Movie Review: Gold
Matthew McConaughey and Edgar Ramirez stranded in the jungle.


Gold is a movie that seeks to be two things at once: a bushwhacking jungle adventure and a shark-tank finance thriller. It doesn't fail exactly, or not entirely: the picture looks okay (although Robert Elswit has done better work) and the actors aren't phoning it in. But the movie does fail to be very interesting, and even Matthew McConaughey in full hyper-overdrive can't make it so.
The story is "inspired by actual events," as they say—which in this case means it's based on a big mining-business scandal that occurred in Canada in the late 1990s and has now been transported across the border to Reno, Nevada, in the late 1980s. McConaughey—fitted out with a real pot belly, a faux balding pate, and an odd prosthetic tooth—plays Kenny Wells, head of a failing family mining company that desperately needs a major score. Kenny hears about a hot young geologist named Michael Acosta (Edgar Ramirez) who has a new prospecting theory that involves… I dunno, tectonic plates or something ("Ring of Fire," it's called). This theory appears to be legit: Acosta recently discovered a large copper lode in Indonesia that has enriched everyone associated with it. Kenny hocks a couple of watches and flies to Borneo to meet this guy. Soon they're in business together, searching for gold.
The movie is tiringly peripatetic. In Borneo, we follow Kenny and Acosta as they traipse through endless monsoons and mud lands on their way to a brief bout of malaria. (There's also a passing mention of headhunters, who, alas, never arrive—which is too bad, because this is a movie that could really use some headhunters.) Then Kenny flies back to Reno—to plant a kiss on his boringly loyal girlfriend, Bryce Dallas Howard—and soon to New York, to beat the corporate bushes for investment capital to keep his gold hunt going. Back and forth, back and forth he goes, facing off against increasingly deceitful money men (Corey Stoll, Stacy Keach, Bruce Greenwood) on each trip.
Lightning finally strikes, of course. One day Acosta announces he's discovered a huge gold field that could be worth billions of dollars. Kenny figures his days of impoverishment are finally over. Then, naturally, new problems arise.
McConaughey is never dull to watch. But he's so over-amped here—smoking and swearing and sweating and chewing up scenery as if it were all-you-cant-eat kobe beef—that it sometimes seems as if the other actors are just lying back to watch in admiration as he lets rip. Ramirez, an actor with the gift of charismatic stillness, fares best. Director Stephen Gaghan mostly stays out of the way.
The movie ends on an annoying note. First there's a twist; then there's a second twist that sets up a substantial narrative complication that the picture has no time left to address. In the normal course of things this development might be dealt with in a sequel. But I don't think we'll be seeing one of those.
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Sad. He's usually so much fun in a movie. Too bad the whole seems to be less than the sum of its parts.
There is nothing boring about Bryce Dallas Howard.
*My father is a metallurgical engineer specializing in ore concentration for gold, copper and nickel. I vaguely remember him talking about the 'true events' this movie is based on. The international community of these guys is fairly small, they all know each other and everything everyone else is doing. There is always someone trying to run a scam but everyone in that community knows about it so it's only the fish from outside the 'in' crowd who have dreams of getting rich with a gold mine that ever get taken.
As I recall these true events involved one of those scams and the Douchebag McConaughy character ended up at the bottom of a lake with cement shoes on.
Matthew McConaughey has already done his definitive jungle work in Tropic Thunder
Alright, alright, alright...
+1 Simple Hans
+1 Tuggernuts.
The company was called Bre x and once the scam started to unravel (they were salting the samples) the real shit hit the fan when the geologist in question "fell" out of a helicopter...
Thats right. I remember that now. My memory was fuzzy.
no doubt from the fall...
I hope the director was clever enough to include the song "Gold" by OMD. I mean, the whole song is about gold. And so is the movie. It's clever, right?
Spandau Ballet, not OMD
True, lass.
There's a difference?
One has a saxophone. The other doesn't.
Apart from his car commercials I can't think of a single thing I've seen Matthew McConaughey in that wasn't awesome. His stint on HBO's Real Detective being his crowning achievement. He even made the rambling Free State of Jones watchable. So no, I have a hard time believing he would have accepted a bad role in a lousy movie. Take it back!
His car commercials are pure art.
'You might never even sit in the back seat. That'd be a shame.'
Go watch "Failure to Launch" and get back to me.
If Kate Hudson is in it, wearing a bikini and searching for the Gold with him, I'll watch it.
At what point(s) in the movie does Matthew McConaughey take his shirt off?