ALL THE MONEY IN THE WORLD (2017)
Directed by Ridley
Scott
TriStar Pictures, 133
minutes, R (violence)
★★★★
If you are watching All
the Money in the World and suspect what you're seeing isn't entirely accurate,
you're right. But it's probably not the parts you think. Its central absurd
core is absolutely true; that is, in 1973, sixteen-year-old John Paul Getty III
was abducted in Rome by Calabrian mobsters and held for $17 million in ransom.
His grandfather, though his favorite grandchild's life was in peril and he was the
richest man in the world at the time, refused to pay it—partly because he
feared it would spark further kidnappings and partly because he despised
terrorists, but mostly because he was such a tightwad he'd squeeze a twenty till
Lincoln screamed. Young "Paul" was not released until five months
later, after his captors cut off an ear to prove they were prepared to kill
their captive, and not until the price dropped to $3 million. Even then, Getty
ponied up just $2.2 million, as that was the maximum tax deduction he could
claim. He loaned his son John Paul, Jr. the remaining $800,000 at 4% interest!
All the Money is the
World is a study in megalomania. It's no Citizen Kane, but it's better than most of the early reviews
purport. It took quite a lot of backpedaling to get it out in time for the
awards season. The movie was originally finished in the summer, but with Kevin
Spacey cast as the elder Getty. Gay sexual harassment charges reduced Spacey
from star to box office poison, which prompted director Ridley Scott to slice
all of Spacey's scenes and reshoot them in a single month with Christopher
Plummer as Getty (1892-1976). This hasn't boosted the early box office, but
it's hard to imagine anyone doing a better job than Plummer. It would be
shocking were he not to gain a Best Supporting Actor Oscar nomination. His
Getty is filtered through a misanthropic acid vial. At one point in the film,
the five-times married/five times divorced Getty calmly explains that he
prefers things to people as material possessions seldom disappoint. At the time
of the kidnapping, Getty Sr. had pretty much walled himself into a
high-security estate in England where he could monitor his oil fortune and
revel over his precious art collection (which posthumously became California's
Getty Museum). We watch Plummer disdainfully dismiss those seeking to help his
grandson, as he reads the stock ticker.
Charlie Plummer—no relation to Christopher—plays J. P. Getty
III (1956-2011). He's fine in the role, though he doesn't need to do much more
than be clueless in the early part of the film and defenseless the rest of the
way through. He does, however, give us glimpses of why JP III was expelled from
his English boarding school, why he had a reputation for being a reckless brat
posing as a hippie, and why his post-release life was tragically foolish.
Mostly, though, the film is a vehicle for Michelle Williams as Paul's mother
Gail, and her efforts to convince his grandmother to ransom Paul. I generally
like Williams as an actress, though I'm not sure why she has been so highly
praised for this role. She plays frustration and exasperation very well, but
she never really convinced me that she had much maternal anguish. There is
considerably more chemistry between Williams and Mark Wahlberg, who plays
Fletcher Chase, an ex-CIA man, Getty security chief, and go-between. Chase is
not a Hollywood invention; he really was a key liaison between the kidnappers,
Gail, law enforcement, and Getty Sr.
Some of the other details are more for effect than accuracy.
Paul's father, John Paul Getty (Andrew Buchan), Junior (1932-2003), is
portrayed as a hopeless drug addict. This is uncertain at the time. He and Gail
divorced in 1964, nine years before his son was abducted. His second wife had
died in 1971, he was a depressed, and perhaps using drugs in 1973, but he played
as large a role in trying to secure his son's release as his ex-wife and simply
did not have a fortune at the time. Scott elides time. Junior later fell prey
to severe addiction, but not until after his son's release. In like fashion,
the elder Getty died in 1976, not as implied in the film, shortly after Paul's
rescue. Nor did Paul's final despite flight from the 'Ndangheta crime syndicate
actually occur; it was added for dramatic tension.
The liberties taken with fact scarcely matter; after all,
Charles Foster Kane wasn't literally William Randolph Hearst either. Ridley Scott
really wants us to contemplate age-old questions such as when is enough,
enough? Does absolute power corrupt absolutely? Do the ultra rich lack
morality? Are ego and self-aggrandizement the engines that drive the rich man's
train? I don't know if Scott wants us parallel J.P. Getty Sr. and Donald Trump,
but it's rather hard not to do so. Scott is always a masterful storyteller with
an interesting movie palette and this taut drama is no exception. I doubt this
film will go down as a great Ridley Scott film, but it's good enough, which is
more than can be said about the Getty clan.
Rob Weir
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