Travers particularly loathes Disney’s expressed wish to meld musical numbers and animation sequences into the film, and threatens to put the kibosh on ever allowing the film to get made. But Disney had promised his daughters he’d make the film in their honor, and he was determined to keep his word – a process that involves him having to peel back the layers of mystery inTravers’ life and help her come to terms with her troubled relationship with her own father (Colin Farrell in a very moving turn), a dreamer who also suffered from addiction.
“Banks” is an impressive effort from writer-director John Lee Hancock, who follows up his Oscar-winning 2009 blockbuster “The Blind Side” with this film. From the lush early-1960s settings and costumes through a deep cast (including Paul Giamatti, Jason Schwartzman and B.J. Novak) at their charming best, this is a glossy and thoroughly winning film that provides a lot of insights into the magic of the Disney creative process. While it’s not inappropriate for younger children, it is serious enough in tone to make it likely to be enjoyed more by teens and adults.
Meanwhile, “American Hustle” is filled with fast-talking dreamers each looking to get ahead in their own desperate, yet often funny, way. It follows the story of Irving Rosenfeld (Bale), a New Jersey con artist, and his mistress/con partner Sydney (Adams) and how a highly ambitious FBI agent named Richie DiMaso (Cooper) uses them to bust a bunch of congressmen and Newark, New Jersey mayor Carmine Polito (Renner) for taking bribes in a notorious real-life U.S. government sting operation called Abscam.
The wild card in this bunch, however, is Irving’s wife, Rosalyn (Lawrence), who got stuck married to the shady loser at way too young an age and is constantly looking for any way to make his life miserable. As the stakes get higher in both the sting and in the personal lives of its participants, it’s the seemingly naïve yet extremely willful Rosalyn who stirs things up to dangerous levels that could bring everything down like a house of cards.
“American Hustle” is the perfect name for this movie, because each and every one of its superbly drawn and colorful characters is indeed hustling their own unique dreams: to be the best at art forgeries, to be the best federal agent, or the best mayor. Writer-director Russell shoots them all with a comically outsized swagger in their public moments, yet a haunting vulnerability in their private ones.
The cast all rise to their respective challenges, leaving viewers with an embarrassment of riches to enjoy from the year’s best ensemble of actors. The terrific late-70s period details and costumes meld with a perfect soundtrack of the era’s overly earnest pop hits to fully immerse viewers in the story’s time and place, and Russell bring it all together with fun zest that recalls “Boogie Nights.”