Opentopia Directory Encyclopedia Tools

The Usual Suspects

Encyclopedia : T : TH : THE : The Usual Suspects


The Usual Suspects is a 1995 American movie written by Christopher McQuarrie (who earned an Oscar for the screenplay) and directed by Bryan Singer. It stars Kevin Spacey (who won an Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor for his performance), Gabriel Byrne, Chazz Palminteri, Stephen Baldwin, Pete Postlethwaite, Benicio Del Toro and Kevin Pollak.

The film, shot on a $4 million budget, did not create much excitement (or box office) during the movie's initial release (even making the list of Roger Ebert's most hated films). Word-of-mouth later made it one of the most highly-regarded of the crime-drama genre. Ten years after its release, it is consistently found in the Top 20 on the Internet Movie Database's Top 250 Movies list (Currently at #15).

Roger "Verbal" Kint (Spacey), a small-time con man, is in a police interrogation, and tells his interrogator, Agent Kujan (Palminteri), a convoluted story about events leading to a massacre and massive fire that have just taken place on a ship docked at Los Angeles. Using flashback and narration, Verbal's story becomes increasingly complex as he tries to explain, to Kujan's satisfaction, why he and his partners-in-crime were on that boat.

Plot details

The movie begins with a man being killed on a merchant ship. The murderer has a gold cigarette lighter and twice shoots a victim in the head before using spilled gasoline to incinerate the boat.

The movie cuts to Agent Kujan interrogating Verbal on the status of criminal Dean Keaton, who was involved in the boat fire. Kujan wants to make sure Keaton is dead, and insists that Verbal tell his story, despite the fact that Verbal has already made his statements and been granted immunity.

Five crooks are brought together in a police line-up on trumped-up charges. They are an eclectic bunch: Keaton (Byrne) appears to have gone legit; McManus (Baldwin) and Hockney (Pollak) form an instant rivalry; Verbal himself is crippled and walks with a limp; and Fenster (Del Toro) talks in such mangled English that, according to DVD bonus material, even the actors themselves had trouble understanding him. One thing is certain: since all of them are guilty of something, they're probably innocent of what they're actually being accused of (hijacking a truck full of firearms).

While in jail, the five suspects join forces to plan an emerald heist (as well as a flipping-off of the NYPD), and though Keaton had planned to stay away from further "work", he finds himself continually involved in the group's criminal activities. Using Verbal's plan, the heist goes down with no deaths involved, and eventually they wind up in California, where they are blackmailed by a lawyer named Kobayashi (Postlethwaite) into doing a job for someone named Keyser Soze. (Simultaneously to the flashback narrative, an FBI agent receives an eye-witness account of events on the ship - a badly-burned survivor shouts Soze's name over and over and is eventually coaxed into giving a visual description.) Keaton, Fenster, McManus and Hockney react to Soze's name with a desperation bordering on terror; for his part, Verbal simply wants to know who the man is.

Keyser Soze, as Verbal relates it, is organized crime's version of the monster under the bed. When he was a small-time Turkish dope runner, a rival Hungarian gang tried to seize his territory and business by taking his family hostage. Soze, in response, killed his own family and all (but one) of the threatening gangsters. He then started a crusade against the gang, systematically eliminating their friends, family, children, lovers, parents, and even their homes and businesses before eventually disappearing. He is a criminal mastermind, and his name strikes fear into the heart of hardened criminals. Is he real? Nobody knows. "The greatest trick the Devil ever pulled was convincing the world he didn't exist."

Back in the narrative, Fenster loses his nerve and bolts; several hours later Kobayashi tells the remaining four how to find his body. After further application of threat, the remaining suspects agree to take on the heist: on a ship docked at San Pedro (the ship from the beginning), two gangs are meeting to finalize the sale of, and then exchange $91 million in cocaine. The suspects are to prevent this from happening, as the sale would be unfortunate for Soze's business. If the suspects wait for the deal to be sealed, they may help themselves to any cash they might stumble upon, but this will require fighting through nearly twice the number of bodyguards.

Spacey as "Verbal" in The Usual Suspects
Enlarge
Spacey as "Verbal" in The Usual Suspects

Regardless, they opt for this strategy - if they are going to risk their lives, they at least want a payoff. Keaton tells Verbal to stay back and make a run for it if things go wrong, which they do; Keyser Soze himself appears and puts an end to all of the remaining suspects, save Verbal himself. Simultaneous to the narrative, the FBI agent discovers, among the dead from the ship, a man from Soze's organization who was about to hand Soze over to the law. This man has been shot twice in the head, which is Soze's calling card. Furthermore, it is discovered that there were, in fact, no drugs on the ship. Kujan believes that the whole point of the exercise was not to interrupt a dope transaction, but rather for Soze to kill the man who was going to rat him out.

