The Good Liar (2019)
Directed by Bill Condon
Warner Brothers, 109 minutes, R (violence, brief nudity)
✭✭✭✭
One of the small
pleasures of movie-watching is coming across a film that only works because of
its principals. The Good Liar is an acidic double-cross duet in
the very best British style. It is made so by great actors who can cover holes
in the plot, and it scarcely gets much better than Ian McKellen and Helen
Mirren.
We know from the
outset that Roy Courtnay (McKellen) is a con man. He and his partner Vincent (Downton
Abbey’s Jim Carter) run scams that separate fools from their money through
elaborate fake identity and money-transfer scenarios. In fact, we first meet
them as they are about to fleece Bryn (Mark Lewis Jones), a toffee-nosed
high-flyer with more dosh than common sense. But Roy’s favorite swindle is
draining accounts of rich widows. He even trawls dating Websites in search of
prey. That’s how he meets Betty McLeish, a retired Oxford history professor.
The first thing they learn about each other is that they both used fake names
on the site.
Roy will draw from
his usual bag of tricks to ingratiate his way in Betty’s home and life, but it
seems as if old Roy might actually be falling for Betty–and vice versa. Her
grandson Steven (Russell Tovey) tries to warn her that he not only smells a rat
but has some evidence he dug up–he’s a Ph.D. student in history–but Betty tells
him it’s none of his business. Roy is certainly spending Betty’s money, but
he’s so charming that she hardly cares. What’s the use of money if you can’t
blow it? Does Roy finally know a good thing when he sees it, or is he setting
her up for an even bigger score?
The Good Liar is a who-do-you-believe film. It’s adapted
from a Nicholas Searle novel, so there are only a couple of ways all of this
can play out. Give director Bill Condon for knowing what he had and letting
McKellen and Mirren make us believe in it. Would that he had been slightly more
demanding of Jeffrey Hatcher’s screenplay, which is over stuffed and rockets us
from place to place and jumps time periods. I haven’t read Searle, but I assume
all of the film’s detail is in the book. The film, though, is decidedly a situation
in which less would be more. There are times in which The Good Lair
feels like a feast in which the food keeps coming even though we are stuffed.
In this case, all we want the main course: McKellen and Mirren.
Luckily Condon
pulls back at the right moment and lets them go at it. McKellen and Mirren are
so skilled that they make us stop thinking about the implausibility of some of
the background detail. In essence, they force us to suspend disbelief. Each
plays a graying elder who lives each day as if each knows their current fling
might be their last. They keep us off balance because they are old, but
also because they are old pros. It’s eyes to the front when they are on
screen at the same time. What details? We just want to know what will happen
next.
It’s quite possible
that The Good Liar really isn’t that good of a movie and that the
ongoing pas de deux makes it better than it has any right being. My
advice is to allow yourself to drown in this tart battle of the sexes. It could
have easily been a stage show rather than a film, but does anything top the
irony that we the audience are double-crossed in a film about double-crossing?
Rob Weir
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