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Elegante y cortés, nuestro anónimo héroe (Daniel Craig) es un traficante respetado, todo un profesional. Trabajando con la cocaína y con el éxtasis con la mayor naturalidad, como si de cualquier otro material se tratase, ha conseguido hacerse con una buena fortuna. Habiendo tomado la decisión de retirarse, su objetivo es salir del mundo del crimen, la droga y la violencia, y llevar una vida sencilla. Pero antes de que esto suceda, el jefe del crimen Jimmy Price (Kenneth Cranham) quiere que le haga dos favores. El primero es que debe encontrar a la hija desaparecida de un poderoso criminal, Eddie Temple (Michael Gambon). En segundo lugar, debe negociar la venta de un importante envío de éxtasis con Duke (Jamie Foreman). Lo que debería ser simple rutina acaba complicándose y nada sale según el plan. En vez de eso, la mentira y las alianzas ocultas se convierten en el orden del día.
Avis de la communauté (11)
I don't know why people on here think the script was a mess or hard to follow. The Layer Cake will not go down as an all-time classic, but it was pretty good - besides, "classics" are only good in your memory banks. Once you revisit them years later 9/10 they are no longer the classic you thought it was. Lots of twists throughout the movie and the finale - I didn't see that coming when it arrived! 8.5/10
The film that got Daniel Craig cast as James Bond.
For a movie that looked and started promising it quickly became a convoluted storyline with too many names and things going on at once to follow and eventually even care about.
_Layer Cake_ is a stylish British crime drama with a keen eye for cinematography. Daniel Craig's performance as a savvy amateur crook already gets mentioned frequently, but I'd like to highlight Matthew Vaughn's slick directing, crafting some of the slickest transitions and interesting camera work depicting deaths and pivotal moments in the film. You can almost glimpse the blueprint of his future projects like _First Class_ and _Kingsmen_. The script might not break new grounds; it offers the expected crime film twists and turns, but enough to keep you glued to your seat and enjoying the ride--as long as you get your eyes fixated on the screen and not on your phone like most Netflix goers nowadays. The film veers into a Fargo-esque vibe as events spiral out of control as the characters straddling through the chaos. As with Fargo, there is no real focus on making them "interesting" and just a depiction of how they navigate through the haywire they got themselves into. In the end, everything is artfully resolved.
Absolutely tremendous! I haven't got much (edit: five paragraphs later...) to say about 'Layer Cake', but that's only because it's simply one of those movies that is undeniably outstanding, to the point it's plain and simple that it requires little explanation. I had heard this bandied about down the years as being arguably Daniel Craig's best, though that is all that I knew about it. What a film! I knew it was one of my favourites because I got goosebumps as soon as the credits rolled as I processed it and that only happens for the movies I adore. Going back to Craig, that man is superb in this, definitely one of the best performances of his that I've seen - up there with 'Knives Out'. That's also saying something, given his other stellar stint as that spy geezer. Michael Gambon is, though, the one I enjoyed most. I'm already a big fan of his, though here he is also a notch above; his voice is up is just so iconic. Away from Craig & Gambon, I lost track of all the known faces that appeared insert Rick Dalton meme here. Crazy to see Tom Hardy in this and that he's used the least of his whole crew! I also didn't even recognise Sally Hawkins, despite seeing her name in the opening credits! Simply put: It's brilliantly entertaining! I loved every second, quite literally. It gave me exactly what I wanted from a British gangster flick, so many from this subgenre fail to correctly tow the line between the crime and comedic gangster elements so it can either be cringe or boring, or even both. This, however, utterly nailed it for me. It also holds a pleasing score, you give me that, an entertaining plot and a fantastic cast then, I'm afraid, I am gonna love your movie. It does surpass (the great) 'Stardust' as my standout Matthew Vaughn flick.