72 out of 93 people found the following comment useful :- "Winner Winner Chicken Dinner", 28 March 2008
Author:
Lechuguilla from Dallas, Texas
Slick camera work and some good performances rev up the technical
quality of this fact-based story about a 21 year old MIT student named
Ben Campbell (Jim Sturgess) who, along with his brainy Ivy League
chums, travels to Vegas to win tons of money at the blackjack tables.
Their sleazy math professor, Micky Rosa (Kevin Spacey), leads the
group. Rosa has devised an elaborate and conspiratorial card counting
scheme that consists of code words and hand gestures. With all that
preparation, the group's scheme does work ... for a while. And in the
process, the shy, cautious Ben, who only wants the money for tuition
costs, morphs into his alter ego, a person quite unlike his original
self.
The film's pace starts off leisurely, then alternates between
fast-paced Vegas casino action and periods of downtime wherein Ben and
his girlfriend, fellow conspirator Jill (Kate Bosworth), talk shop and
take in the high life. The story does have a villain, but it may not be
who you think it is.
The script's dialogue is snappy and hip, and contains minimal tech
jargon. "Variable change" is one such math term, and it has thematic
implications toward the end, as the story twists and turns in ways that
may surprise you. And "winner winner, chicken dinner" is the group's
lingo for gambling success.
Production design is realistic and lavish; this is a big budget film.
Color cinematography, by DP Russell Carpenter, is polished and slick.
There are lots of elaborate camera dissolves and close-ups. The best
parts of the film are the close-ups of the characters at the blackjack
tables. Film editing coincides with plot pacing, and ranges from slow
to super fast. Acting is all-around good. Kevin Spacey gives his usual
topnotch acting job; Sturgess and Bosworth also give fine performances.
It's not a perfect film. Background music was noisy and rather
nondescript for my taste. And I could have wished for more card
playing, and less time spent on Ben's college buddies in the first Act;
the result is that the film gets off to a slow start. Still, the script
is credible, and stays close to its book source "Bringing Down The
House" by Ben Mezrich.
Thematically relevant in today's world of greed and materialism, "21"
is a terrific film, one that has greater import than other films,
because the events in "21" really happened. And the fine performances
and polished visuals enhance the overall look and feel, to create a
film that is both engaging and entertaining.
88 out of 148 people found the following comment useful :- much better than you would expect!!, 5 February 2008
Author:
madciderhead-1 from United Kingdom
I was lucky enough to see this film for free at a special screening in
greater London as part of a market research by the film industry. even
though it was free i would have paid good money to see that film. but I
was presently surprised about how good the film was and everyone seemed
to agree that the film was really good. I thought it made the card
playing parts actually riveting even though i am not a card player
myself. i thought the acting performances were all good especially that
of Kevin Spacey's. In terms of the story. In many ways it reminded me
of all the good things that was in the BBC TV show hustle. But in a
much more real way. On the down side, you may see the ending coming and
there is a romance part of the film that feels unnecessary. However it
is a very slick film that gets away with it. I would say that it
clearly the best film in this genre of film. I enjoyed it more than
films such as Confidence and the Oceans 11 type films. I would highly
recommend it to anybody when it eventually comes out in April!! I would
have thought that they would cut down and re-edit it a bit on the basis
that it was quite long. however it kept my attention for the whole film
and that is not something that is also done during these sorts of films
48 out of 69 people found the following comment useful :- 21 Leaves out Elements of the Book, Adds New Excitement, 26 March 2008
Author:
waltboyisme102 from United States
After Reading Ben Mezrich's "Bringing Down the House", upon which this
movie is based, I was excited to the movie. I am usually let down by
movies that are based on books, but that was not the case this time.
Although there were a handful of cliché parts of the movie, all in all
it was excellently done. The visual effects were well done, and the
acting on the part of Jim Sturgess, Kevin Spacey, and Kate Bosworth,
was exemplary. Some people may criticize Spacey for his 'gusto', but I
believe his portrayal of Mickey was stellar.
The movie had suspense, a solid plot line, scattered funny scenes, and
a good ending. The people I went with, none of whom had read the book,
found it an even better movie than I did. If you like the movie enough,
I recommend reading the book for a more complete story.
