Flawless (2007 film)

Flawless (2007 film)

Infobox Film | name = Flawless


caption = He had a scheme. She had a motive
director = Michael Radford
producer = Carola Ash
Jimmy de Brabant
Stephen Margolis
Albert Martinez Martin
Michael A. Pierce
Richard Pierce
Charles Salmon
Mark Williams
writer = Edward Anderson
starring = Demi Moore
Michael Caine
Joss Ackland
Jonathan Aris
Simon Day
Josef d'Bache-Kane
music = Paul Englishby
Allan Jenkins
Robert Houston
cinematography = Richard Greatrex
editing = Alex Anstey
Stephen Boucher
distributor = Magnolia Pictures
released = February 11, 2007
runtime = 108 min
language = English
imdb_id = 0780516

"Flawless" is a 2007 British crime film directed by Michael Radford, written by Edward Anderson, and starring Michael Caine and Demi Moore.

"Flawless" premiered 11 February, 2007 in Germany. The film opened in limited release in the United States on 28 March, 2008. [cite web|url=http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0780516/releaseinfo |title=Flawless (2007) - Release dates |accessdate=2008-03-29 |publisher=Internet Movie Database]

"Flawless" is an entirely fictional film. Reports that it is loosely based on actual events are false and inaccurate. [cite web|url=http://www.magpictures.com/presskit.aspx?id=d7431a57-dab1-4b49-a6b5-01f6dd07317f |title=Flawless (2008) - Press Kit |accessdate=2008-09-25 |publisher=Magnolia Pictures]

ynopsis

The film is set in the early 1960s. Mr. Hobbs, a janitor played by Michael Caine, is about to retire but does not want to leave empty-handed. He asks Laura Quinn (Demi Moore), a disgruntled executive victimized by the glass ceiling, to help him steal from the company for which they both work: the London Diamond Corporation.

The film opens with the camera focusing on women in various positions of power, from different backgrounds, most of them handling some kind of business on PDAs or cellular phone. The camera follows one woman, a writer for a newspaper who is doing a piece on "Women Who Led." As she enters a restaurant to interview a woman to be included in this piece, she is talking on her cell phone to an associate who has guaranteed her a front page spot for a story, of which the writer seems to be very proud. The woman she is meeting with is Laura Quinn, the only woman to ever have been a manager at the London Diamond Corporation during the late 50s into 1960. Quinn in a very nonchalant manner places a box on the table, and out of this box pulls a large diamond of approximately 123 carats. The writer is astounded and eyes the piece as Quinn says, "I stole it."

The movie flashed back to 1960, when Quinn was still employed as a manager at London Diamond Corporation. She is the first person to arrive at work, and is always the last to leave. Despite her having proved herself intellectually superior to her male co-workers, she is passed over for a promotion for the sixth time. She pretends to brush it off, but it is plain to see that is severely bothers her. The janitor, Mr. Hobbs, says small supportive things to her when he cleans her office at night and then proceeds on his way, obviously an admirer of her strength and resolve to accomplish more than the men at London Diamond. When the company is in danger of losing a crucial contract with the Russians, Quinn saves the company with a simple solution, but the Russians will not proceed unless the arrangements are kept secret from everyone except senior management, which excludes Quinn. Quinn is to be terminated, but Mr. Hobbs finds out and warns her. Additionally, he offers her a place in a plot against the company. A plot that will guarantee him a hearty pension and will make her departure from the company a little more satisfying: stealing enough diamonds to make them rich, but not enough so that anyone will notice they are missing.

The plan is almost ruined when the company installs cameras to monitor the hallways, but Quinn discovers a loophole and the plan proceeds. However, instead of Mr. Hobbs only filling his coffee thermos with diamonds, he steals every single diamond, almost two tons worth, and holds them for ransom. For 100 million pounds, the London Diamond Corporation will get all of its diamonds back. Quinn never agreed to this and now finds herself trapped. The company hired a private investigator to keep the matter from going public. If the world were to know that the single supplier of diamonds to six continents had lost its supply, the diamond market would crash. Mr. Finch keeps a close eye on Mr. Hobbs and Miss Quinn, but still does not have sufficient evidence against either of them. Quinn says they have to turn themselves in and perhaps avoid jail time if they give the diamonds back. Mr. Hobbs confesses that his cause is worth one thousand lives in jail, and refuses to disclose the location of the diamonds. She begins to realize this was never about his pension.

