Category Archives: mystery

Shadowboxer

An impressive, different 2005 movie from a first time director and first time writer, Shadowboxer stars Cuba Gooding, Jr., Helen Mirren and Vanessa Ferlito as an offbeat family. Mirren and Gooding are lovers, though Mirren was also sort of his stepmother, who make a living as an anonymous, efficient team of killers for hire. Mirren, as the film opens, is dying of cancer and they take one last job together: killing Ferlito along with several men who work for her psychotic mob boss husband (Stephen Dorff, always good at the crazy roles).

When Mirren gets to Ferlito’s room and is about to finish the contract, Ferlito stands up and her water breaks. Yeah, she’s ready to give birth to Dorff’s kid, that’s how nuts he is. Mirren takes Ferlito with them, unable despite decades of homicide to take out a pregnant woman and her nearly born child. Dying has given her perspective.

Gooding is, of course, insane as well since he saw his father kill his mother and, shortly thereafter, his father get murdered too. Not to mention having the stepmom turn into his lover and instructor in the deadly arts. He has no ability to make decisions for himself; Mirren has done that all his life and, after the cancer takes her away, Ferlito does (though without realizing quite what’s happening).

Macy Gray and Joseph Gordon-Levitt give nice supporting performances as Ferlito’s best friend and doctor to both Mirren and Gooding and Dorff’s crew. Lee Daniels is the first time director and William Lipz the first time writer and I think the credit can be split fairly evenly. This is a decent movie, though not great, with interesting characters, a different sort of take on contract killers and romance and the meaning of family and good visuals and pacing.

recommended

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Let's Go to Prison

This 2006 piece of dreck comedy was so boring that I hit stop after 15 minutes (right after Will Arnett’s character’s trial opens). I expected more from Let’s Go to Prison since it stars Arnett and Dax Shepherd, was written by the Reno 911/Night at the Museum/The Pacifier team of Thomas Lennon and Robert Ben Garant and was directed by the funny Bob Odenkirk.

not recommended

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Deja Vu

Denzel Washington and Tony Scott do not generally make for a thrilling combination (e.g., Man on Fire) despite the quality of their work otherwise. So I skipped this 2006 release until the other day when the supply was really low and it was available in HD on demand. Deja Vu exceeded my expectations but that’s only because they were so very, very low.

Washington plays Doug Carlin, an ATF agent in the New Orleans office, when one weekday morning someone blows up a ferry full of kids and soldiers and their families, killing over 500 of them. Carlin catches the eye of FBI agent Paul Pryzwarra (Val Kilmer, who gives a paycheck-oriented performance) after he points out that one body was actually found dead five minutes before the explosion and Pryzwarra adds him to his very special investigatory team.

Special because the team is using, for the first time in the field, what they explain to Carlin as a very high power satellite surveillance system that allows them to show in ultrahigh def exactly what happened anywhere within the target area from any angle, with high fidelity sound as well. The catch is that the system can only show what happened four days and six hours in the past, because it takes that long to process the input, and the data flow is so large that it cannot be recorded.

Pryzwarra and the system’s slacker savant developer, played by Adam Goldberg, try to hide the true nature of the device from Carlin but he’s too slick and figures out that it’s actually a camera which sees directly into the past. Or rather, creates a sort of tunnel into the past, through which they can send a signal. Probably a piece of paper, with a warning of the impending explosion, and maybe even a person. A person?! That’s so whack they never had the nerve to test the idea.

The biggest problem is that everything in the movie rests on this magic camera and, despite the explanation that Goldberg’s scientist character eventually provides, is something even this inveterate science fiction fan won’t accept. It’s a combination of a bad take on string theory and inconsistent technology, and the script by Bill Marsilli (whose previous credits are for a couple of kid’s TV cartoons) and Terry Rossio (a better track record but presumably brought in to fix Marsilli’s work) can’t overcome this basic failing.

not recommended

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Notorious

Released just months after V-E day and the end of World War II, Alfred Hitchcock’s Notorious is fixed clearly on the post-Hitler Nazi threat, among the earliest manifestations of a pop culture meme that continued for decades in movies like the Dustin Hoffman/Lawrence Olivier thriller Marathon Man and Robert Harris’s classic ‘what if England lost’ novel Fatherland.