38 out of 52 people found the following comment useful :- Winner Winner, Chicken Dinner, 1 April 2008
Author:
GermanDragon from United States
There are many stories about success based on hard-work and
perseverance. There have also been many stories about success based on
crime and abandonment of the law. Both of these scenarios can make for
great movies -- but when a movie like 21 comes out, it's both great AND
fresh. 21 is a movie about success based on locking in on a hole in the
system, and exploiting it.
Card counting is legal, and anyone able to do so can take the house's
edge away in a game of blackjack. That is the basic premise of 21: A
team of intelligent students at MIT structure a team to make vast
amounts of money at the blackjack table. They have everything down pat,
from the counting to the signals to alert of suspicious casino workers
(because if you can believe it, casinos don't like to lose money in
such high amounts.) The movie portrays the situation stylishly,
perfectly blending in montages and effective music when necessary. Add
in some Hollywood "embellishment" such as a particularly harsh head of
security (Laurence Fishburne), and you have the making of a good movie
on your hands.
It is disappointing that the production team felt the need to re-assign
the races of the actual MIT Team (of which the majority was Asian), but
that's more of an issue of ethics and sociology. Don't let it ruin a
perfectly good movie. Aside from this blunder, 21 is an excellent film.
40 out of 60 people found the following comment useful :- Not so much like the book or the real-life story but a terrific movie!, 27 March 2008
Author:
rhstoo from United States
I had the really cool opportunity to see an advance screening of "21"
tonight. Having read the book when it first came out, I was a bit
skeptical about whether it would translate well. I couldn't have been
more pleased. Was it the same as the book? Of course not (except for
The Green Mile, what was?) But it was action-packed, smart, fun,
well-acted, well-directed, and just plain enjoyable. Spacey, Fishburne,
and Bosworth are at the top of their games and Jim Sturgess is going to
be a star. The visuals were great, the editing sharp, and the score
right on point. I don't know whether to stay up all night re-reading
the book or hop on a plane for Las Vegas to try to win while I still
halfway remember the counting system. I enjoyed this as much as any
light fare I have seen in a long time. I love George Clooney, but "21"
is an order of magnitude better than any of the "Oceans" movies.
28 out of 38 people found the following comment useful :- Nothing new, but it's worth the watch, 3 April 2008
Author:
Kristine (kristinedrama14@msn.com) from Chicago, Illinois
21 is definitely the major film for the spring time, it has young hot
actors, including an incredible academy award winner, Kevin Spacey, and
another great actor who's head looks like it grew quite a bit bigger,
Lawarence Fishburne. So it has all the key ingredients for a good
movie, a decent plot, over all a good combination of actors, and looks
like a well put together movie. So I saw it this weekend and I have to
say that I was a little disappointed, I think this movie was more for
the teenagers, with the actors and the rating, I think it should've
been more adult. It was a typical rise and fall story with cliché'd
characters. Kevin Spacey, seriously my favorite actor, he's always a
dead on hit with every role he takes on, but he seemed to just sleep
his way through the film and didn't really care about it. He and new
and hot up-comer, Jim Sturgess were not a bad couple on screen, but
were not strong enough to hold the story into something original.
Basically we have Ben Campbell who needs $300,000 for Harvard Med.
School, he's extremely gifted with numbers, so when his professor,
Micky Rosa notices his gifts, he invites Ben with a group of his other
students to go to Vegas and play 21. But there is a way to beat the
game apparently, by counting cards. Ben promises up and down that it is
just for school, but of course when he gets so hot, he takes it way
further and ends up making a huge mistake and gets caught with some
nasty security guards you don't wanna mess with.
Now 21 has decent enough acting, the movie itself is decent, I didn't
mind at all watching it. For the most part, it's the young group of
students that keep the movie interesting and keeps your attention. My
main problems are for example about the characters Ben and Jill hooking
up, I seriously doubt that would happen for real, but for the movie,
they want these two hotties to get together at least for the teenage
audience's sake. Also supposedly the group says they have to stay on
the down low in Vegas so they don't get caught, yet they go around
Vegas buying all these new clothes, clubbing, drinking, etc. 21 is
worth the watch, but to be honest, if you're reading this, wait for the
rental, it's just a regular rise and fall story.
6/10
23 out of 29 people found the following comment useful :- Not The Movie It Could Have Been, 31 March 2008
Author:
CalifDude from United States
*** This comment may contain spoilers ***
This movie was based on a true story, and if the makers had stuck
closer to the true story it could have been a much better movie. But
no, they had to Hollywoodize it and dumb it down so that anyone with
the least knowledge of the game of blackjack and how casinos operate
will be saying "No way" to themselves all through the movie. It
actually ends up with a chase scene and characters running through the
kitchen, for God's sake.
