Asides

Something to watch tonight: Wednesday 21 August

By August 21, 2024No Comments

The Color of Money (Scorsese, 1986)

Baby-faced Tom Cruise and (Academy Award winner) Paul Newman in Martin Scorsese's 1986 drama The Color of Money

Apologies to Cruise-o-phobes* for bring­ing him into the timeline twice in less than five days, but this film is Baby-Cruise and, after watch­ing it this week­end, I was tickled at the idea that the toy sales­man hust­ler Vincent in The Color of Money would even­tu­ally become the ice-cold hit­man Vincent in Collateral twenty years later.

Like dozens of my Blu-rays, this one was burn­ing a hole in my expens­ive shelving. It has been sit­ting around for at least ten years since I bought it – prob­ably in a sale some­where – and it had landed near the top of my to-watch list thanks to the HBO doc­u­ment­ary about Paul Newman and Joanne Woodward, The Last Movie Stars which came out in 2022.

Newman won an Academy Award for the reprise of his role as “Fast Eddie” Felson from The Hustler in 1961. He per­son­ally chose Scorsese as dir­ect­or and then went along as the film changed from an ori­gin­al vis­ion reunit­ing him and Jackie Gleason, to some­thing that res­on­ated much more for an act­or who was look­ing ahead to his own final act. How much more did he have in the tank?

As it turned out, quite a lot.

Scorsese has always con­sidered this one of his non-personal films. He was in movie jail after blow­ing budgets on Raging Bull, The King of Comedy and After Hours, and proved on this gig that he could be a good sol­dier – under budget and ahead of schedule.

But it is one of his best. Lean, mean storytelling and Thelma Schoonmaker’s edit­ing (of the pool sequences espe­cially) is abso­lutely out­stand­ing. The script from Richard Price (Clockers) is superb, Robbie Robertson’s score and music selec­tion is won­der­fully atmo­spher­ic, and – of course – Newman is wonderful.

Turns out the 2012 ‘25th Anniversary’ Blu-ray is one of the most derided by col­lect­ors. It does indeed look like crap and the film is well over­due for a decent res­tor­a­tion. In case, like me, you thought the ver­sion stream­ing on Disney+ might look bet­ter, I can con­firm that it is the same grubby and gloomy transfer.

The film does man­age to sur­vive this, how­ever, and is well worth a look, not least for the sup­port­ing cast includ­ing John Turturro, Helen Shaver, Bill Cobbs, Forest Whitaker and a cameo from Iggy Pop as one of Cruise’s hust­ler victims.

Walking past while I watch­ing this the oth­er night, the editor-in-chief asked “Whatever happened to Mary Elizabeth Mastrantonio?” She has been the first choice on so many film of the 80s and 90s –The Abyss, The January Man, Robin Hood: Prince of Thieves. I had to look her up but she has been work­ing con­sist­ently in tele­vi­sion for don­keys’ years even though she only has one fea­ture cred­it since 2000’s The Perfect Storm.

*In The Spinoff, Caroline Shepherd writes about watch­ing all 46 Cruise fea­ture films in one year and man­ages to do so in the least insight­ful way imaginable.


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Where to watch The Color of Money

The con­tent below was ori­gin­ally paywalled.

Aotearoa & Australia: Streaming on Disney+

Canada: Streaming on Disney+ and HollywoodSuite

Ireland & UK: Digital rental

USA: Streaming on Fubo and Paramount+