John Huberman is convicted of treason for being a German spy in early 1946 and his daughter Alicia (Ingrid Bergman) attempts to drown her sorrow in liquor and men in Miami. One night T.R. Devlin (Cary Grant) shows up at one of those parties at her bungalow and, in the morning when she wakes with a nasty hangover, suggests that a better way to get past her dad’s disgrace is to work for him to infiltrate a Nazi gang in Rio de Janeiro; Devlin wants her because one of the conspiracy’s leaders has held a crush on Alicia for years and is himself getting old enough to feel real pressure to marry and settle down.

The two fly to Brazil where a chance encounter with Alexander Sebastian (Claude Rains) is arranged; a few lunches and dinner later, after Momma Sebastian (played with a delightfully nasty edge by Leopoldine Konstantin) can meet and give her blessing, he pops the question. Neither Alicia nor Devlin are happy about this since by now they are in love but the bosses don’t know that, nor would they care even so, and instruct her to accept.

While the conspiracy is disposed of by the end–could you imagine some other outcome?–the survival of the two lovebirds and their romance is far less certain. Hitchcock is the master of suspense and Notorious is considered one of his best films, Ben Hecht wrote a very strong script (he won the Best Original Screenplay Oscar) and Grant, Bergman and Rains all give terrific performances (Rains was nominated for Best Supporting Actor, losing to Harrold Russell’s outstanding effort in The Best Years of Our Lives) so this is a movie you really ought to see when the chance comes around again on DVD or cable.

recommended

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The French Connection

Released in 1971, The French Connection was part of the post-hippy hardedged wave of films including The Godfather and Serpico that did a hard reset on American, and especially New York, cops and robbers police procedurals. This movie, directed by William Freidkin and written by Ernest Tidyman from Robin Moore’s novel, revels in the mundane emotions of a cop’s job, the long stretches of boredom punctuated by a foot chase that leaves everyone heaving for a breath and imperfections generated by base emotions like jealousy and spite, as well as the dirt and hassles which pervade modern American urban life.

Gene Hackman stars as NYPD Detective Poppy Doyle along with Roy Scheider as his partner Det. Cloudy Russo, Tony Lo Bianco as Sal Boca and Fernando Rey as Alain Charnier; Marcel Boffuzzi has a great cameo as Charnier’s muscleman Pierre Nicoli and Eddie Egan and Sonny Grosso, the real life cops whose exploits were the basis of the film, also have small parts.

Doyle has about exhausted the patience of his boss and squadmates in the Narcotics Bureau, not to mention his liver’s capacity to clean booze from his blood when he notices a small time hood called Sal Boca throw around serious cash having dinner and drinks with some far larger fish. On a hunch he and Russo tail Boca and his wife, only to see them switching cars and scrambling to get home in time to open the greasy spoon they run in Queens. “Exercising discretion” the stay on Boca for a few more days until he meets up with Joel Weinstock, a man known for financing major drug deals.

This is enough, barely, to get their Lieutenant’s approval for a bigger operation with the FBI drug squad. Meanwhile, Boca really is trying to put together a French drug connection with Charnier, a Marseille mob boss, with financing from Weinstock. Staking out Boca brought Charnier onto their radar but he’s wily and experienced at detecting a tail.

Hackman establishes the screen persona here that he went on to use so effectively over his long, acclaimed career, ornery, convinced of his own correctness and resentful of authority and so it isn’t too surprising that he won the Best Actor Oscar for his performance. Scheider is also good playing the softer, suffering partner, willing to take risks and still clean up after Doyle and he was nominated for Supporting Actor but lost to Ben Johnson (for Larry McMurtry and Peter Bogdanovich’s The Last Picture Show). Rey and Boffuzzi are also really effective and Lo Bianco does well with, to be honest, the one major character not given much meat.

