Posts tagged thriller
‘The Town’ movie review: Affleck labors hard in gripping cops-and-robbers thriller
Sep 17th
‘The Town’ movie review: Affleck labors hard in gripping cops-and-robbers thriller Published: Friday, September 17, 2010, 8:00 AM
Stephen Whitty/The Star-Ledger
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Claire Folger Jon Hamm, left, as an FBI special agent squares off against Ben Affleck in the crime drama “The Town.”
Some kids go into the family business.
And in one Boston neighborhood, it’s the Family business.
You learn the skills early. How to hot-wire a car. How to get into a vault. How to hit an armored car, hard, and how, if you’re caught, to keep your mouth shut, no matter what.
How to be a thief, basically — just like dear old Dad.
That’s the point behind “The Town,” anyway, a solid crime thriller from Beantown’s Ben Affleck, who showed he could write in “Good Will Hunting,” and that he could direct in “Gone Baby Gone.”
I don’t know if his stats on Boston’s Charlestown neighborhood are true — it’s been pretty yuppified over the past decade, and, no matter what “The Departed” says, the Irish mob seems to be in decline. But it’s certainly alive and unwell in “The Town.”
Based on a novel by Chuck Hogan, the screenplay (which Affleck co-wrote) follows a quartet of skilled robbers. Doug is the brains of the outfit, and getting tired. Jem, his best friend, is the loose cannon always far too ready to reach for his gun.
You can see where this is going to end, can’t you?
Well, maybe not, as the movie takes a couple of interesting turns and spotlights a few solid performances. As a director, Ben Affleck is no Michael Mann, that’s for sure (and he’d probably be the first to agree). But at its best, “The Town” may remind you of “Heat” — and not totally embarrass itself by the comparison.
Like that film, “The Town” takes an interest in how men work together on a complicated caper (and how they work against each other when the past or dreams of the future get involved). Like that film, it also has a slam-bang, middle-of-the-day urban gun battle.
Mostly, though, it has a couple of great performances.
One of them is by Jeremy Renner, the mad bomb defuser of “The Hurt Locker,” now back as Jem, an equally fierce risk addict. Another is — maybe you should sit down first — Blake Lively, who leaves the “Gossip Girl” world behind to play a sluttish junkie who’s still waiting on a bar stool for Dougie to drop by.
That’s Affleck’s part, and it’s a quiet one by design — Doug’s supposed to be the cool one here. But Affleck pulls it off nicely. And he’s smart enough to surround himself with good actors and then to let them work — like Rebecca Hall, who is superb as a terrorized bank employee.
The movie, like the recent French film “Mesrine,” does seem to prefer the crooks to the cops. The only lawmen we really get to know are charmless creeps; the rest remain nameless targets, mere inconveniences for our antiheroes to mow down.
Although Doug may find ways to justify what he does for a living, it would be nice if the film didn’t aid and abet him.
Still, as a straightforward cops-and-robbers picture, “The Town” delivers.
The local color is astute. The pacing is fine and the characters well-drawn. And although it gets a bit too Hollywood in its final scenes, the gang’s climactic heist gets points just for sheer nerve.
But then Affleck — reinventing himself, yet again — knows something about audacity.
Stephen Whitty. (212) 790-4435 or swhitty@starledger.com
Roger Ebert: Ben Affleck’s heist movie ‘The Town’ is an effective thriller
Sep 16th
Ben Affleck plays Doug MacRay in the bank robbery-thriller The Town. This is Affleck s second movie as director. (WARNER BROS.)There’s a scene in Ben Affleck’s “The Town” that expertly exploits the conversations we have with movie characters. In critical moments we urgently send mental instructions to the screen. Let me set up such a moment here. Doug cares for Claire. There’s something she mustn’t know about him. If she should see the tattoo on the back of Jem’s neck, she would know everything. Jem unexpectedly joins Doug and Claire at a table. With hard looks and his whole manner, Doug signals him to get the hell away from the table. So do we. Jem is a dangerous goofball, and sadistically lingers. He doesn’t know the tattoo is a giveaway.
If a film can bring us to this point and make us feel anxiety, it has done something right. “The Town,” Affleck’s second film as a director, wants to do something more, to make a biographical and even philosophical statement about the culture of crime, but it doesn’t do that as successfully. Here is a well-made crime procedural, and audiences are likely to enjoy it at that level, but perhaps the mechanics of movie crime got in the way of Affleck’s higher ambitions.
There are two fairly extended scenes in the film, for example, during which bank robbers with machine guns exchange fire with a large number of cops. My opinion is that when automatic weapons are used by experienced shooters at less than a block’s distance, a lot of people are going to get killed or wounded. It becomes clear in “The Town” that nobody will get shot until and/or unless the screenplay requires it, and that causes an audience letdown. We feel the story is no longer really happening, and we’re being asked to settle yet once again for a standard chase-and-gunfight climax.