In real life the team's success was 90% in being careful to not attract
the attention of the casinos detectors and only 10% in their scheme,
which was based on the well-known technique of card-counting to get an
edge. In the movie, the team's actions were childishly crude even to
the point of continually returning to the same casino...so the movie
makers could develop the characters of the casino bad guys. In real
life the team was careful to not win much at any one table or at any
one casino, not more than $1,000 a session, which would be well within
the amount any lucky player might win without counting. In the movie
they hit the same table for tens of thousands of dollars, which would
have set off alarms all over Nevada. Even the hand signals the team
used in the movie were childishly obvious. All this by the supposedly
brilliant MIT students and professor. No way.
The movie actually had the bad casino guys torturing card counters when
they caught them. No way. In real life a casino has the right, tested
in court, to kick anyone out and ban them from ever playing
again...they do not have to prove cheating or card-counting, they do it
under the laws of trespassing on their private property and this is
what they do. Remember, card-counters are only making what amounts to
an hourly wage, so they are not a serious threat to a casino.
Another example of the Hollywood treatment was that after showing how
brilliant Ben was at counting cards when they were recruiting him, he
was not used as the card counter, he was used as the big bettor and one
of the female team members did the counting.
an entertaining movie for someone not knowledgeable or much interested
in real life casino gambling, but dumb and dumber for those who are.
36 out of 61 people found the following comment useful :- Good, but not Great, 9 March 2008
Author:
JustCuriosity from Austin, TX
This film screened at the SXSW Film Festival in Austin, TX. It is a
reasonable well-made based-on-a-true-story film that tells the story of
a group of MIT students who attempt to make a fortune counting cards in
Vegas. The screenplay apparently plays pretty fast-and-loose with the
version told in the book. Never-the-less, the acting is excellent -
especially Jim Sturgess in the role of the lead student. Honestly, his
accent was so good that I didn't realize - until he came on stage
afterward - that he was British. He does a great job with the
mannerisms to give you a real sense of the character's evolution. Kevin
Spacey and Laurence Fishburne are solid - although Fishburne's role is
fairly small. The minor characters are not as well-developed as they
could have been. The cinematography of both Boston and Las Vegas is
quite good, especially on the big screen. It's an interesting story,
but they could have edited down a bit to make it move a little quicker.
This is a good film, but it probably could have been a lot better.
13 out of 17 people found the following comment useful :- If you loved Good Will Hunting and Ocean's 11, then give 21 a try., 4 April 2008
Author:
DarkVulcan29 (DarkVulcan29@aol.com) from United States
Take a brilliant mind and mix it with Las Vegas, and you get is an
incredible story, that had a good mix of some drama, humor, and
suspense. Jim Sturgess who was last seen in Across The Universe(2007),
and The Other Boleyn Girl(2008), really comes alive here, he looks a
cross between Jude Law and Jake Gyllenhaal. Not to mention Kevin Spacey
and Laurence Fishburne are also great. Lets not forget the ever so
lovely Kate Bosworth who really shines in her role. The story starts
with Ben Campbell(well acted by Jim Sturgess) who is a MIT student, who
has a brilliant intelligent mind when it comes to numbers. But Ben
discovers that there are problems that his brilliant mind can't solve.
When he has trouble paying for school. But his luck quickly changes,
when he is asked by college professor Mickey Rosa(Kevin Spacey), and
some other MIT students including the beautiful Jill Taylor(Kate
Bosworth) to help them count cards in Las Vegas. Although unsure about
it, he goes along with. They think that he can help them win, cause of
his brilliant mind. But what happens when the stakes get to high? It
was a great casino thriller. Please don't miss it.
19 out of 30 people found the following comment useful :- Just as predictable yet enjoyable as the game depicted, 2 April 2008
Author:
pyrocitor from Ontario, Canada
Considering the risky pleasure generally associated with gambling and
the seductive thrill of watching a heist or scam unfold, it should come
as no surprise that 21, a film which combines the two aforementioned
premises should excel at being enjoyable. And while the film may be
very familiar ground to anyone with in any experience with Ocean's
Eleven style crime capers, and the majority of the film's plot points
verge on being almost laughably predictable, it is executed with enough
exuberant flair to make it worthwhile in the midst of its formula.