Mr. Finch tries to press Miss Quinn for more information, but she does not crack. He threatens that he has evidence against her, but she still does not reveal any information to him. When the president of the company has a heart attack over the stress of the situation, Mr. Finch is called away. Miss Quinn runs to the bathroom and cries uncontrollably. She pulls a handkerchief from her purse which held one of her earrings she had taken apart earlier in the film. The diamond from the earring falls down the drain of the sink and into the trap underneath. As she takes it apart and retrieves it, she gets an idea as to where the diamonds could be. She goes down into the sewer under the company and finds Mr. Hobbs guarding a passage. He pulls a gun on her to prevent her from finding the diamonds, but she finds the one from the beginning of the movie on the floor. Mr. Hobbs confesses that she is correct, it was never about the pension. When his wife was diagnosed with cancer, several years before the creation of the National Health Service, the doctors told him that it was totally preventable and curable. But when they sought treatment through their medical insurers, they were told it was not an emergency and the medical insurers refused to pay for it until the cancer had reached an advanced stage and was too far gone. The plot was purely revenge. The Chairman of the Board of London Diamond died of a heart attack and the head of the insurance syndicate from King's Row, who formerly headed the medical insurance company which ultimately prevented Mr. Hobbs' wife from getting the medical help she needed, was financially ruined by paying the ransom and took his own life.

Once the deadline for the ransom has passed, Mr. Hobbs leaves. Miss Quinn proceeds through the tunnel and finds the mountain of diamonds, she calls Mr. Finch. She almost decides to give up the huge diamond as well, but decides against it. As the film returns to the present, the reporter is more than intrigued by her story. Quinn states that later on, she was passed over for a promotion once again, but tendered her resignation the very next day. After she quit, she received a letter from a bank in Switzerland stating that a certain amount had been deposited into a numbered account on her behalf, 100 million pounds sterling. Mr. Hobbs had given her all of it. Quinn tells the reporter that when she received that money, that is when the real story began. She gets up and walks away leaving a manuscript with the reporter. The manuscript details how Quinn spent the rest of her life donating all of the money from the plot to different organizations from cancer research to African charities, especially in the blood diamond region. But she did confess to keeping the diamond, perhaps as a symbol of the vanity she had left. The reporter runs out of the cafe and watches Quinn walk down the street, as she looked in 1960.

Cast

* Michael Caine as Mr. Hobbs
* Demi Moore as Laura Quinn
* Lambert Wilson as Finch
* Joss Ackland as Milton Kendrick Ashtoncroft
* Constantine Gregory as Dmitriev

Critical reception

The film received generally positive to average reviews from critics. As of October 3, 2008, the review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes reported that 59% of critics gave the film positive reviews, based on 66 reviews. [cite web|url=http://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/10008754-flawless/ |title=Flawless Movie Reviews, Pictures - Rotten Tomatoes |accessdate=2008-10-03 |publisher=Rotten Tomatoes] Metacritic reported the film had an average score of 57 out of 100, based on 21 reviews. [cite web|url=http://www.metacritic.com/film/titles/flawless2007 |title=Flawless (2008): Reviews |accessdate=2008-06-15 |publisher=Metacritic]

Box office performance

The film was released 5 October, 2007 in Spain and has grossed $2.2 million there as of 6 January, 2008. [cite web|url=http://www.boxofficemojo.com/movies/?page=intl&id=flawless07.htm |title=Flawless (2008) - International Box Office Results |accessdate=2008-03-29 |publisher=Box Office Mojo]

References

External links

*imdb title|0780516|title=Flawless
*rotten-tomatoes|id=10008754-flawless|title=Flawless
*metacritic film|id=flawless2007|title=Flawless
*mojo title|id=flawless07|title=Flawless
*amg movie|id=1:410056|title=Flawless


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