Uncut Gems: The BRWC Review

Uncut Gems

Uncut Gems: The BRWC Review – We saw the film at London Film Festival, so we have reposted that review.

Fresh from the success of the terrific Heaven Knows What and the wonderfully absorbing Good Time, the Safdie Brothers’ latest film is a roller-coaster of thrills from start to finish, proving themselves once again to be true masters of suspense cinema, capable of unnerving any audience. 

In Uncut Gems, Adam Sandler plays a jewellery dealer with a mountain of debts, facing a race against time for his life, in a New York-based crime thriller that carries a level of grit not seen in Hollywood for many years. It has a particularly authentic feel to it, thanks in large part to the raw and chaotic style that the Safdie Brothers have now perfected.

This is an absolute masterclass in tense, pulse-racing cinema, designed to discomfort the viewer in the best way imaginable. It’s genuinely edge-of-your-seat stuff, and the erratic nature of it all is at once unsafe, unnerving and unpredictable. 

In amongst the thrills are plenty of legitimate laughs, in what could only be considered a black comedy in the strongest possible sense. It’s certainly not for everyone, carrying with it the potential of being either your favourite film of the year or your least favourite, but those who find themselves wrapped up in it will find it impossible to forget. 

Of course, the main talking point with this film is that of the terrific central performance from Adam Sandler, who proves once again that, when given strong material, he is an extremely capable dramatic actor. Much like Punch-Drunk Love and The Meyerowitz Stories, the range in his performance is admirable, and much credit must go to the Safdie Brothers for their work with actors, as we saw with Robert Pattinson’s career-defining turn in Good Time.

Adam Sandler is a difficult man for film lovers to like. In many ways, the films he makes and the way he conducts those productions represents the very worst of Hollywood and just how shallow mainstream cinema has become, but its testament to his performance that these preconceived opinions are largely forgotten after about three minutes, with films like Grown Ups and Jack and Jill a distant memory. He is outstanding in this film, in a role that utilises both his dramatic and comedic talents, and that’s really all that matters. 

Uncut Gems is utterly relentless from start to finish; a true force of nature that is excruciating to sit through yet impossible to look away from. Its provocative style will prove no doubt to be divisive, but those who engage with it will be rewarded with one of the most high-pressure, adrenaline-fueled American films in years.

UNCUT GEMS is in select cinemas from January 10th and on Netflix from January 31st

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9 responses to “Uncut Gems: The BRWC Review”

  1. […] its best entries offering a pulsating tension that throttles forward an unpredictable narrative (Good Time and Widows are some of my recent favorites). The latest in the genre’s lineage The Informer […]

  2. […] an avid NBA fan, it’s my film critic mandate to engulf any basketball film that hits release… and I mean any (seriously, how many other Netflix users watched Amature […]

  3. […] of the notable stars in this film is Julia Fox, who was heavily praised for her breakout role in Uncut Gems by the Safdie Brothers. That isn’t the end of the Safdie Brothers’ connection as we also see […]

  4. […] alone, one would not expect Shiva Baby to implement a visceral edge akin to sweaty thrillers like Uncut Gems, yet Seligman skillfully infuses her familiar premise with newfound vitality. Her intensely […]

  5. […] over a single night, which allows us, as in the excellent “Good Time” (2017) by the Safdie Brothers, to witness a gradual rise in tension, linked to Mikael’s loss of  […]

  6. […] the right material to work with. Easily my favorite dramatic role of his has to be in 2019’s Uncut Gems, which is quite possibly the most unbearably tense film I’ve ever seen in my life. Ever since […]

  7. […] the right material to work with. Easily my favorite dramatic role of his has to be in 2019’s Uncut Gems, which is quite possibly the most unbearably tense film I’ve ever seen in my life. Ever since […]

  8. […] the right material to work with. Easily my favorite dramatic role of his has to be in 2019’s Uncut Gems, which is quite possibly the most unbearably tense film I’ve ever seen in my life. Ever since […]

  9. […] crowds, and all the glamour you could dream of. By the 2000s, films like Ocean’s Eleven, 21, and Uncut Gems used light, mirrors, and colour as part of their storytelling […]