Friedkin and Tidyman also won Oscars for directing and adapted screenplay, respectively, and the movie took the Best Picture award for the producers. 36 years later much of what they accomplished here may seem less exciting but at the time was innovative; consider that three of the other Best Picture nominees were The Last Picture Show, Nicholas and Alexandria and Fiddler on the Roof, all quality films to be sure but nothing all that original, though the fifth was Stanley Kubrick’s A Clockwork Orange, which was even more creative and rush-inducing.

recommended

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The Brave One

On a hot summer night in Manhattan two women are attacked, separately, and end up in the same Intensive Care unit. One lives, barely, though her fiance died at the hands of three Hispanic gangbangers and the other dies, purportedly a suicide. An NYPD detective, assigned the suicide, checks in on the woman who survived; he’s a fan of her NPR-ish radio show. The pair of cops from his squad assigned to her case get nowhere on the vicious assault even though the perps videotaped themselves.

Erica Bain (Jodi Foster) is barely able to get past the fear that keeps her trapped inside her apartment and when she does its to get a handgun. Her radio show mainly consisted of her talking over random sounds she recorded on walks all over the city but now she shrinks at the sound of footsteps on busy streets in broad daylight. The fiance’s family couldn’t (didn’t?) wait for her to be released from the hospital so she makes a trip to his grave, crying until she falls asleep at his feet.

When she wakes up the Sun’s long gone and the subway car she rides home is nearly empty. A soft white teenager is lost in his iPod and two young black guys use the threat of a beating to take it from him. At the next stop he and a father and daughter race off but Erica remains, seemingly lost in her own world. “Locked down,” the former iPod owner later describes her. The two guys can’t believe she stayed and as the train pulls out of the station they move on her. Erica simply pulls the pistol out of her purse and shoots them both dead.

This time NYPD Detective Mercer (Terrance Howard) is the primary in what’s quickly becoming known as another Bernie Goetz vigilante. Two more times the vigilante strikes and, since the cops and everyone else assumes the self-appointed crime fighter is male, no one even considers Erica as a suspect. Mercer and Bain have even met in her media persona role and, from his perspective, are maybe falling for each other.

Then, just after a post-midnight, unable to sleep phone call, the husband of the alleged suicide from the opening is murdered. Since Murrow’s a sleaze, involved in drugs, sex slaves and more, and Mercer fears for the guy’s six year old stepdaughter who might just know a bit too much about her mother’s death, he isn’t too upset at catching the case. Almost certainly Murrow was offed by someone in the business, a competitor or a cheated partner. Then he hears the elevator bell in the parking garage where the murder happened and remembers hearing the same sound towards the end of his call with Bain.

While I usually don’t give so much of the plot here it doesn’t matter. Police procedurals, cat and mouse, mistaken assumptions, all standard fare. Not bad but not that relevant to why you want to see The Brave One. Which you absolutely do because Foster and Howard turn in two amazing performances that ought to get serious consideration come awards season.

The script by Bruce Taylor, Roderick Taylor and Cynthia Mort (I couldn’t figure out if the Taylors are brothers, though they seem to generally work together) is interesting, though obviously reminiscent of Death Wish, Taxi Driver and the much more recent Death Sentence. The complex dance between Foster and Howard’s characters and, for the most part, the consistency of their actions throughout put this movie closer to Scorsese’s classic than the other two.

Perhaps this ought not to be that surprising given that Brave One is directed by Neil Jordan, the Irishman whose made such excellent films as (in chronological, not quality, order) Mona Lisa, The Crying Game (won the original screenplay Oscar, nominated for directing but lost to Eastwood’s Unforgiven), The End of the Affair and The Good Thief. Roger Ebert’s review points to Jordan’s frequent focus on gender subversion in his movies which is perhaps at least partially explained by what he said about his schooling in Ireland: “[Y]ou have an educational system run by celibate men in skirts, which is bizarre in itself.”

