Tuesday, March 5, 2024

Snake Eyes (1998) - Review

Snake Eyes stars Nicolas Cage as corrupt policeman Rick Santoro, who is roped into an unravelling criminal conspiracy after the murder of the United States Defense Secretary at a heavyweight boxing fight. Gary Sinise plays Kevin Dunne, a U.S. Navy Commander who is in charge of the security detail for the Secretary of Defence and a childhood friend of Santoro. Thinking that determining the circumstances surrounding the assassination of the Secretary will raise his profile, Santoro starts to realize that the fight, the death of the Secretary, and the appearance of his friend are all connected.

Snake Eyes fits into Cage's filmography in a time where he was receiving critical success and after what I consider to be his trilogy of action stardom (The Rock, Con Air, Face/Off), and is often lost or overshadowed by opinions of those movies. Cage is able to slot into the role of Santoro effortlessly, and is the kind of performance one would expect to see from him in an average movie. Snake Eyes benefits, however, from Cage dialing back his usual overflow of unpredictability once the assassination attempt occurs. Santoro is initially portrayed as a corrupt officer whose ability to do his job is in question, but once he takes charge of the investigation with Commander Dunne, he is shown to be an effective investigator. This change in the tone that the character undergoes is something that I enjoy Cage using; it can be almost a cheap shorthand to use Nic Cage as the "goofy, zany, unhinged" character because of such roles as Vampire's Kiss or The Wicker Man have popularized. Snake Eyes allows Cage to partake in this insanity for contextually appropriate levity, while being able to flip a switch and act in a different mode altogether.

The plot for Snake Eyes is fairly straightforward - the corrupt cop whose gambling habits unwittingly gets him swept up into a criminal conspiracy seems to be a cliche and is usually quite tiring. The twist that Gary Sinise's Commander Dunne is the mastermind behind the entire events of the movie occurring nearly half-way through the movie (for the viewers) makes for an entertaining, multi-layered cat-and-mouse game. The betrayal that Santoro feels is earned once he realizes that he was simply meant to be used as an unwitting tool for his longtime friend's scheme - we have known for a while that Dunne is the true villain of the story, so we know that it is only a matter of time before Santoro catches up with the realization. I found it quite amusing that most of his progress on the murder investigation coincided with his personal investigation as to why the boxing fight was thrown, costing Santoro thousands of dollars in loss.

I entered this viewing of Snake Eyes with an overall positive opinion, and left it with the same level of enthusiasm. As stated above, Snake Eyes plays with familiar story tropes but with amusing and often entertaining results. Outside of strong performances from Cage and Sinise, Carla Gugino and Stan Shaw also brought complicated characters to the screen in supporting roles. I think the best way to describe Snake Eyes is that it is the equivalent of comfort food - you know deep down that the food is bad for you, but it provides a sense of comfort or normalcy to your life despite your present circumstances.

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