Kujan returns Verbal to the crucial point: is Keaton dead? Verbal is sure: he saw Soze trigger the two head shots (which the audience recognizes from the beginning of the movie). But what was Soze actually shooting at? It is Kujan's belief that Keaton is actually Soze (Keaton had successfully faked his own death two years earlier, to say nothing of Soze's activities), which raises the odd question: why is Verbal, then, even alive? Why did Keaton actually tell him to get lost, if his whole objective was to kill anyone who might turn Keaton/Soze over to the police? Kujan is convinced it's because Keaton wanted Verbal to tell the police the story of how he died, and that Verbal was the only one who wasn't smart enough to figure it all out. Verbal breaks down into tears and admits that the whole plan, from the beginning, was Keaton's idea, even the emerald heist Verbal had previously taken credit for. By this time, Verbal's bail has been posted, and he departs with his legal immunity, deciding to take his chances on the street rather than trust the dubious safety of the Witness Protection Program.

Verbal receives his personal effects from the jail warden: a gold watch, a gold cigarette lighter, and a pack of cigarettes. Kujan, relaxing in the office he used for the interrogation, suddenly starts to notice details from Verbal's story appearing on objects around the room; most notably, the cups from which they both have been drinking coffee are made by a company called Kobayashi. He scrambles outside, just missing a fax with the artist's impressions of Keyser Soze's face (which bears more than a passing resemblance to the now released Verbal Kint). As Verbal leaves the jail, his limp suddenly disappears. He steps into a waiting Jaguar limo driven by "Mr. Kobayashi" and departs just as Kujan arrives, desperately searching for "the cripple", a man who no longer exists. The credits roll.

Plot Twists

The Usual Suspects includes some major plot twists. Throughout the course of the movie, the plot leads viewers to suspect that Soze is Keaton, with the actual answer hitting hard at the end. The film's idea, according to the extras on the DVD release, was to confuse the audience until the very end, when it finally reveals that Verbal is, in fact, Keyser Soze.

Burning Questions

The movie ends with more questions raised than answered. Who exactly is Keyser Soze? And, perhaps more importantly, who is Verbal Kint? Are they one and the same? Unwinding this tangle is difficult, because Kint himself is the source of almost all the information in the movie; he is clearly an unreliable narrator, raising the possibility that everything the audience has just seen and been told is a lie. Even that, however, is not incriminating; Verbal Kint is clearly a consummate liar, but that does not mean he's necessarily anyone other than Verbal Kint. Of course, when Kujan hears that the burn victim is repeatedly saying Soze's name and asks Kint who this is, Kint's immediate reaction is anger, suggesting his annoyance at having to make up yet another story on the spot.

Director Bryan Singer confesses that he is pretty sure Kint is Soze; writer Christopher McQuarrie has said that it is however the viewer decides to interpret it. The gold cigarette lighter Kint retrieves at the end of the movie is prominently featured in the opening scene; the two smoke their cigarettes the same way. Despite this, Gabriel Byrne (Keaton) was pretty sure his character was Soze, at least until he saw the finished movie. However, in the end, the focus isn't on what really happened, but how Verbal/Keyser was able to manipulate Kujan into thinking he'd won long enough for his bail to be posted.

The DVD commentary reveals several interesting moments in the making of the film. During Soze's appearance on the ship, the camera pans across a pile of dock gear as Kint hobbles behind it, but Spacey stops just short and the camera keeps panning. He also had Byrne dress up as Soze for a specific flashback shot, and filmed him firing Soze's signature dual gunshots... despite Byrne's protests that he was shooting his own character. Finally, Singer points out that "söze", in the Turkish dictionary from which he and writer Christopher McQuarrie took the word, is defined as garrulous or talkative. This, combined with the Turkish transliteration of the German Kaiser, leaves us with a verbal king. This meaning suggests that he is a master of words and speechcraft (not to mention that "verbal king" is one letter off from Spacey's character). But that is not to say that Keyser Soze himself is not above creating fiction to perpetuate his own myth and cover his tracks.

See also

Trivia of interest

Cultural references

The Usual Suspects inspired Jay-Z's video "The city is mine."

External links

 


From Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia. Original article here. Support Wikipedia by contributing or donating.
All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License See Wikipedia Copyrights for details.

Search Titles
0123456789
ABCDEFGHIJ
KLMNOPQRST
UVWXYZ?

E-mail this article to:

Personal Message: