A WALK AMONG THE TOMBSTONES
Director : Scott FrankCast : Liam Neeson, Dan Stevens, Ruth Wilson, Olafur Darri Olafsson, Sebastian Roche, David Harbour, Mark Consuelos, Astro
Genre : Crime/Thriller
Opens : 18 September 2014
Rating : NC-16
Running time: 114 mins
Pierce Brosnan strutted his “older man of action”
stuff recently in The November Man
and now Liam Neeson, the definitive “older man of action” of the moment, is at
it again in A Walk Among the Tombstones.
Neeson plays Matt Scudder, a former NYPD cop, now an unlicensed private
detective and a recovering alcoholic. Drug dealer Kenny Kristo (Stevens)
engages Scudder’s services when his wife is kidnapped and killed even after
he’s paid the ransom. While doing research in the library, Scudder befriends
homeless teenager TJ (Bradley), whom he takes under his wing. Scudder discovers
that the psychopaths responsible are targeting young women related to figures
in the drug world, knowing they would be unable to go to the police for help.
Working outside the law, Scudder must prevent the serial killers from striking
again.
A Walk Among the Tombstones is adapted
from the 10th book in Lawrence Block’s long-running Matt Scudder series (there
are 17 books now). Jeff Bridges played Scudder in 1986’s heavily panned and
largely forgotten 8 Million Ways to Die
and this film has been in the works for quite a while, with Joe Carnahan
attached to direct and Harrison Ford to star at one point. Writer-director
Scott Frank’s realisation of A Walk Among
the Tombstones is slick, stylish and foreboding, lean and effectively
chilling. At times, it seems reminiscent of David Fincher’s work, if more
pedestrian. A slow-motion sequence in which the killers leer at a young girl
walking her dog, set to Donovan’s “Atlantis”, is a very darkly comic touch. The
book was published in 1992, but Frank chooses to set it in 1999, hinting at Y2K
paranoia with the symbolism of people being “afraid of all the wrong things”,
as the tagline goes. This doesn’t seem to add a lot to the story but it is an
interesting textural detail.
However,
beyond the look and feel of the film, the story is a pretty conventional one.
Yes, the serial killer antagonists are very creepy, but it’s nothing you
haven’t seen before in dozens of police procedural or detective TV shows. They
drive around in a van, kidnapping women to torture and kill and they’re
unbalanced and evil – not exactly a unique or compelling situation for our hero
to be up against. It’s a good thing then that our hero is Liam Neeson, a master
at the art of being quietly intimidating. He’s effortlessly cool throughout the
film and you’ll want to cheer when he snarls “are you listening, motherf***er?”
through the phone at the kidnappers. More than that, it’s entertaining to watch
Neeson’s Scudder just doing some old-fashioned sleuthing about, cleverly
cajoling information out of various subjects. Neeson is sufficiently low-key
and yet never seems like he’s sleepwalking through the film. He also has the
approval of author Block, who thought Neeson would make the ideal Scudder since
watching him in Michael Collins.
Less
conventional than its main “catch the kidnappers” plot is the relationship
between Scudder and tagalong kid TJ. TJ could have very easily been unbearably
irritating and Brian “Astro” Bradley did get on many nerves as a contestant on
American X Factor. However, he holds
his own opposite Neeson and their interactions lend the film a slight hint of
dry levity without the character being “the comic relief”. There’s some
sentimentality there too, TJ stricken with sickle cell anaemia, having nowhere
to go and drawing superheroes in his sketchbook. The scene in which Scudder
chastises TJ for picking up a gun he found in a dumpster is particularly well
done and a discussion about cool detective names displays a self-awareness of
the genre without it being obnoxious.
Some
fans of Liam Neeson have bemoaned that since Taken, the Oscar nominee has starred in a string of run of the mill
actioners that don’t particularly test his abilities as an actor. A Walk Among the Tombstones puts less
emphasis on the running and the shooting -though there is some of that, to be
sure. While the role of Matt Scudder isn’t wildly different from the cool tough
guys we’ve become accustomed to seeing Neeson play, there is more here for
Neeson to sink his teeth into and this film certainly is more of a grown-up,
intense, sometimes disturbing thriller than his more action-oriented movies. And
isn’t it nice that the novel’s original name was preserved instead of the title
being changed to some snappy synonym for “vengeance”?
Summary:
Liam Neeson fans
will want to take this walk, his lead performance as the old-school detective
and the creepy atmospherics making up for the familiar narrative.
RATING:
3.5 out of 5 Stars
Jedd Jong
Jedd Jong
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