Travis Bickle, Paul Kersey and Nick Hume–all men. And as mentioned no one is looking for a female vigilante in this situation either. Erica is able to move freely through the days, to show up at Mercer’s press conference, at a precinct house and even start taking calls on air about the person taking justice into ‘his’ own hands without really attracting any suspicion, because ‘these people’ are always men.

But we get a nice bit of foreshadowing that I bet most viewers miss (I did) when Howard tries to explain to other police why Murrow’s wife wasn’t a suicide. Women, he points out, never shoot themselves in the face because they’re too conscious of what comes afterward. Subtle, but on point.

You will probably read or hear some complaints about the ending, speculation about studio meddling. I agree that denoument is weaker than it could, and should, have been. But after consideration my opinion is that it’s inconsequential because what’s dazzling here are Foster, Howard and Jordan, their ability to bring out powerful, damaging emotions without taking them too far and turning The Brave One into a campy, unintentional farce. No, this is a keeper.

definitely recommended

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The Spy Who Came in from the Cold

Based on the classic John Le Carre novel, The Spy Who Came in from the Cold strikes me as perhaps the first major feature film taking an overtly cynical posture on the way intelligence agencies on both sides of the iron curtain did business. In 1965, released amidst the massive success of the first James Bond movies and just before the anti-war movement went mainstream, the film’s attitude and low tech approach–it was one of the last major releases shot in black and white–didn’t go over well and the film pretty much sank from sight.

Forty years later those are no longer obstacles to appreciating the quality of the acting, direction and screenplay. Richard Burton has one of his best outings as the title character, a spy called Alec Leamas returned from a decade of service running the Berlin station, though one wonders just how difficult playing a burned out drunk was for the former Mr. Elizabeth Taylor.

Some fine supporting performances by Claire Bloom as a beautiful, naive young English communist, Cyril Cusack as Leamas’ MI-6 controller, Oskar Werner as a Jewish East German spy boss at war with Peter van Eyck, his anti-semitic boss, and Beatrix Lehmann as the stern chief of the tribunal where Leamas and the two East German spies face off.

Martin Ritt, who also directed such classics as Woody Allen’s The Front, Sounder, a couple of Paul Newman hits (Hud and The Long, Hot Summer) and Norma Rae, has his A game on Cold, using lighting as a powerful tool to convey emotions and framing shots precisely to help viewers see beneath the dialog. The script by Guy Trosper (Jailhouse Rock and Birdman of Alcatraz) and Paul Dehn (Goldfinger, the second Bond movie), who came on to finish it when Trosper passed away, does very well in getting the meat of Le Carre’s novel on screen with some very crisp dialog and plot construction.

Le Carre is the pen name of David Cornwell, a real life an MI-6 spy. He was still active when this movie was made but shortly thereafter left the agency as one of the dozens of western agents betrayed to the Soviets by Kim Philby; one expects he’d have not stayed much longer in any case as his literary star bloomed. Many Le Carre novels have been made into acclaimed films and mini-series, including his best known work Tinker, Tailor, Solder, Spy starring Alec Guinness, The Little Drummer Girl with Diane Keaton and ex-Bond Pierce Brosnan starrer The Tailor of Panama as well as the 2005 critical favorite Constant Gardener.

recommended

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The 6th Day

After 20 years, his producers seemed to be having trouble coming up with new big action thrillers for Arnold Schwarzenegger; this 2000 release was the next to last one he made except for the third Terminator, which I don’t count because it was a sequel. At least the producers gave us a villain who was neither a terrorist nor a machine this time, eh?

In The 6th Day, set a few years in our future, the Governator plays Adam Gibson, partners with Hank Morgan (Michael Rappaport) in a leading edge helicopter taxi service. One beautiful day the two are hired to fly multi-billionaire Michael Drucker (Tony Goldwyn) up to a nearby mountain for some skiing. Actually Gibson is hired but he and Morgan switch without telling Drucker’s people as Adam needs to run an errand.