I believe Affleck, his writers and their source (the novel “Prince of Thieves” by Chuck Hogan) know better, and their characters deserve better. But above a certain budget level, Hollywood films rarely allow complete follow-through for their characters. Consider the widespread public dislike for the year’s best crime film, George Clooney’s “The American.” People didn’t want a look into the soul of an existential criminal. They wanted a formula to explain everything.
In “The Town,” Ben Affleck plays Doug MacRay, the next generation of a bank-robbing family in the Boston area of Charlestown. This square mile, we’re told, contains more thieves and bank robbers than anyplace else in the country. It’s a family trade, like cobbling or the law. Affleck heads a four-man crew most notably including Jem (a pudgy, loopy Jeremy Renner, miles different than in “The Hurt Locker”). They plan their jobs meticulously, going to lengths to eradicate DNA traces and confiscate security tapes. But Jem has a wild streak. He injures civilians when it’s not necessary, and during one job does what is forbidden: He takes a hostage, Claire (Rebecca Hall). Kidnapping is a heavy-duty crime.
They release Claire unharmed. Turns out she lives in Charlestown. Jem gets paranoid. Doug trails her to a Laundromat, meets her by “accident,” gets to know and quite unexpectedly gets to like her. This is what “The Town” is really about — how getting to know Claire opens Doug’s mind to the fullness of a life his heritage has denied him. The film could have continued to grow in that direction, but instead pulls back and focuses on more crime. We meet Doug’s hard-boiled father (Chris Cooper) in prison, and a local crime lord (Pete Postlethwaite, unrelenting). And we follow an FBI team led by Jon Hamm. They have a good idea who they’re looking for; you don’t make a career out of bank robbery in Charlestown without the word getting around. But they lack evidence they can take to a jury.
The most intriguing character is Jem. As played by Renner, he’s a twisted confusion of behavior, a loose cannon on a team that requires discipline. He’s furious when he finds Doug friendly with the woman who could finger them, and the jumpy way he plays friendly is chilling. There’s something interesting going on here: Doug is the central character and all interest should move to him, but at about the halfway point it becomes clear that his character has been deprived of impulse and committed to an acceptable ending. Jem, however, remains capable of anything. If you’ve seen a lot of Jeremy Renner before, you might need to look twice to recognize him; it’s like the hero of “The Hurt Locker” moved to Boston and started on a diet of beer, brats and fries.
“The Town” shows, as his first film “Gone Baby Gone” (2007) did, that Affleck has the stuff of a real director. Everything is here. It’s an effective thriller, he works closely with the actors, he has a feel for pacing. Yet I persist in finding chases and gun battles curiously boring. I realize the characters have stopped making the decisions and the stunt and effects artists have taken over.
Playing at: Regal 13, R/C Hanover Movies, Queensgate Stadium 13, R/C Gateway Theater 8 and Frank Theatres Gettysburg Village Cinema.
‘The American’ a different sort of thriller
Sep 3rd
‘The American’ a different sort of thriller By Jenny Kobiela-Mondor Friday, 03 September 2010 04:34
“The American” is a thriller about an assassin, but don’t expect a James Bond — or Jason Bourne — -esque romp, complete with explosions and witty quips. If that’s what you’re expecting, you’ll be sorely disappointed.
No, “The American” is a different type of thriller.
The story follows an American assassin (George Clooney), who gives his name as both Jack and Edward in different times during the movie. After a tragic mishap at the beginning of the movie, he hides out in a small village in Italy to do one last job for his boss, Pavel (Johan Leysen) — to put together a custom gun for an assassin named Mathilde (Thelkla Reuten). After that, he’s out, or so he says.
As he’s working on the gun, he spends time with the local priest, Father Benedetto (Paolo Bonacelli). He also spends time with a local prostitute, Clara (Violante Placido), with whom he begins to develop a romantic relationship beyond the bordello where she works.
“The American” is a movie with a slower pace than many American movies, and I suspect that some audience members will get restless for an explosion. But patience is a virtue while watching this movie. Director Anton Corbijn and writer Rowan Joffe slowly and deliberately build Jack/Edward’s character, his motivations and the relationships with people around him. At times, I wondered about the point of scenes, but as the story built and the picture got less fuzzy, it was exciting to see where the story was leading. The end is truly thrilling, but, again, it’s not necessarily thrilling in a conventional sense. Instead, it’s the bittersweet release of a slow, deliberate buildup. It wasn’t a thrill a minute but, then again, I was never bored, either.
A lot of the success of this movie relies on Clooney’s performance, because a lot of the movie follows Clooney, without much dialogue or music to mask any problems with acting. Luckily, there aren’t any. Clooney doesn’t exhibit his famed smarmy charm in “The American.” Even though I’ve seen him in a wide range of roles, I feel like this movie is a bit of a risk for him, and it may not pay off in everybody’s eyes. People expecting the normal George Clooney they love in so many movies might be confused — or they might be delighted to see one of their favorite actors trying something new.