A slow start gives the necessary exposition as to how a thoroughly
ethical young MIT student (Sturgess)'s desperate need for money to
attend Harvard medical school leads him to join a team of mathematical
geniuses trained in blackjack card counting who routinely rip off Las
Vegas casinos during weekends between class. However, this opening
proves overlong, overly predictable, and largely unnecessary, dragging
far too much before plunging into the film's real fun as Sturgess and
his team are engulfed by the seductive glamour of Vegas and the thrill
of the huge monetary takes. Some judicious editing, clearing away such
unnecessary subplots (such as a robotics competition with Sturgess'
tiresomely stereotypical nerdy friends) could have resulted in a far
more streamlined and faster paced film.
Some viewers may take offence to the "Hollywoodizing" of the MIT team,
with team members of different ethnicity largely shoved to the
background in favour of the typically gorgeous Caucasian leads, a
disconcertingly common practice in modern day cinema. However, the
flashy MTV style cinematography and editing ably capture the engrossing
spectacle of Vegas, and once the film gets going, it would be difficult
to deny the sheer enjoyment of being swept up in the heady rush of
quick wealth and all of its hedonistic trappings.
The film's quality cast add credulity to the frequently underwritten
characters they portray. Jim Sturgess once again impresses as the
ethical math prodigy slowly corrupted by a world of superficial
glamour, his endearing charm putting an intriguing enough take on the
"troubled but well meaning hero" archetype. As one might expect, Kevin
Spacey effortlessly steals the show as the charismatic but ruthless
professor managing the MIT card counting team, and Spacey's easygoing
yet commanding presence is a profound boost to the film. Kate Bosworth
contributes a typically flat performance, but given her token
'inevitable love interest' role, she fails to detract much from the
film's overall quality. Lawrence Fishburne adds class, much needed
dramatic weight and moments of grim humour to his antagonistic burly
head of casino security, gradually catching on to the MIT team's
scamming.
While the age old adage of 'style over substance' certainly holds true
here, 21 may essentially epitomize the modern Hollywood crime caper
film, but the formula hasn't quite run dry enough to overly detract
from the enjoyment factor. The film's snappy visuals and strong casting
are mostly enough to make up for a largely uninspired and frequently
weak script. However, fans of similar works will not be disappointed,
and for those willing to forgive the film's frequent delving into the
wells of convention and accept entertainment over profundity, 21 should
prove an ideal watch.
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21 (2008)
72 out of 93 people found the following comment useful :-

"Winner Winner Chicken Dinner", 28 March 2008
Author: Lechuguilla from Dallas, Texas
Slick camera work and some good performances rev up the technical quality of this fact-based story about a 21 year old MIT student named Ben Campbell (Jim Sturgess) who, along with his brainy Ivy League chums, travels to Vegas to win tons of money at the blackjack tables. Their sleazy math professor, Micky Rosa (Kevin Spacey), leads the group. Rosa has devised an elaborate and conspiratorial card counting scheme that consists of code words and hand gestures. With all that preparation, the group's scheme does work ... for a while. And in the process, the shy, cautious Ben, who only wants the money for tuition costs, morphs into his alter ego, a person quite unlike his original self.
The film's pace starts off leisurely, then alternates between fast-paced Vegas casino action and periods of downtime wherein Ben and his girlfriend, fellow conspirator Jill (Kate Bosworth), talk shop and take in the high life. The story does have a villain, but it may not be who you think it is.
The script's dialogue is snappy and hip, and contains minimal tech jargon. "Variable change" is one such math term, and it has thematic implications toward the end, as the story twists and turns in ways that may surprise you. And "winner winner, chicken dinner" is the group's lingo for gambling success.
Production design is realistic and lavish; this is a big budget film. Color cinematography, by DP Russell Carpenter, is polished and slick. There are lots of elaborate camera dissolves and close-ups. The best parts of the film are the close-ups of the characters at the blackjack tables. Film editing coincides with plot pacing, and ranges from slow to super fast. Acting is all-around good. Kevin Spacey gives his usual topnotch acting job; Sturgess and Bosworth also give fine performances.
It's not a perfect film. Background music was noisy and rather nondescript for my taste. And I could have wished for more card playing, and less time spent on Ben's college buddies in the first Act; the result is that the film gets off to a slow start. Still, the script is credible, and stays close to its book source "Bringing Down The House" by Ben Mezrich.
