BEFORE: Jason Statham carries over from "Wrath of Man", and if all goes well, and his films stay available on streaming this week, I should have a new name on top of the leader board very soon. Take that, Celia Imrie.
I moved a few things around here as I figured with four more Statham movies to work with, I needed to hit at least ONE birthday, so the SHOUT-out goes out today to Ritchie Montgomery, born March 23 in, um, some year gone by. If you don't know Mr. Montgomery, he's a character (background?) actor who's shown up over 30 times here at the Movie Year, first in "Deja Vu" where he killed it as "Agent #1", and then "Young Doctor" in "Catch Me If You Can", and who can forget him as "Bus Driver" in "The Help"? He's versatile enough to have played doctors, pharmacists, policemen AND security guards, then went on to played characters with actual names in "Cleaner", "Contraband", "The Whole Truth" and "Geostorm". Happy Birthday, Mr. Montgomery, please shine on, you crazy diamond.
Joe Chrest has a birthday later this week, March 26, but I'm sorry, I can only celebrate one character actor at a time. Today is also the 1-year anniversary of me watching "Crank: High Voltage", for whatever's that worth.
THE PLOT: A former DEA agent moves his family to a quiet town, where he soon tangles with a local meth druglord.
AFTER: There's a very disturbing moment in the early (flashback) sequences of this film, where Jason Statham's character is an undercover operative in the drug world, and he's got long, black hair. That's it, Jason Statham with hair, and once you see it, you can't un-see it, plus he's wearing guy-liner and therefore looks like Criss Angel after a rough night. Don't say I didn't warn you. But the operation ends with the drug lab blowed up and the son of the drug kingpin killed by cops, so yeah, that's probably going to have some implications.
This movie's kind of filled with character actors, not just Joe Chrest, but look, there's Pruitt Taylor Vince, and Lance E. Nichols, and that's Chuck Zito as the first drug lord, who ends up in jail but swears vengeance on the DEA agent he blames for the death of his son. And then Frank Grillo shows up in the second half, he's kind of become the new king of B-level actioners after his work in the MCU. But also some big-name actors show up here, I think somehow this represents a point in Statham's career when everyone in Hollywood suddenly wanted to work with him, how else can we explain the presence of both James Franco and Winona Ryder as the head villains here?
It's a pretty simple film, what else can you expect from a screenplay written by Sylvester Stallone? So this is also an example of a film that Stallone was planning to star in, but then he made the mistake of getting too old. Tomorrow's film, I think, is another example - but if you're living off of Stallone's leftovers, those are potentially still some very nice leftovers. Still, we can kind of see the same Statham formula at work here - a man with a shady past in the military or feds, dead wife but a young daughter, gets pulled back into service when his family is threatened, and he has to work his way up the chain to take out the big bads. Only then can he be free and clear...
It all starts with a bullying incident, though, and over the first 30 minutes we see how that can spiral out of control, as people in Louisiana (?) can't seem to let things go. Broker's daughter gets bullied at school but defends herself and gives the bully a bloody nose, then Broker is threatened by the bully's mother, then the father attacks him physically, and well, that doesn't end well for the father. The mother calls her husband a "pussy", so you can see how personal pride just escalates the whole thing to ridiculous levels. Broker makes his peace with the father (who doesn't want his ass kicked again), but the mother calls in her brother, who happens to be the local drug-lord, Gator Bodine. Gator breaks into Broker's house and figures out he used to be a narc, and well, then it's on - the drug-lord can't have a narc living so close to his drug lab.
We get a bunch of those scenes where Statham takes down like four or five goons, who never quite figure out that they should attack him at the same time, no, they go in turns, and they get broken and battered individually. Which makes no sense, like if you're the FIRST goon to attack him, you don't know what to expect, and if you're the SECOND goon, well you probably just think he got lucky with the first goon, but if you're the FOURTH goon, why the hell attack, you just saw him take down your three buddies, who are all lying on the ground outside the gas station - if you're the fourth goon, you should just surrender, or run away. The third goon was like twice your size, and how his head's been put through a pick-up truck window and he's bleeding, just give up!
Gator also kidnaps Broker's daughter's cat, and well, if you've seen "John Wick" you know that's one step too far. We don't go after kids and pets, now Broker's got to kill everyone in your organization AND blow up your drug lab. He's really good at that last thing, just spread some chemicals around and tamper with the breakers, so the second you turn the lights on, BLAMMO. Gator's girlfriend flees the scene with Broker's daughter, but she brings Maddie back to the drug lab, which is one of the all-time dumbest movies in crime history. All that the retired DEA agent wanted was to live a quiet life in your territory, and he never would have had to take down your entire criminal organization, but you just had to go and mess with his daughter and her cat. You brought this on yourselves.
Come on, the bully apologized, and Broker's daughter invited him to her birthday party! None of this violence had to happen! What kind of example are we setting for our kids, they're just trying to make peace and share the schoolyard together, and then the adults have to protect their drug territories and kidnap cats and deal with angry biker gangs, what kind of example are we setting here?
Directed by Gary Fleder (director of "Runaway Jury" and "Don't Say a Word")
Also starring James Franco (last seen in "The Show"), Izabela Vidovic (last seen in "Wonder"), Kate Bosworth (last seen in "Force of Nature"), Marcus Hester (last seen in "Just My Luck"), Clancy Brown (last seen in "A Nightmare on Elm Street" (2010)), Winona Ryder (last seen in "Haunted Mansion"), Omar Benson Miller (last seen in "Sinners"), Rachelle Lefevre (last seen in "The Twilight Saga: New Moon"), Chuck Zito (last seen in "13"), Frank Grillo (last seen in "Superman"), Pruitt Taylor Vince (ditto), Linds Edwards, Austin Craig, Owen Harn (last seen in "The Piano Lesson"), Stuart Greer (last seen in "Runaway Jury"), Lance E. Nichols (ditto), Christa Campbell (last seen in "The Mechanic"), Amin Joseph (last seen in "Dope"), Michael Traynor, Joe Chrest (last seen in "The Secret Life of Bees"), Billy Slaughter (last seen in "Big George Foreman"), Christopher Alan Weaver, Craig Stark (last seen in "Licorice Pizza"), Ritchie Montgomery (last seen in "Hit Man"), Karen Kaia Livers (last seen in "Queen & Slim"), Raeden Greer (last seen in "Freelancers"), Eddie Matthews, Michael Papajohn (last seen in "The Iron Claw"), Carlos Navarro (last seen in "Identity Thief"), Nicole Andrews (last seen in "The Expendables 4"), Robert Fortner.
RATING: 5 out of 10 regrettable tattoos
