15 Minutes
In this age of Survivor, Andy Warhol's statement that everyone
will be famous for 15 minutes shows no signs of outliving its own minutes of
fame. Now movies are getting into the act. In the aptly titled 15
Minutes, two Slavic gangsters, wild and crazy types not much removed from
the classic SNL bit, kill a double-crossing ex-partner and his wife and
torch their apartment. Enter celebrity NYPD inspector Eddie Flemming (played
with cynical, boozy aplomb by Robert De Niro). He's gotten his picture in
People magazine, but he actually is a good cop, even though he steps on
the toes of hotshot arson investigator Jordy Warsaw (a whiny Edward Burns). The
two form a tense and unlikely team to hunt down the killers, who have decided
to beat the rap by making a video of their crimes, pleading insanity, and
becoming millionaire celebrities.
So much for plausibility and trenchant cultural insight. Some of the satire has
punch, especially when Kelsey Grammer as the sleazy host of a tabloid TV show
is the target. It's all trashy, hypocritical fun until director John Herzfeld
unleashes a bold but gimmicky plot twist near the end that reveals the film's
essential phoniness. The biggest problem with 15 Minutes is that it's 15
minutes too long. At the Apple Valley, Flagship, Harbour Mall, Holiday,
Hoyts Providence 16, Showcase, Swansea, and Tri-Boro cinemas.
-- Peter Keough
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