Best Laid Plans review

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Well, it's unpredictable, - you've gotta give it that. By far the best thing about Best Laid Plans is how it constantly messes with your expectations, shifting between dialogue-driven indie flick, dusky old thriller and, eventually, a less moneyed take on The Game.

Nick and Lissa's overall scheme is clearly insane: Nick and Bryce go to a bar and Nick gets busy buying the drinks; glamorous 'stranger' Lissa enters and lightly hits on the easily led Bryce; the two split from Nick and go back to Bryce's surrogate place, where they have sex; Lissa cries date rape and blackmails Bryce into handing over a few of the house's valuables. Money problem solved. What could possibly go wrong? Sadly, things don't pan out quite so neatly, mainly because Bryce's response to the rape accusation is a little less passive than expected.

A stark and seedy take on a misanthropic money-making scheme as it goes increasingly haywire. A bit rough and rambling, but bonded well by Witherspoon and Nivola, and helmed with satisfying restraint by Brit Barker.

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