Thematically relevant in today's world of greed and materialism, "21" is a terrific film, one that has greater import than other films, because the events in "21" really happened. And the fine performances and polished visuals enhance the overall look and feel, to create a film that is both engaging and entertaining.
88 out of 148 people found the following comment useful :-

much better than you would expect!!, 5 February 2008
Author: madciderhead-1 from United Kingdom
I was lucky enough to see this film for free at a special screening in greater London as part of a market research by the film industry. even though it was free i would have paid good money to see that film. but I was presently surprised about how good the film was and everyone seemed to agree that the film was really good. I thought it made the card playing parts actually riveting even though i am not a card player myself. i thought the acting performances were all good especially that of Kevin Spacey's. In terms of the story. In many ways it reminded me of all the good things that was in the BBC TV show hustle. But in a much more real way. On the down side, you may see the ending coming and there is a romance part of the film that feels unnecessary. However it is a very slick film that gets away with it. I would say that it clearly the best film in this genre of film. I enjoyed it more than films such as Confidence and the Oceans 11 type films. I would highly recommend it to anybody when it eventually comes out in April!! I would have thought that they would cut down and re-edit it a bit on the basis that it was quite long. however it kept my attention for the whole film and that is not something that is also done during these sorts of films
48 out of 69 people found the following comment useful :-

21 Leaves out Elements of the Book, Adds New Excitement, 26 March 2008
Author: waltboyisme102 from United States
After Reading Ben Mezrich's "Bringing Down the House", upon which this movie is based, I was excited to the movie. I am usually let down by movies that are based on books, but that was not the case this time.
Although there were a handful of cliché parts of the movie, all in all it was excellently done. The visual effects were well done, and the acting on the part of Jim Sturgess, Kevin Spacey, and Kate Bosworth, was exemplary. Some people may criticize Spacey for his 'gusto', but I believe his portrayal of Mickey was stellar.
The movie had suspense, a solid plot line, scattered funny scenes, and a good ending. The people I went with, none of whom had read the book, found it an even better movie than I did. If you like the movie enough, I recommend reading the book for a more complete story.
38 out of 52 people found the following comment useful :-

Winner Winner, Chicken Dinner, 1 April 2008
Author: GermanDragon from United States
There are many stories about success based on hard-work and perseverance. There have also been many stories about success based on crime and abandonment of the law. Both of these scenarios can make for great movies -- but when a movie like 21 comes out, it's both great AND fresh. 21 is a movie about success based on locking in on a hole in the system, and exploiting it.
Card counting is legal, and anyone able to do so can take the house's edge away in a game of blackjack. That is the basic premise of 21: A team of intelligent students at MIT structure a team to make vast amounts of money at the blackjack table. They have everything down pat, from the counting to the signals to alert of suspicious casino workers (because if you can believe it, casinos don't like to lose money in such high amounts.) The movie portrays the situation stylishly, perfectly blending in montages and effective music when necessary. Add in some Hollywood "embellishment" such as a particularly harsh head of security (Laurence Fishburne), and you have the making of a good movie on your hands.
It is disappointing that the production team felt the need to re-assign the races of the actual MIT Team (of which the majority was Asian), but that's more of an issue of ethics and sociology. Don't let it ruin a perfectly good movie. Aside from this blunder, 21 is an excellent film.
40 out of 60 people found the following comment useful :-

Not so much like the book or the real-life story but a terrific movie!, 27 March 2008
Author: rhstoo from United States
I had the really cool opportunity to see an advance screening of "21" tonight. Having read the book when it first came out, I was a bit skeptical about whether it would translate well. I couldn't have been more pleased. Was it the same as the book? Of course not (except for The Green Mile, what was?) But it was action-packed, smart, fun, well-acted, well-directed, and just plain enjoyable. Spacey, Fishburne, and Bosworth are at the top of their games and Jim Sturgess is going to be a star. The visuals were great, the editing sharp, and the score right on point. I don't know whether to stay up all night re-reading the book or hop on a plane for Las Vegas to try to win while I still halfway remember the counting system. I enjoyed this as much as any light fare I have seen in a long time. I love George Clooney, but "21" is an order of magnitude better than any of the "Oceans" movies.
