The Judge (FILM REVIEW)
The Judge
Film
Review by Kam Williams
Downey and Duvall Square-Off in Character-Driven
Courtroom Drama
Hank Palmer (Robert Downey, Jr.) is
a very successful, criminal defense attorney with a good reason to hide his
humble roots. After all, he was a rebellious kid who frequently landed in
trouble with the law while growing up in tiny Carlinville, Indiana.
That juvenile delinquency only served to alienate him from his
father, Joseph (Robert Duvall), who just happened to be the town’s only judge. In
addition, one of Hank’s more egregious missteps left him permanently estranged
from his older brother, Glen (Vincent D’Onofrio). And since their only other
sibling, Dale (Jeremy Palmer), was mentally handicapped, Hank hadn’t been back
in ages when he received word that his mother (Catherine Cummings) had died.
So, he only planned to make a perfunctory appearance at the
funeral before quickly returning to Chicago
where he had his hands full, between his high-flying career and a custody
battle with his estranged wife (Sarah Lancaster) over their young daughter
(Emma Tremblay). However, everything changes when Judge Palmer is suddenly
arrested in the hit-and-run killing of a creepy convict (Mark Kiely) he’d
publicly castigated in court before releasing back onto the street.
This shocking development conveniently forces Hank to stick around
to represent his father, and simultaneously affords him the opportunity to mend
a few fences. Plus, it gives him time to unwittingly seduce a woman he meets in
a bar (Leighton Meester), who is not only the daughter of his high school
sweetheart (Vera Farmiga), but might be the love child he never knew he
had.
Thus unfolds The Judge, a character-driven
drama which is half-whodunit, half-kitchen sink soap opera that pulls another
rabbit out of the hat every five minutes or so. A potentially farcical film
remains rather well grounded thanks to Robert Duvall who plays the Palmer
family patriarch with a sobering, stone cold gravitas.
Both Robert Downey, Jr. and Billy
Bob Thornton turn in inspired performances, too, as the opposing attorneys matching
wits in a classic courtroom showdown. And the rest of the ensemble more than
holds their own as well in service of a script that has a tendency to strain
credulity.
A fanciful,
thoroughly-modern variation on the parable of the Prodigal Son!
Excellent
(3.5 stars)
Rated R
for profanity and sexual references
Running time: 141
minutes
Distributor: Warner
Brothers
To see a trailer for The
Judge, visit: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7TA5Y86yAo4
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