Blood&Wine review

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Watching Jack Nicholson, Michael Caine and Stephen Dorff circling each other like hungry sharks, you get a vague feeling of déjà vû. Blood&Wine, which is expertly handled by director Bob Rafelson, looks suspiciously like a '90s remake of some old crime noir. But it's not. It's just that this star-studded robbery movie feels old. Its story is, as they say, timeless: a tale of greed, misfortune and backstabbing that relies on the interplay of the characters first, the plot second and the setting a distant and rather unimportant third.

Like all the best heist films, Blood&Wine is built on the simple notion that nothing goes to plan. When Gates' wife Suzanne catches him packing for New York - his extra ticket for the sultry "Oh look, my clothes have fallen off" Gabriella rather than his spouse, - she's understandably peeved, whacking hubby over the head with a golf club. Grabbing the suitcase, she and son Jason (Dorff) run off... unaware that Big Jack's valuable, illegal acquisition - of a diamond necklace is stashed in the luggage's lining.

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