Post-Katrina New Orleans. Policeman Sean Riley (Johnny Strong) is in about as
bad a shape as is his city. His little son died a couple of years ago from an
illness, his wife left him, and he’s a husk of a man drawn ever further into
cycles of violence. Consequently, we find him straight-up murder the man who
just shot his partner (a cameo by good old Kim Coates in one of his few
non-gangster stints as an honest cop). Things will go even downhill from here,
for Sean soon finds himself invited into a particularly horrible homicide
investigation. Detective Will Glanz (Kevin Phillips) is the lucky bastard tasked
with solving a series of killings whose victims are set on fire, then doused
with a fire extinguisher, then set on fire again, and so on. Sean’s supposed to
be his street crime expert.
As luck will have it, Colin (Sean Patrick Flanery), an old army buddy of
Sean’s seems to be involved in the whole messy affair, though it’ll take some
time to clear up if he’s working for the guy leading the killers (Costas
Mandylor), is a direct part of the crimes, or what. What’s clear early on is
that Sean’s nearly suicidal violent tendencies – and his efficacy as a killer –
might actually be the appropriate tools to solve this particular case.
William Kaufman is one of the good handful of truly great, individual voices
doing direct to video action films in the USA during the last fifteen or twenty
years. In Kaufman’s films, there are little if any of the writing and acting
short cuts you usually find in these affairs, nor are these films that can’t
afford to show any actual action.
Sure, the more up-market actors here – among them Tom Berenger, Jürgen
Prochnow, Jolene Blalock and the inevitable Method Man – are only on screen in a
few scenes in what amounts to cameos but unlike the typical way direct to video
action often operates where certain characters are only in a film because the
filmmakers have Dolph or Jean-Claude for a shooting day, here these actors are
cast in roles that are actually part of the plot; well, the Prochnow character
might not have been absolutely necessary, but what the hey. Kaufman – who
co-wrote the script with Jay Moses – clearly knows how to construct his action
film as something with an actual plot, and while it is certainly one full of
clichés, it uses its clichés with the kind of conviction that turns them into
something a little more satisfying than you’d expect. There’s also the plain
fact that Kaufman in general uses standards character types and tropes with a
great degree of intelligence and care, putting the decisive bit more thought
into standard character arcs and actually writing characters instead of
character types. Why, Sean Riley often feels like a person as much as he does
the Cop on the Edge.
Interestingly enough, the film even has some ethical concerns about what the
things its main character does so well say about him as a human being, or
rather, what parts of his humanity they might destroy. At the same time – which
makes rather a lot of sense for an action flick – Sinners and Saints is
also very specifically interested in how abhorrent acts of violence may or may
not be justified depending on one’s position. It’s certainly a more thoughtful
approach than you usual find in direct to video action, and it leads to a film
which features certain Cop on the Edge movie standard scenes it can approach
from a somewhat different angle.
On the acting side, Johnny Strong isn’t quite as, well, strong as I would
have wished for the role. He’s not terribly good at acting out the more nuanced
emotional beats, though he’s certainly not phoning things in, nor does he ever
feel like robot or inadvertently funny. He’s just not quite there. He’s
certainly a fine action performer, though, which goes a long way in this
context. Costas Mandylor for his part does some fine scenery chewing (but not
too much), a weird accent, and is believable as a guy who does truly horrible
things as a matter of course.
Last but not least, the action is pretty terrific, with various violent
shoot-outs, as well as a few more acrobatic bits, all staged by Kaufman with a
sort of casual surety that really sells them as gritty and exciting.
Wednesday, November 8, 2017
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