WT

Snatch

2000 · Directed by Guy Ritchie

🧘2

Woke Score

55

Critic

🍿83

Audience

Ultra Based

Critics rated this 53 points above its woke score. Among Ultra Based films, this critic score ranks #1060 of 1469.

🎭

Representation Casting

Score: 0/100

The film casts minority actors in roles defined almost entirely by ethnic stereotype. These are not complex representations but caricatures designed for comedic effect.

🏳️‍🌈

LGBTQ+ Themes

Score: 0/100

No LGBTQ+ themes, characters, or representation of any kind appears in the film.

👑

Feminist Agenda

Score: 0/100

The film contains minimal female characters and shows no interest in feminist themes or perspectives.

Racial Consciousness

Score: 0/100

The film demonstrates no racial consciousness. Instead, it deploys racial and ethnic stereotypes as its primary comedic currency.

🌱

Climate Crusade

Score: 0/100

Climate themes are entirely absent from this crime comedy.

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Eat the Rich

Score: 0/100

While the film depicts criminals and violence, it offers no critique of capitalism or systemic inequality. It is simply a heist narrative.

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Body Positivity

Score: 0/100

Body positivity is not a theme in this film. Characters are depicted without commentary on their physical appearance.

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Neurodivergence

Score: 0/100

No representation of neurodivergence or related themes appears in the film.

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Revisionist History

Score: 0/100

The film does not engage with history in any form, revisionist or otherwise.

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Lecture Energy

Score: 5/100

While the film lacks explicit preachy lectures, its entire comedic strategy relies on the audience sharing the filmmaker's assumptions about what makes various ethnic groups inherently amusing. This is a form of implicit messaging.

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Synopsis

Unscrupulous boxing promoters, violent bookies, a Russian gangster, incompetent amateur robbers, and supposedly Jewish jewellers fight to track down a priceless stolen diamond.

Consciousness Assessment

Snatch arrives as a deliberately provocative artifact of early 2000s sensibilities, a film that wears its anti-political-correctness stance like a badge of honor. Guy Ritchie constructs his London underworld through exaggerated ethnic caricature, banking on the assumption that audiences will read these grotesqueries as knowing subversion rather than mere mockery. The Jewish jewelers exist primarily as stereotyped plot devices, their characterization more cartoon than character. This is not progressive storytelling masquerading as edgy comedy. This is edgy comedy that has aged into something resembling a time capsule of a particular cultural moment's taste for offensive transgression.

The film's structural mechanics are sound, its pacing energetic, its violence bloodless and cartoonish enough to avoid genuine consequences. But beneath the stylistic flourishes lies a film fundamentally uninterested in the humanity of anyone it portrays. Every character is a type, every group a collection of traits to be mined for laughs. The Russian gangster, the Irish Travelers, the Jewish dealers, the Black bookmakers all exist as variations on a theme of otherness, rendered amusing through exaggeration and rapid-cut editing.

What distinguishes Snatch from genuinely progressive cinema is not merely its lack of representation in the modern sense, but its active commitment to the opposite: a cinema of strategic dehumanization dressed up as sophistication. This is not a film wrestling with difficult truths about marginalization or power. It is a film that has decided marginalized communities are funny because of their difference, and that celebrating this observation constitutes artistic daring. The passage of time has not been kind to this particular form of courage.

Analysis generated by our Consciousness Algorithm

Critic Reviews

55%from 31 reviews
Austin Chronicle89

Snatch is nothing if not watchable: It has the insane, popcorn rhythms of a Road Runner cartoon, and for that reason alone it's a minor masterpiece.

Marc SavlovRead Full Review →
Rolling Stone80

Ritchie's got something all his own: a go-for-broke energy that cuts through the cliches of the crime genre.

Peter TraversRead Full Review →
Portland Oregonian75

The convoluted story is an excuse for comical tricks of the camera, fractures of chronology, acid punch lines and amusingly excessive performances. (In this latter category, Pitt, so deep into his character that you can smell him, wins the day gloriously.)

Shawn LevyRead Full Review →
Village Voice20

For those who care, Madonna has found her match in Guy Ritchie, whose absence of talent when it comes to the film medium is equal to her own.

Amy TaubinRead Full Review →