You won’t feel scammed by American Hustle
David O. Russell returns with his stable of actors to put a fictional spin on true events in one of the year’s best films.
In the late 1970s, the FBI launched an investigation into corrupt politicians under cover name Abscam. The Feds hired a convicted con artist conduct the operation which ended up nabbing one senator, six members of the House of Representatives, one member of the New Jersey State Senate, members of the Philadelphia City Council, and an inspector for the Immigration and Naturalization Service. David O. Russell’s new film American Hustle takes the basics of this operations and wraps it up brilliantly in a fictional narrative.
Christian Bale stars as Irving Rosenfeld, a Long Island businessman who owns a chain of dry cleaners. He also “helps” people with bad credit get loans. Except he doesn’t, he just scams them for $5,000 and the loan never materializes. Irving meets Sydney Prosser (Amy Adams) at a party and the two hit it off, eventually becoming partners in crime and in love despite the fact that Irving has a wife (Jennifer Lawrence) and a son at home. A prospective client shows up one day, but he turns out to be Richie DeMaso (Bradley Cooper) of the FBI and he nabs Sydney (who is going by the name and accent of Lady Edith) taking his check in exchange for the non-existent loan.
Richie knows that Irving loves Edith (Richie has no clue she’s not really British, although he does know she is not of royal stock), so he makes them an offer they can’t refuse: help the FBI bring down four of their most wanted, and they walk away scot-free. The plan seems to be working, but the power and excitement goes to Richie’s head as the mayor of Camden, NJ (Jeremy Renner) is drawn into the scam simply because he is desperate to fund the redevelopment of Atlantic City. The operation then snowballs nearly out of control as Richie, Edith and Irving are drawn deeper into the criminal underworld that could have dire consequences if the plan fails.
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