Otchs/Devoted
Palace Pizza Joplin
My.doculivery.com/Crowncork
Animal Eye Clinic Huntersville Nc
RBT Exam: What to Expect
Flower Mound Clavicle Trauma
How to find cash from balance sheet?
Curtains - Cheap Ready Made Curtains - Deconovo UK
Cashtapp Atm Near Me
Bnsf.com/Workforce Hub
Rachel Griffin Bikini
Mflwer
Daylight Matt And Kim Lyrics
Halo Worth Animal Jam
All Obituaries | Gateway-Forest Lawn Funeral Home | Lake City FL funeral home and cremation Lake City FL funeral home and cremation
Form F-1 - Registration statement for certain foreign private issuers
Craigslist Lake Charles
3569 Vineyard Ave NE, Grand Rapids, MI 49525 - MLS 24048144 - Coldwell Banker
Cornedbeefapproved
Masterbuilt Gravity Fan Not Working
As families searched, a Texas medical school cut up their loved ones
NV Energy issues outage watch for South Carson City, Genoa and Glenbrook
Hwy 57 Nursery Michie Tn
Helpers Needed At Once Bug Fables
Otis Inmate Locator
Christmas Days Away
Robot or human?
Despacito Justin Bieber Lyrics
Mistress Elizabeth Nyc
Case Funeral Home Obituaries
Is Arnold Swansinger Married
Wayne State Academica Login
Smite Builds Season 9
Go Nutrients Intestinal Edge Reviews
Caesars Rewards Loyalty Program Review [Previously Total Rewards]
Mytmoclaim Tracking
What Does the Death Card Mean in Tarot?
Spongebob Meme Pic
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Sen. Emmett Berge

Last Updated:

Views: 6345

Rating: 5 / 5 (80 voted)

Reviews: 95% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Sen. Emmett Berge

Birthday: 1993-06-17

Address: 787 Elvis Divide, Port Brice, OH 24507-6802

Phone: +9779049645255

Job: Senior Healthcare Specialist

Hobby: Cycling, Model building, Kitesurfing, Origami, Lapidary, Dance, Basketball

Introduction: My name is Sen. Emmett Berge, I am a funny, vast, charming, courageous, enthusiastic, jolly, famous person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.