There’s a big surprise when he gets home to his lovely wife (Wendy Crewson) and daughter and it isn’t just the surprise birthday party for him: he’s already inside celebrating. Then, after four hard cases come along and try to kill him, Ah-nold is off and running. We already know who’s chasing him: Drucker is sponsoring cloning research by superscientist Griffin Weir (Robert Duvall), and while the research has pretty much succeeded cloning humans is still against the law. No one outside Drucker’s inner circle can be allowed to know about the active program.

6th Day was written by the husband and wife team of Carmac and Marianne Wibberly and directed by veteran Roger Spottiswoode; it’s the first big production for the writers, who went on to write the I Spy movie, the Charlie’s Angels and Bad Boys sequels, Tim Allen’s Shaggy Dog remake and Nic Cage’s National Treasure, while Spottiswoode previously gave us the Bond movie Tomorrow Never Dies, the Robin Williams/Kurt Russell The Best of Times and Sly Stallone Stop! Or My Mother Will Shoot comedies and the AIDs docudrama And the Band Played On.

Here the first half is entertaining because we know what’s happening but Schwarzenegger’s character is struggling to figure it out for himself and then the movie kicks into top gear after the two Adams connect and work together to take down Drucker. Dr. Weir gives a major assist after finally growing himself a conscience.

Of the big guys post-True Lies action flicks, The 6th Day is my favorite though it doesn’t really reach the same heights as that one, Last Action Hero or the first Terminator.

recommended

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War

Teaming up for the second time, Jet Li and Jason Stathem are the opponents in a movie that matches the latest trends in extreme violence. FBI agent Hank Crawford (Stathem) gets in the middle of a war between a Triad gang lead by Chang (John Lone) and a Yakuza family run by Shiro (Ryo Ishibashi), but he really wants Rogue (Li), a Chinese hitman who used to work for the CIA and now does the business for Chang. He also murdered Crawford’s partner and his partner’s wife and young daughter just moments before Crawford arrived with his own wife (Andrea Roth, Dennis Leary’s wife on Rescue Me) and son.

War is pretty much what one expects for a late summer action flick: plenty of action with guns and martial arts smackdowns, cops versus robbers and a bevy of gorgeous babes. In the latter group are Devon Aoki as Shiro’s daughter and number two, Nadine Velasquez (Catalina on My Name is Earl) as Chang’s wife and an uncredited, tall and very well endowed beauty as a hooker who delivers Li’s first payday.

The real hottie in War, though, is the car Jet Li drives throughout: the Spyker C8 Spyder. A Dutch marque not widely seen in the US despite being around since 1914 and having a Formula One entry, you can check them out in person at Spyker of Silicon Valley. However, you better go loaded since the car lists for over $250,000.

The director is Phillip Atwell, moving up to features after making his mark with some high profile rap videos for 50 Cent, DMX, NWA and Xhibit. Atwell does okay, never letting the action slow down and adding flash and movement even in what could otherwise be very talky scenes. The script, from Lee Smith and Greg Bradley, is less exciting though there are a couple of pretty decent twists in the third act; not terrible for the first produced script for either.

recommended

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Dirty Work

I only watched this movie because there was nothing else even remotely interesting and Lance Reddick is so good on The Wire. Reddick is a dirty cop but we’re supposed to think that’s only due to some bad luck and too much gambling, which got him under the thumb of Julian, a weird local crime boss played by Austin Pembleton.

Dirty Work picks up when Assistant State Attorney Frank Sullivan (Mike McGlore), running for his boss’s job, comes home late one night. During a fight he gets physical with his alcoholic wife and strangles her; he and his campaign manager smuggle the body out and stage her to appear as if she was another victim of a rapist/murderer. The other plot is that Reddick decides he’s not going to let Julian ruin a young Polish hotel maid, after she overheard the real killer, Julian’s top goon, admit that fact to his boss.

In the end, this movie is too simple and formulaic. Writer/director Bruce Terris, in his first feature-length production, leans too heavily on dark visuals, bad Chicago winter weather and some pretty decent acting to overcome poor material with too few surprises for a thriller.

not recommended

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