Review: 'Uncut Gems' Is an Anxiety-Filled Thrill Ride

Cameron Lee ‘20 / Emertainment Monthly Staff Writer
Cinema makes us feel many different things; joy, sadness, excitement, just to name a few. Josh and Benny Safdie, known as the Safdie Brothers, are early in their career yet already boasts an impressive resume with Heaven Knows What and the incredible Good Time have mastered a different feeling from what was listed above; anxiety!
Uncut Gems feels like the culmination of their quest to make an audience have a panic attack inside a theatre. A crime thriller that doesn’t stop until the credits roll, Uncut Gems is a thrilling heart-stopping roller coaster ride with an amazing lead performance from Adam Sandler that showcases his skills as an actor better than any film has since Paul Thomas Andeson’s Punch-Drunk Love.
No one else could have played this role than Mr. Sandler. His comedic stick and timing are perfect for this. He’s charming one minute to clients and the women in his life and an uncontrollable spastic mess the next. Sandler does all of this often in the same scene. He never catches his breath or slows down, he is downright fearless in this role and it’s a joy to watch when he tries to scheme up a plan or struggle to achieve his goals. Howard is the definition of a character we shouldn’t like yet we do. The Safdie brothers have a knack for making investing and compelling main characters who are horrible people look at Robert Pattinson as Connie in Good Time. Yet despite how bad of a person Howard is and how bad of a father he is, you can’t help but relate to what he wants in life. He wants to win big and to feel like he’s achieved something incredible in his life. We all have a dream like that, and that dream of him making a big score makes us root for Howard even when we really shouldn’t.
It’s hard to imagine the Safdie brothers topping themselves after this. They’ve done all one can possibly do in this style. The film is bookended with scenes that feel straight out of 2001: A Space Odyssey with its trippy visuals inside the world of a gem. It never lets up until the credits roll. In this case, the film is truly the cinematic equivalent of the aforementioned cocaine. All one thinks about after watching this film is watching it again. For Howard it’s the massive gem he acquires at the start of the film, that’s the drug that sustains him throughout this film. He looks into it and sees only happiness and success instead of his only faults and the dangers that await him. If only he had time to evaluate his life maybe his things could have been different. But as Charlie Murphy once said, cocaine is a hell of a drug!
Overall Grade: A-
Watch The Trailer: