The Laundromat
The Laundromat

The Laundromat (2019)

6.0 ? Sep 27, 2019 1h 36m

Overview

When a widow gets swindled out of insurance money, her search for answers leads to two cunning lawyers in Panama who hide cash for the superrich.

Genres

Crime Drama Comedy

Release Date

September 27, 2019

Rating

6.0 /10

Runtime

1h 36m

Official Trailer from YouTube

Meryl Streep

Meryl Streep

Ellen Martin / Elena

Gary Oldman

Gary Oldman

Jürgen Mossack

Antonio Banderas

Antonio Banderas

Ramón Fonseca

Jeffrey Wright

Jeffrey Wright

Malchus Irvin Boncamper

Melissa Rauch

Melissa Rauch

Melanie

Jeff Michalski

Jeff Michalski

Norm Sidley

Jane Morris

Jane Morris

Barb Sidley

Robert Patrick

Robert Patrick

Captain Paris

David Schwimmer

David Schwimmer

Matthew Quirk

Cristela Alonzo

Cristela Alonzo

Special Agent Kilmer

Larry Clarke

Larry Clarke

Ellen's Attorney

Will Forte

Will Forte

Doomed Gringo #1

Chris Parnell

Chris Parnell

Doomed Gringo #2

Nonso Anozie

Nonso Anozie

Charles

Larry Wilmore

Larry Wilmore

Jeff

Jessica Allain

Jessica Allain

Simone

Nikki Amuka-Bird

Nikki Amuka-Bird

Miranda

Matthias Schoenaerts

Matthias Schoenaerts

Maywood

Rosalind Chao

Rosalind Chao

Gu Kailai

Kunjue Li

Kunjue Li

Gu's Aide

Sheldon Nylander avatar

Sheldon Nylander

5.0/10

Oct 24, 2019

Remember the Panama Papers? Those leaked documents that detailed how various people and companies created off-shore shell companies in order to avoid paying billions if not trillions in taxes around the world? No? I’m not surprised. It was a huge story that seemed to become a flash in the pan and many people forgot about it after the coverage dried up because, very likely, the corporations that run the news media tried to bury it. But these folks didn’t forget. The film’s title refers to the whole operation as generally being a money laundering scheme. Featuring an ensemble cast of Hollywood who’s who as well as who’s that, this Steven Soderbergh film invariably draws comparisons to Adam McKay’s “The Big Short,” both in subject matter and style. The narrators, played by Gary Oldman and Antonio Banderas, frequently address the camera directly. Usually, this has the effect of making the audience feel like they’re in on the scheme, but it’s not as effective as when it was used in, say, “House of Cards.” Why? I can’t quite put my finger on it, but it likely has to do with the complexity of the scheme. Their characters are more than just narrators, but are actual players in the overall story, lawyers who created the paperwork and did the legwork to get these schemes off the ground. As such, they actually try to explain it, both simplified and with a certain complexity that leaves one a little unsure of the truth. Maybe that was the idea, but from a storytelling perspective, it didn’t quite work. And effect is part of the problem with this film. Aside from being done as a comedy for what is in fact a very serious subject (the reporter who exposed this story was later killed by a car bomb), this film doesn’t feel very effective in conveying outrage. In fact, it feels less like outrage and more like being impotently miffed. The film doesn’t feel like it conveys the gravity of the situation. Which is very disappointing given the talent involved and the chance to really bring this subject back into the public eye. While I have to give the filmmakers credit with trying to make the complex money laundering scheme in the Panama Papers digestible to a general audience and keeping this visible, ultimately it feels like it’s too little too late.

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r96sk avatar

r96sk

5.0/10

Mar 07, 2021

I didn't enjoy this at all, yet I still weirdly reflect on it to be better than it had any right to be. That's thanks to the cast of <em>'The Laundromat'</em>. Meryl Streep (Ellen), Gary Oldman (Mossack) and Antonio Banderas (Fonseca) are the main reasons I'm not rating this lower. They stop it becoming an annoying watch. You also have Jeffrey Wright, David Schwimmer and Nonso Anozie involved too - as well as even Sharon Stone and James Cromwell. I just didn't like the way they chose to portray everything, I appreciate what they went for but it simply didn't work for me. It's definitely one of those things, though, that will depend on the viewer - I'm sure many will find it good. The comedy is extremely lacking, in accordance to my tastes anyway. Also, even though I praised Oldman and Banderas themselves, I found their characters particularly irritating - same goes with the ending. Feels like it merits an inferior score and yet... A charitable 5*.

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CinemaSerf avatar

CinemaSerf

6.0/10

May 30, 2024

This had the potential to be an eye-opening opportunity to bring to the fore all the devious antics and off-shore activities carried out by people from all nations - but recently publicised by the Mossack-Fonseca revelations. Instead, it delivered a largely pedestrian investi-journo kind of piece that traded heavily on the names of it's three stars and very little on any meaningful substance. The two-handers between Messrs. Oldman and Banderas are witty and focused, but captured against the banality of the rest of the film merely serve to illustrate why sheep have a shepherd. Meryl Streep is, I think, going for the Dame Judi Dench "how little screen-time can I get away with whilst still getting top billing award". What an open goal; what a miss....!

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