Rakesh's movie talk
Bullseye! (1990)













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Directed by Michael Winner
Starring: Michael Caine, Roger Moore and Sally Kirkland

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Pairing Roger Moore and Michael Caine must have been thought to be a great Idea. Probably inspired by The Man Who Would be King, where Caine was paired with another ex-Bond, Sean Connery. Bullseye! didn't have benefit of larger scale epic-like canvass of TMWWBK, as it didn't want itself to be taken seriously. Did Bullseye! work?

Yes and No (God, we all hate this kind of answer). No, because most of the time, the joke falls flat on its face. Yes, because Caine and Moore (as usual) are always great to watch. They play a pair of conmen and a pair of treacherous scientists. Keep an eye on Moore, always known as a great ad-libber. Unfortunately these two guys are the only reasons to watch the movie.

Bullseye! takes the premise of impersonation (this time two of them) and adds twist and turn, moving from a caper flick to espionage. While it tries hard to be a comedy, most of the time you see some humourless farce in an inconsistent progress. I quickly lost interest in the story during the first half an hour and just sat through the rest watching the dynamic duo of England. Being a Bond fan, I was especially delighted to see Moore playing off his Bond persona, even throwing lines like, "For England". Ring a bell, Bond-fans?

There is Sally Kirkland, who provides some personal agenda to the ageing conmen, while also providing a bit of flesh here and there. She looks positively old and attractive at the same time. But her character does nothing much but to be in between Moore and Caine, and helping them with their con job. Thats all.

I checked out Michael Winner's (the director) past record, and was surprised to note that he directed serious films like the Death Wish films and The Big Sleep (a supposedly sequel of Farewell, My Lovely). While the former was successful in its own way, the latter killed nostalgic-noir delight began by Farewell, My lovely. He later went on to direct many bombs, and regarded generally as a horrible director. Wonder how he managed to find job for so long. It is so evident in this film. Whether its him, the script or his crew, the movie failed to amuse many at that time; it will still fail to amuse many now. Bullseye! is something the film couldn't achieve.