“The American” will be loved by some and hated by others. Some people will leave the theater disappointed that there weren’t more explosions and assassinations. But others — the more patient ones — will be delighted by the tightly wound, expertly crafted story, even if it isn’t exactly what they expected. If you open your mind, be patient and let “The American” unfold its story for you, you won’t be disappointed.
Jenny’s Take: See it before it leaves theaters.
(Runs 103 minutes. Rated R for violence, sexual content and nudity.)
Check out Jenny’s blog at www.fwdailynews.com/jenny.
Nicolas Cage Quits Trespass Thriller Movie
Aug 4th
Nicolas Cage Quits Trespass Thriller Movie
By: Jennifer Hong
Staff Writer
Published: Aug 4, 2010
After a film promotion with Disney, Nicolas Cage quits his latest Trespass movie and goes to the Bahamas.
Cage quits Trespass thriller movie. Nicolas Cage quits one of the latest film projects called Trespass and has retreated to the Bahamas. Trespass was only one movie that Cage is working on, and it quits just after a long promotional tour.
Trespass is a Louisiana-set thriller that was ready to begin filming in two weeks. Nicolas Cage is doing too many movies at once. In fact, the actor has pulled something of a disappearing act after a long promotional tour for Disney’s “The Sorcerer’s Apprentice.” The film is directed by Joel Schumacher.
The movie centers around a married couple taken hostage by thieves looking for an easy pay day. Nicole Kidman is set to play the wife, with Cage originally set to play the husband before he changed his mind a few weeks ago and switched to the role of the leader of the kidnappers. Producer Avi Lerner is currently scrambling to find an available actor to replace Nicolas Cage.
This means that the project has to justify the film’s $35 million budget. Cage was set to make a $7 million paycheck with the movie. The actor has been a steady performer for Lerner over the past few years, having appeared in “The Wicker Man,” “The Bad Lieutenant: Port of Call – New Orleans” and the upcoming “Drive Angry 3D.”
China to import hit sci-fi thriller ‘Inception’
Aug 3rd
China Film Group will give the Warner Bros. production one of its coveted 20 annual slots for revenue-sharing imports, Yuan Wenqiang, an executive who oversees imports for the state-owned company, told The Associated Press in a phone interview. The 148-minute film has already cleared Chinese censors, he said.
China splits revenues with foreign studios on 20 of their movies every year – a rule that effectively limits the country to 20 foreign blockbusters a year. It buys the rights to other lesser-known foreign films at flat rates.
Yuan said he didn’t know the release date. China Film Group’s distribution department couldn’t immediately be reached for comment. Calls to the company went unanswered. Warner Bros. didn’t immediately respond to an e-mail seeking comment.
Chinese media reports gave conflicting dates. The news website Sina.com said Sept. 21 in a report last week, but another website, Sohu.com, said Wednesday the date had been advanced to Sept. 2.
“Inception,” which is also being released in IMAX format, will face off against a slew of Chinese-language blockbusters in September – Zhang Yimou’s “The Love of the Hawthorn Tree” (Sept. 16), Andrew Lau’s “The Legend of the Fist: The Return of Chen Zhen” (Sept. 21) and the John Woo-produced “Reign of Assassins” (Sept. 28), both kung fu thrillers, as well as Tsui Hark’s “Detective Dee and the Mystery of the Phantom Flame,” Sina.com reported.
Despite the rapid growth of the Chinese box office, it still lags behind American ticket revenues. But the recent success of James Cameron’s sci-fi epic “Avatar” proved that Hollywood blockbusters can generate earnings on the same scale in China as they do domestically. The global box office champion of all-time raked in a massive $204 million in the country earlier this year, compared with nearly $750 million in the United States.
Hollywood’s leading trade association has lobbied Beijing for better access for years, but the Chinese government hasn’t budged. A World Trade Organization ruling in December urged China to let foreign movie studios distribute their movies in the country on their own – but didn’t address the annual import quota. Beijing has promised to comply by March 2011.
Starring Leonardo DiCaprio, Ken Watanabe, Marion Cotillard and Ellen Page, “Inception” follows a team of brain-tapping experts who are hired by a Japanese businessman to influence the thinking of the heir to an energy conglomerate. It has made $193 million in the U.S. and $171.5 million overseas as of Sunday, according to the box office tracking website Box Office Mojo.
The film was released in the semiautonomous southern Chinese territory Hong Kong on Thursday, earning $2 million as of Monday in the former British colony, said Ponnie Leung, a Hong Kong-based publicist for Warner Bros.
Warner Bros. decided not to release Nolan’s last blockbuster, “The Dark Knight” in China in 2008, citing “cultural sensitivities” to the movie. Studio executives were likely worried that its plot of Batman capturing an ethnic Chinese criminal in Hong Kong would offend Chinese censors.
