Michael Dixon (Cuba Gooding Jr.) has been working for the US Border Patrol at
the US/Mexican border for too long, it seems. He doesn’t seem completely cynical
but he’s certainly not happy with a world where desperately poor people trying
to make their way to a mildly less horrible life are preyed upon by human
traffickers who don’t care about their lives as well as by right wing
militias/future Trump voters who sound as if they believe shooting brown people
is some kind of sport. His mood and his week certainly don’t improve when what
looks like a minor drug raid leads to a shoot-out (during which his partner is
shot but surprisingly enough not killed). Worse still, one of the drug runners
is a guy Michael knows.
You see, a few decades ago, Michael was a gang member known as Mad Mike, and
the guy is one of his former buddies. And he’s not the last one of them Michael
will meet, either. Our protagonist is soon visited by half a dozen of them, lead
by his old frenemie Kimo (Omari Hardwick). Turns out Michael’s little shootout
got in the way of a meet-up between Kimo’s people and their drug suppliers from
south of the border. They want Michael to help them set up a new meeting where
nobody will disturb them. If he isn’t amenable, why, he has a nice little family
now, wouldn’t it be horrible if something happened to them?
Of course, things won’t go too well for anyone involved in the end.
Linewatch by Kevin Bray is a film I’ve mostly seen critically
slaughtered on the Net. Perhaps at that stage of Cuba Gooding Jr.’s career,
quite a few people were still expecting Oscar-baiting films from him, when
clearly that kind of role either didn’t come to him anymore or wasn’t of
interest? This certainly isn’t the kind of film that will win anyone any Academy
Awards, nor is it one many professional critics looking for one will love.
After all, apart from its surprising compassion for the people trying to make
it over the border, this is very much your typical film about a man haunted by
his criminal past who will only get rid of it by killing a lot of people he once
saw as family, and now can see rather more clearly as dysfunctional and
abusive.
Me, as a man with simple tastes, do enjoy a competent stew of battered old
tropes like this quite a bit, particularly since Bray knows how to set up an
action sequence properly, and never falls into the action movie automatism of
having to include one shoot-out every seven point five minutes. That would be a
waste of a perfectly good Cuba Gooding Jr., and a whole handful of decent to
good (mostly black) character actors, after all, so we also get quite a few
moments of the characters acting like old friends who probably never liked each
other all that much. There’s even a pretty clearsighted portrayal of the way a
gang might work as a (dysfunctional) family unit included, and while that wasn’t
exactly news in 2008 either, it certainly adds to the film’s feeling of
veracity.
Which isn’t too bad of an achievement for a film hardly anybody seems to
respect.
Tuesday, November 28, 2017
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