The Great Swindle: A Tale of Two Con Artists in the South of France
Once upon a time in the glamorous South of France, two con artists decided to square off in a high-stakes game of one-upmanship that makes sibling rivalry look like a tea party. Welcome to The Hustle, a supposed female-led reimagining of the 1988 oddity Dirty Rotten Scoundrels. Here, we find the impeccably coiffed Anne Hathaway and the loose-limbed Rebel Wilson, who might as well be auditioning for a circus performance. Spoiler alert: magic does not happen.
Hathaway channels her inner Michael Caine as a master grifter, applying every stereotyping tool in the dumb-blonde toolbox. She’s the kind of woman who could part a rich man from his fortune faster than you can say “credit card limit.” Meanwhile, Wilson, stepping into the shoes of Steve Martin, operates on the distinctly more pedestrian level of ‘free sandwich’ con artistry. Because who doesn’t want to go from double-crossing billionaires to double-dipping at a local deli?
Now, one would think that a clever female con artist using her biting wit to take down pompous wealthy men would be way more fascinating than a hot chick giggling over shiny rocks. Yet, here we are, unsatisfied, watching Hathaway’s artifice and Wilson’s antics compete for our attention like two peacocks in a derelict zoo.
The plot thickens as these two hustlers decide to con an unsuspecting American tech billionaire. However, instead of the adorable absurdities seen in classic capers, we get increasingly ludicrous roles that Hathaway’s Josephine and Wilson’s Penny try desperately to sell. One must wonder, are these ladies even on the same planet? While the duo is busy raising stakes, one can’t help but notice that emotional depth was left somewhere on a cutting room floor.
As the tech millionaire’s wealth is laid bare, our heroines decide to change the wager. Forget money; they opt for an emotional rollercoaster ride as riveting as watching paint dry. You’ll find it hard to cultivate any semblance of concern as their schemes unravel like a cheap sweater. Just like the plot, emotional investment decreases with each passing moment.
Hathaway’s performance feels less “ooh la la” and more “please, make it stop.” Meanwhile, Wilson, in her typically physical and expressive style, lacks the human touch that made Martin’s Freddy Benson endearing. Instead, we see two talented women not quite dancing in sync, like a badly choreographed flash mob.
In the end, while the sky may have glittered with diamonds, the real treasure lies in the comedy of errors that is The Hustle. It serves as a curious case study on how you can take a classic caper and drain it of all entertainment value. Call it a lesson in what happens when two con artists lose sight of their charm while trying to hustle their way to emotional depth—and a little bit of fun.
