Dead Man Down (DVD REVIEW)
Dead Man Down
DVD Review by Kam
Williams
Twists
Abound in Convoluted Suspense Thriller
Grief-stricken Lazlo Kerick (Colin Farrell) never recovered
from the gruesome murder of his wife (Beata Dalton). It came on orders from a
vicious mob boss intent on preventing her from testifying in court. Amoral
Alphonse Hoyt (Terrence Howard) also had the couple’s only child (Accalia
Quintana) slain in her sleep, which left the disconsolate widower with nothing
to live for except bittersweet revenge.
So, Lazlo
changed his name to Victor, assumed a new identity, and infiltrated the ranks
of the ruthless gangster’s crime syndicate. But rather than pouncing at the
first opportunity, he opts to toy with his prey by playing a mind-bending game
of cat and mouse. He starts by
killing one of Hoyt’s favorite henchmen (Aaron Vexler), stuffing the corpse in
the gangster’s freezer with a cryptic note (“719, now you realize”) attached.
The plot
thickens when Victor’s felonious activities are observed by a neighbor (Noomi
Rapace) whose high-rise, Manhattan
apartment sits directly across the courtyard from his. Instead of calling the
cops, embittered Beatrice blackmails him into helping her even the score with
the drunk driver responsible for her badly-disfigured face.
The two
terminally-haunted anti-heroes proceed to forge an unholy alliance in the name
of the God of retribution prior to dispensing a particularly grisly brand of
vengeance around a New York City that looks more
like Philadelphia.
(I’ve lived in both cities, so it was a little weird to see Philly being passed
off as The Big Apple.)
Because
he’s from Sweden,
director Niels Arden Oplev must have naively figured that nobody would notice
the urban switcheroo. But misattributed locales aside, Dead Man Down is a decent payback flick featuring all of the staples of
the gruesome, high body-count genre.
Opley
certainly knew what he was doing in tapping Noomi Rapace to play Beatrice,
since he had already cast her as a similarly-tortured soul in The Girl with the
Dragon Tattoo. Though the wheels gradually come off
the increasingly-preposterous production, all is forgiven on account of the
convoluted adventure’s compelling storyline, arresting special f/x, and
satisfying, if farfetched resolution.
The Girl
with the Vigilante Agenda!
Very Good (3 stars)
Rated R
for sexuality, violence and pervasive profanity
In English, French, Albanian and Spanish with subtitles
Running time: 118
minutes
Distributor: Sony
Pictures Home Entertainment
DVD Extras: Staging
the Action: The Firefights.
To see a trailer for
Dead Man Down, visit: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6WKmnAcMTKM
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