BEFORE: I'm going to skip Friday, as I have to work late on Friday night, so my next movie counts for Saturday. I'm going out on Saturday, too, there's a beer festival in the afternoon so when I get home from that I won't be in any condition to watch a movie. Moving my review to Saturday accomplishes the following and I can still get to Mother's Day movie on time:
John Hoogenakker carries over again from "G20" and today we've got a special Birthday SHOUT-out to Al Pacino, born on 4/25/1940. That's right, he's turning 86 today, but he's a very young 86, to be sure.
THE PLOT: When a contract killer is diagnosed with a rapidly evolving form of dementia, he is offered an opportunity to redeem himself by saving the life of his estranged adult son.
AFTER: Al Pacino is OLD, sure - his character here claims to be pushing 90, and so we don't see him running around or shooting anybody, his role in "Knox Goes Away" is to be a mentor to the main character and give him advice over the phone. We do see him, but he's usually sitting in a chair, or once in a bathtub I think, but there's nothing physical he has to do, just talk on the phone. He's done a LOT of movies, man, I think he's earned his break - he hasn't retired from acting like Jack Nicholson or Robert Duvall did, but clearly what he can do in a movie is limited due to his age.
I've seen a fair number of Michael Keaton movies over the years, and I think I finally figured out what "type" of character he prefers to play, and I think if you see most of his movies like I have, you start to put it together. He either plays really smart characters or really stupid ones, and maybe sometimes both at the same time. Seeing him in February in "Much Ado About Nothing" kind of cemented that, his Dogberry was very dumb, to the point of serving as comic relief, yet he figured out the scheme of Don John and saved the wedding day for Hero and Claudio. Sure, he arrested Borachio without fully knowing what treasonous act he had done, but he knew he was guilty of SOMETHING and took him to a town official when he couldn't figure it out himself. In other films ("American Assasin", "Protege") he's played master assassins, and those people have to be pretty smart, and then in the Spider-Man movies he played the Vulture, and was able to figure out that Peter Parker had a secret. And while "Batman" is called the world's greatest detective (smart) he also played Bruce Wayne as a clueless playboy (dumb) - and I think "Beetlejuice" is another great example of a character who's somehow smart and stupid at the same time. His character in "Birdman" was a smart playwright who was maybe also going insane, that counts, too, right?
So here he plays a contract killer who used to be a college professor - so we're back on "smart", I mean he's killed a lot of guys and never got caught, so he's got to be both book-smart and street-smart. BUT, he learns that he's got a fast-developing form of dementia, so as time goes on he's going to be less and less lucid, and he may start forgetting names and details, so he's going to end up "dumb", in a sense, very soon. He can't reveal his diagnosis to his handlers, his only plan is to get out of this lifestyle before his brain stops working right, I mean what good is a hit-man who might forget who he's supposed to kill, in the middle of doing a job? Sure, you can write a bunch of stuff down, but that only works if you read it, plus then he's leaving a paper trail.
So this plays out a little bit like "Memento" did - a guy who's got a job to do, only he knows his memory is shot, so he's got to leave himself little notes if he wants to get out of this life and have some time left when he's not tracking down people and killing them before he dies. I still have to re-watch "Memento", I'm overdue but I've been pretty busy. Knox can't officially quit, with his knowledge of all his hits then his boss might have to take him out, but he can cash out the money he's earned and invested, launder it, and divide it into thirds, leaving it to his ex-wife, his estranged son, and the woman he spends Tuesdays with, who I assume is a hooker.
The whole plan is complicated when his son, Miles, shows up at his door, covered in blood and with a bad cut on his hand, he's killed someone, but he had a very good reason, and he needs his father's help to cover it up. Knox does know a thing or two about disposing of bodies, however, that's not what he does here. He helps his son calm down, gets him cleaned up and then he goes to look at the scene. The victim was a total scumbag, a low-level criminal who got Miles' daughter pregnant, and instead of dealing with that some other way, Miles lost control and stabbed the guy 17 times.
Rather than clean up the crime scene, which would eventually raise suspicion, Knox does something totally different, he gets rid of the actual evidence, and then plants a bogus knife with Miles' fingerprints in a place where the cops can find it easily, also he gets rid of Miles' real bloody clothing and then plants a bogus bloody shirt in his son's trash. Man, it took a while for me to figure out what Knox was doing here, but it actually was pretty brilliant. He assumed that Miles would not be able to keep his cool, and eventually he would be arrested for the murder, and there was enough evidence (the cut on his hand, the motive) for the cops to detain Miles, however when they REALLY examined the evidence, it would tell a different tale.
God, this was so smart. I'm blown away by it and I'm left wondering how somebody came up with it. For the majority of the movie, it sure looked like Knox was framing his son while pretending to help him, and then I was also wondering if the dementia had already kicked into high gear, and if he knew what he was doing, or just going through the motions of some past hit, and his actions didn't seem to make much sense, but then of course they did. "M'wah", chef's kiss. No notes.
Except, of course, for the notes that Knox had to make this plan, but he burned those. Also he knew that by the time the cops fully investigated the murder scene, he himself might be completely incoherent and therefore unable to stand trial or adequately defend himself. Meanwhile Knox also was taking those last steps to acquire his stash, get that money laundered and split three ways - no, wait, two but that's another story. So in the end this turned out to be a very smart, touching story about a father making a sacrifice to save his son, and damn, this would have been a great thing to save for Father's Day, if only I had known to do that.
Directed by Michael Keaton (producer of "Worth")
Also starring Michael Keaton (last seen in "Much Ado About Nothing"), James Marsden (last seen in "The Best of Me"), Suzy Nakamura (last seen in "Horrible Bosses 2"), Joanna Kulig (last seen in "Hansel & Gretel: Witch Hunters"), Ray McKinnon (last seen in "News of the World"), Lela Loren (last seen in "Bruised"), Marcia Gay Harden (last seen in "Get a Job"), Al Pacino (last seen in "Hangman"), Dennis Dugan (last seen in "Happy Gilmore 2"), Jay Paulson (last seen in "Killers of the Flower Moon"), Paul Perri (last seen in "Vice" (2018)), Edwin Garcia II (last seen in "Holes"), Nicole Reddinger, Charles Bisset, Martin Garcia (last seen in "Ingrid Goes West"), Morgan Bastin, Natasha Galano, Rena Bobbs, Chad Donella (last seen in "Shattered Glass"), Marisa Echeverria, Gugun Deep Singh, Cassie Moronez, Kristofer Gordon, Jimmy Ortega (last seen in "Crank: High Voltage"), Sasha Neboga, Benita Krista Nall (last seen in "13 Going on 30"), Anthony Molinari (last seen in "The Rental"), Zedric Harris (last seen in "Triple Frontier"), Lee Dawson, Dan Ringey
RATING: 6 out of 10 storage units (at different locations, of course)
