Most people seriously overestimate their abilities: we all think we are excellent drivers, skillful and proficient writers, and able to successfully multi-task. Most people rate themselves as excellent in their professional capacities. And, yet, of course, mediocrity reigns. We are heroes to ourselves but feckless so far as the rest of the world is concerned. Kelly Reichardt's new crime film, The Mastermind, explores the incongruity between our self-confident pride and the actual measure of our abilities in the context of a fairly standard heist picture. In films of this sort, a crime is planned, a team assembled, and, then, the heist consummated; because crime doesn't pay, the second half of the movie documents the unraveling of the scheme, the accomplices betraying one another, and the ultimate failure of the enterprise --the model for this genre (or, perhaps, its most successful example) is John Huston's 1950 The Asphalt Jungle; in that movie, a group criminals commit a crime and are hunted down one-by-one: the film shows us how the fate of the men depends entirely on things outside of their control -- the Professor, the film's criminal mastermind, is arrested because he tarries in a cafe and is in the wrong place at the wrong time. None of the thugs are too smart and the bravest, but most dim-witted, ends up face-down in a pasture with a couple of curious horses nuzzling at him. Reichardt's minimalist picture follows the same pattern but is, even, more dispiriting. Several disaffected kids carry out a heist at a suburban art museum, stealing four canvases by the American expressionist, Arthur Dove -- the crooks aren't ambitious enough to snatch paintings by more famous artists: the museum has a couple of iconic pictures by Frederick Erwin Church and a canvas by Thomas Cole. Third-rate crooks steal third-rate pictures. Almost immediately, the plan goes awry. One of the co-conspirators informs on his colleagues; other more accomplished thieves snatch the pictures from the gang-leader and, then, hold them for ransom before returning them to the museum. The so-called mastermind goes on the run, but unsuccessfully. This summarizes the film's plot. The film's interest lies in its meticulous staging and carefully detailed, if ultimately opaque, character studies.
JB is the son of a local judge. He has a solicitous mother who loans him the money necessary for the heist. It's a modest sum and she thinks her boy is making cabinets -- a lousy criminal, JB is a skilled cabinet-maker; at least, there's something that he's good at. JB is married, has a mousy wife and two bratty sons. The film is set in 1970 -- Nixon is the President and war in Vietnam, although winding down, is still triggering big protests on campuses and near federal buildings. JB thinks he's a bold individualist and seemingly wants nothing to do with the protests in the streets. Ironically, in the film's last scene, JB gets the beat-up by the cops and is whisked away in a paddy van, implying (I think) that he will be arrested for the heist -- by this point in the film, warrants are out for his arrest. JB assembles a team of fools and ne'er-do-wells. The most reckless in the group is a black kid named Gibson who, notwithstanding JB's orders, brings a revolver to the heist -- this is fortunate because were it not for the gun, the crooks would have been arrested at the museum; it's less fortunate, however, because the gun ups the stakes. The crime, involving a stolen car as a getaway vehicle, is completely botched. Teenage girls see the criminals snatching the canvases and sound the alarm. (An old couple observes the crooks pulling down the canvases on the wall, but think they are maintenance men simply implementing a re-hang in the gallery.) Everything goes wrong. JB's kids are not in school due to a teacher work-day and, so, he has to watch them when he supposed to be stealing the paintings. Within hours of the caper, the black teenager with the gun robs a bank, gets arrested, and, immediately rats out his accomplices. JB takes the paintings and puts them in an elaborately constructed and elegantly designed cabinet-like box. Every film of this sort requires a suspense sequence. Reichardt obliges by staging a terrifying sequence in which JB climbs up a very frail-looking ladder into a hayloft to put his loot into the cabinet that he has dragged up there. The ladder looks sketchy and JB isn't too sure on his feet and we expect that he will fall and be badly injured. He does knock the ladder backward and has to leap out of the hay mow, landing in pig manure. No sooner is he back at home when some sinister men confront his wife; they seem to be mobsters although they claim that they are special art cops. A little later, more mobsters arrive, big, beefy and surprisingly affable thugs who make JB give them the paintings. The dragnet is closing on JB. He flees from Massachusetts to what seems to be upstate New York. By this time, he has abandoned his wife and two boys. His old art school buddies welcome him at their rural home, but the wife doesn't want him around -- it's too dangerous. Without much money remaining, JB takes buses and stays in grim-looking upper rooms in boarding houses or motels. Ultimately, in Cincinnati, he mugs an old woman for funds to buy a bus ticket to Toronto. He gets swept up into an anti-wire protest in which a bunch of jolly local cops are busting heads with their nightsticks and ends up detained in paddy wagon, whereupon the movie ends with a shot of the police clowning around with a hat dropped by demonstrator.
The film is influenced by Bresson and Jean-Pierre Melville -- it has several elaborate scenes detailing criminal procedures (laboriously putting the canvases in the cabinet, casing the museum, altering a passport for the trip to Toronto that never takes place.) These sequences are shot in silence, unpretentiously but effectively. The entire movie has a washed-out appearance, as if shot on super 8 or 16 mm and, then, blown up with the images appearing somewhat hazy and slightly out of focus; the color schemes are monochromatic with the only color provided by the paintings. There are dispiriting rural landscapes all grey and brown and shabby taverns (memorably a place called "The Salty Inn") with everything muted and faintly claustrophobic. The movie that the film most closely resembles is Robert Altman's Thieves Like Us, a picture set during the great Depression about a gang of hapless bankrobbers (and starring Shelley Duval) -- The Mastermind has the same bleak interiors, blurry landscapes and sense of hopelessness and betrayal. I liked the movie. Reichardt's pictures attune you to tiny details and nuances and it's fun for me to explore the images, looking for things are significant but half-concealed. I'm not sure that the film would appeal to all tastes. Thieves Like Us was released in 1974 -- that is forty years after the events in the Great Depression that provide the context for the movie. It's remarkable to me that The Mastermind is about events in 1970 some of which I can readily remember --1970 is more distant from today than the Great Depression was from Altman's picture; The Mastermind is set fifty-five years in the past. There's an early scene that epitomizes JB's selfishness. He takes a small figurine out of a display and puts it in his glasses case. He, then, slips the figurine into his wife's purse. As they are leaving the museum, he kneels to tie his shows as his wife walks out ahead of him with the two boys. JB is testing to see if there's some kind of electronic marker on the objects in the museum. He wants to see if the figurine triggers an alarm. It does not, but the import of the scene is that he allously casts the risk on his innocent wife.