28 out of 38 people found the following comment useful :-

Nothing new, but it's worth the watch, 3 April 2008
Author: Kristine (kristinedrama14@msn.com) from Chicago, Illinois
21 is definitely the major film for the spring time, it has young hot actors, including an incredible academy award winner, Kevin Spacey, and another great actor who's head looks like it grew quite a bit bigger, Lawarence Fishburne. So it has all the key ingredients for a good movie, a decent plot, over all a good combination of actors, and looks like a well put together movie. So I saw it this weekend and I have to say that I was a little disappointed, I think this movie was more for the teenagers, with the actors and the rating, I think it should've been more adult. It was a typical rise and fall story with cliché'd characters. Kevin Spacey, seriously my favorite actor, he's always a dead on hit with every role he takes on, but he seemed to just sleep his way through the film and didn't really care about it. He and new and hot up-comer, Jim Sturgess were not a bad couple on screen, but were not strong enough to hold the story into something original.
Basically we have Ben Campbell who needs $300,000 for Harvard Med. School, he's extremely gifted with numbers, so when his professor, Micky Rosa notices his gifts, he invites Ben with a group of his other students to go to Vegas and play 21. But there is a way to beat the game apparently, by counting cards. Ben promises up and down that it is just for school, but of course when he gets so hot, he takes it way further and ends up making a huge mistake and gets caught with some nasty security guards you don't wanna mess with.
Now 21 has decent enough acting, the movie itself is decent, I didn't mind at all watching it. For the most part, it's the young group of students that keep the movie interesting and keeps your attention. My main problems are for example about the characters Ben and Jill hooking up, I seriously doubt that would happen for real, but for the movie, they want these two hotties to get together at least for the teenage audience's sake. Also supposedly the group says they have to stay on the down low in Vegas so they don't get caught, yet they go around Vegas buying all these new clothes, clubbing, drinking, etc. 21 is worth the watch, but to be honest, if you're reading this, wait for the rental, it's just a regular rise and fall story.
6/10
23 out of 29 people found the following comment useful :-

Not The Movie It Could Have Been, 31 March 2008
Author: CalifDude from United States
*** This comment may contain spoilers ***
This movie was based on a true story, and if the makers had stuck closer to the true story it could have been a much better movie. But no, they had to Hollywoodize it and dumb it down so that anyone with the least knowledge of the game of blackjack and how casinos operate will be saying "No way" to themselves all through the movie. It actually ends up with a chase scene and characters running through the kitchen, for God's sake.
In real life the team's success was 90% in being careful to not attract the attention of the casinos detectors and only 10% in their scheme, which was based on the well-known technique of card-counting to get an edge. In the movie, the team's actions were childishly crude even to the point of continually returning to the same casino...so the movie makers could develop the characters of the casino bad guys. In real life the team was careful to not win much at any one table or at any one casino, not more than $1,000 a session, which would be well within the amount any lucky player might win without counting. In the movie they hit the same table for tens of thousands of dollars, which would have set off alarms all over Nevada. Even the hand signals the team used in the movie were childishly obvious. All this by the supposedly brilliant MIT students and professor. No way.
The movie actually had the bad casino guys torturing card counters when they caught them. No way. In real life a casino has the right, tested in court, to kick anyone out and ban them from ever playing again...they do not have to prove cheating or card-counting, they do it under the laws of trespassing on their private property and this is what they do. Remember, card-counters are only making what amounts to an hourly wage, so they are not a serious threat to a casino.
Another example of the Hollywood treatment was that after showing how brilliant Ben was at counting cards when they were recruiting him, he was not used as the card counter, he was used as the big bettor and one of the female team members did the counting.
an entertaining movie for someone not knowledgeable or much interested in real life casino gambling, but dumb and dumber for those who are.
36 out of 61 people found the following comment useful :-

Good, but not Great, 9 March 2008
Author: JustCuriosity from Austin, TX
This film screened at the SXSW Film Festival in Austin, TX. It is a reasonable well-made based-on-a-true-story film that tells the story of a group of MIT students who attempt to make a fortune counting cards in Vegas. The screenplay apparently plays pretty fast-and-loose with the version told in the book. Never-the-less, the acting is excellent - especially Jim Sturgess in the role of the lead student. Honestly, his accent was so good that I didn't realize - until he came on stage afterward - that he was British. He does a great job with the mannerisms to give you a real sense of the character's evolution. Kevin Spacey and Laurence Fishburne are solid - although Fishburne's role is fairly small. The minor characters are not as well-developed as they could have been. The cinematography of both Boston and Las Vegas is quite good, especially on the big screen. It's an interesting story, but they could have edited down a bit to make it move a little quicker. This is a good film, but it probably could have been a lot better.
13 out of 17 people found the following comment useful :-

If you loved Good Will Hunting and Ocean's 11, then give 21 a try., 4 April 2008
Author: DarkVulcan29 (DarkVulcan29@aol.com) from United States
Take a brilliant mind and mix it with Las Vegas, and you get is an incredible story, that had a good mix of some drama, humor, and suspense. Jim Sturgess who was last seen in Across The Universe(2007), and The Other Boleyn Girl(2008), really comes alive here, he looks a cross between Jude Law and Jake Gyllenhaal. Not to mention Kevin Spacey and Laurence Fishburne are also great. Lets not forget the ever so lovely Kate Bosworth who really shines in her role. The story starts with Ben Campbell(well acted by Jim Sturgess) who is a MIT student, who has a brilliant intelligent mind when it comes to numbers. But Ben discovers that there are problems that his brilliant mind can't solve. When he has trouble paying for school. But his luck quickly changes, when he is asked by college professor Mickey Rosa(Kevin Spacey), and some other MIT students including the beautiful Jill Taylor(Kate Bosworth) to help them count cards in Las Vegas. Although unsure about it, he goes along with. They think that he can help them win, cause of his brilliant mind. But what happens when the stakes get to high? It was a great casino thriller. Please don't miss it.
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Just as predictable yet enjoyable as the game depicted, 2 April 2008
Author: pyrocitor from Ontario, Canada
Considering the risky pleasure generally associated with gambling and the seductive thrill of watching a heist or scam unfold, it should come as no surprise that 21, a film which combines the two aforementioned premises should excel at being enjoyable. And while the film may be very familiar ground to anyone with in any experience with Ocean's Eleven style crime capers, and the majority of the film's plot points verge on being almost laughably predictable, it is executed with enough exuberant flair to make it worthwhile in the midst of its formula.
A slow start gives the necessary exposition as to how a thoroughly ethical young MIT student (Sturgess)'s desperate need for money to attend Harvard medical school leads him to join a team of mathematical geniuses trained in blackjack card counting who routinely rip off Las Vegas casinos during weekends between class. However, this opening proves overlong, overly predictable, and largely unnecessary, dragging far too much before plunging into the film's real fun as Sturgess and his team are engulfed by the seductive glamour of Vegas and the thrill of the huge monetary takes. Some judicious editing, clearing away such unnecessary subplots (such as a robotics competition with Sturgess' tiresomely stereotypical nerdy friends) could have resulted in a far more streamlined and faster paced film.
Some viewers may take offence to the "Hollywoodizing" of the MIT team, with team members of different ethnicity largely shoved to the background in favour of the typically gorgeous Caucasian leads, a disconcertingly common practice in modern day cinema. However, the flashy MTV style cinematography and editing ably capture the engrossing spectacle of Vegas, and once the film gets going, it would be difficult to deny the sheer enjoyment of being swept up in the heady rush of quick wealth and all of its hedonistic trappings.
The film's quality cast add credulity to the frequently underwritten characters they portray. Jim Sturgess once again impresses as the ethical math prodigy slowly corrupted by a world of superficial glamour, his endearing charm putting an intriguing enough take on the "troubled but well meaning hero" archetype. As one might expect, Kevin Spacey effortlessly steals the show as the charismatic but ruthless professor managing the MIT card counting team, and Spacey's easygoing yet commanding presence is a profound boost to the film. Kate Bosworth contributes a typically flat performance, but given her token 'inevitable love interest' role, she fails to detract much from the film's overall quality. Lawrence Fishburne adds class, much needed dramatic weight and moments of grim humour to his antagonistic burly head of casino security, gradually catching on to the MIT team's scamming.
While the age old adage of 'style over substance' certainly holds true here, 21 may essentially epitomize the modern Hollywood crime caper film, but the formula hasn't quite run dry enough to overly detract from the enjoyment factor. The film's snappy visuals and strong casting are mostly enough to make up for a largely uninspired and frequently weak script. However, fans of similar works will not be disappointed, and for those willing to forgive the film's frequent delving into the wells of convention and accept entertainment over profundity, 21 should prove an ideal watch.
-7/10
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