Cargando...
Cargando...



Los diamantes son eternos...sus dueños no
Franky es una ladrón de diamantes que tiene que entregar una enorme pieza a su jefe Avi, pero en el camino es tentado por Boris para apostar en un combate ilegal de boxeo. En realidad, es una trampa para atracarle por lo que, cuando Avi se entera, contrata a Tony para encontrar a Franky y el diamante. Pronto se descubre el triste destino de Franky, y la caza y captura de la gema desaparecida lleva a todo el mundo a un juego de locos que corre el riesgo de descontrolarse, donde el engaño, el chantaje y el fraude se mezclan de forma sangrienta con perros, diamantes, boxeadores y gran variedad de armas en una caótica merienda de negros.
Avis de la communauté (10)
I almost thought this was a great movie. The characters are unique, fun and intriguing. The story is different from the usual. The film-editing is eye-catching. I was almost laughing, almost excited, almost drawn into the story, but for some unexplainable reason it just didn't do it for me. I kept waiting for the film to turn it up just one notch, to suck me in, but it didn't happen. That just sucks, because I really liked the characters, the boxing/diamond setting and the squeaking dog...
I don't find is as good as I once did but I still enjoy it. I don't enjoy some of the dialogue as I once did. The characters are huge cartoon stereotypes and the farcial plot moves along fast. The pace tricks you into thinking the plot is more complex than it is. The movie has moments of forcing style down your neck but I didn't mind it. In time it's become unique.
Certain films innately embody the spirit and flair of a particular point in time. In _Snatch_’s case, the essence of the late ’90s is laced into its DNA. From the groovy, thumping soundtrack to the flashy, in-your-face visual motifs; the grimy criminal subject matter to the extreme sports-inspired camerawork, it boasts an impressive collection of very specific, time-sensitive pop culture calling cards. Watching this now, almost a quarter-century later, is like cracking open a time capsule. Imagine _Pulp Fiction_ as produced by MTV. Motivated the ultimate MacGuffin, a diamond the size of a cueball, the plot follows a number of desperate London criminals as they conspire and connive to pull one over on their rivals and reap the riches. We’ve got high-profile mob bosses and blue collar boxing promoters, ex-KGB agents and common street thugs, each armed with their own peculiar bag of quirks and colorful idiosyncrasies. Though most parties are unaware of the others, their paths constantly interlace and overlap, and the whole mess eventually falls together in a great dogpile during the final act’s frantic, crowded, hilarious payoff sequence. _Snatch_ is an essentially dark comedy, stuffed with all manner of eccentric lowlifes, surprise twists and grim, ironic punchlines. It is a Guy Ritchie / Matthew Vaughn joint, after all, and following hot on the heels of _Lock, Stock and Two Smoking Barrels_, their successful debut, it punches a number of the same buttons. Reuses many actors, too, with Jason Statham and Vinnie Jones the most recognizable of the bunch. It’s newcomer Brad Pitt who steals the show, however, in his spectacular turn as an unintelligible, tattooed, caravan-dwelling boxer. His whole community is a riot, in fact, a tight group of lawless drunkards who honor no set of rules. Their unpredictability is just the fuel this film needed to bump its fire from a small blaze into a lofty inferno. Is it dated? Sure. Is it still entertaining? Yeah, that too.
Amazing how a bunch of coincidences can result in a great and funny story. The actings are great (specially Brad Pitt). The plot reminds me a lot Pulp Fiction, but the editing has faster cuts, so the movie looks more modern and chaotic.