When I moved to Denver in 1968 and
was enrolled in Denver Public Schools a weird thing happened one day when our
class was interrupted and a tall man with oily black hair, large pores and a
strong southern accent came into our classroom and gave us a pitch about
selling his line of plastic combs to our families and neighbors. He told us we
could win prizes and that the experience would build character. I might be
wrong, but I don’t think it was ever made clear to us kids what the ostensible
school-related or charitable reason was that this frightening scumbag was
allowed into our school day. We were pretty much forced to participate and I
remember not doing that well and my Dad being pissed that he had to buy these
crappy red combs. That experience stuck with me for the rest of my life. I have
met many salesmen over the years and some have been very nice people, but that
“type,” that brand of peculiarly American snake-oil salesman remains a reality
in modern life and is still to be regularly encountered. No movie has ever
quite gotten this phenomenon as perfectly as Glengarry Glen Ross.
Combining the greatest ensemble cast since Twelve Angry Men with David
Mamet’s precise, biting, insightful and torturous dialogue and director James
Foley’s claustrophobic filming, Glengarry Glen Ross is a modern
masterpiece of existential angst.
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To give away the specifics of the
plot would spoil the film as it unwinds into a bleak void of bad intentions and
even worse results. It is a cautionary tale about how greed and the drive to
gain money can put people on a slippery slope to reprehensible behavior. There
are no good guys and everyone involved gets covered in monkey stink by the end.
Glengarry Glen Ross achieves greatness through the pressure cooker
environment it creates as these sad men try to claw their way to the top of a
very small hill. David Mamet is perhaps the greatest practitioner of biting,
tough language filled with soliloquy, which gets straight to the underbelly of
the American dream. I find watching this movie to be a devastating experience.
I can only take it about once a decade, but I find it must be seen repeatedly.
Whenever I question my career decisions or the path my life has taken, Glengarry
Glen Ross becomes a useful point of reference.
- Paul Epstein
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