The Bling Ring – Review

Shy new kid Marc Hall (Broussard) arrives at a Calabasas high school and gets swept up into the world of his new friend Rebecca Ahn (Chang). He is promptly introduced to drugs and larceny, plunging headlong into a risky, exciting new existence. Rebecca`s friends Nicki (Watson), Nicki`s adopted sister Sam (Farmiga) and Chloe (Julien) soon join in the “fun. Motivated by boredom, bravado and a magpie-like love for shiny things, the group embarks on a serial burglary spree, the likes of Paris Hilton, Lindsay Lohan, Megan Fox and Brian Austin Green, Audrina Patridge and Orlando Bloom numbering among their celeb victims.

This variety of “true crime story with its frivolous trimmings seems like the perfect fodder for a Lifetime movie of the week in fact, one already exists, 2011`s made-for-TV Bling Ring. Sofia Coppola`s take on things is, as can be expected, an artier affair. The director, inspired by Nancy Jo Sales` Vanity Fair feature The Suspects Wore Louboutins, presents a heady world of youthful abandon and a callous disregard for consequence. However, one gets the feeling that she has held up a mirror to society, but all society seems interested is doing is gazing into that mirror, applying lipstick and preening.

Does The Bling Ring glamourise the illegal activities its protagonists are shown partaking in, or does it critique and examine it? It feels more like the former than the latter, but then again, this comes off as one of those “ah, but that`s how it was intended movies.

“This is really shallow and vapid!

“Ah, but that`s how it was intended.

“I can`t bring myself to root for these characters!

“Ah, but that`s how it was intended.

“This movie seems to be trying to say something, but I have no idea what!

“Ah, but that`s how it was intended.

The fascination with Bonnie and Clyde-type stories is something that`s mentioned in the film, and “young people doing dangerous things-type flicks such as Natural Born Killers might come to mind. Thing is, The Bling Ring is to Natural Born Killers what a Chihuahua is to a Pitbull. The frothy frivolity with which the whole thing is coated means any message the movie tries to get across, it ultimately doesn`t. The film focuses on the superficial acts of the breaking and entering bouts without delving into any profound impact it might have had. Perhaps that`s what Coppola was aiming for, less of a polemic and more of a casual observation. This approach will pull some viewers in but will just as easily turn others off.

One of the main draws for the general audience is definitely the casting of Emma Watson. While Katie Chang`s Rebecca is ostensibly the female lead, Watson handily steals the show, at once mesmerizing and intensely annoying. The actress nails the grating vocal cadence of Alexis Neiers, the real-life person on which her character is based; commanding the screen with an air-headed confidence. Props must also be given to newcomer Broussard, whose turn as the naÃ