Blood Ties
Dir: Guillaume Canet
2013
***
Guillaume Canet's remake of French
thriller Les liens du sang by Jacques Maillot, an adaptation of the French
novel Deux frères: flic & truand by Bruno and Michel Papet, is a fairly
standard affair but its low mood, slow-burn development and smooth
direction appealed greatly. The performances are strong too, it just doesn't
quite reach what I believe it sets out to achieve. Guillaume Canet was
actually one of the main stars in the original and wrote and directed the film
with Jacques Maillot's blessing. It's clearly an important film to the
actor/writer/director and his depiction of 1970s New York is great, it looks
just as good if not better than his previous films but after Tell No One and
Little White Lies I was expecting something a little more punchy. The film
starts with the release of Chris (played by Clive Owen) from prison after
spending several years in prison after he murdered a known killer during the
rape of a friend. His brother Frank (played by Billy Crudup, the role Guillaume
Canet played in the original) meets him reluctantly, not only because of their
volatile relationship, but also because Frank is a cop with a bright
future in the force. Chris and Frank have always been different, and their
father, Leon (played by James Caan who really binds the film together), who
raised them alone, seems to favour Chris despite all his troubles. Yet blood
ties are the ones that bind, and Frank, hoping that his brother has changed, is
willing to give him a chance but old habits die hard. Clive Owen is fairly edgy
and does his Robert Mitchum best - Mark Wahlberg was originally cast in
the lead role but dropped out due to scheduling conflicts, Alfonso Cuarón
convinced Clive Owen to read the film's script and Cuarón is thanked in the
credits because of it. Billy Crudup looks more like a 70s cop
caricature than a real person but he's enjoyable to watch. Matthias
Schoenaerts was cast after starring opposite Marion Cotillard (Guillaume
Canet's partner) in Rust and Bone (2012). Canet has said that he chose
Schoenaerts after hearing Cotillard praising his acting several times, he's
perfect in his likable-criminal role and Marion Cotillard awesome
in her poisonous ex-wife performance. Mila Kunis is okay but a little lost
and a bit miscast if you ask me, it's not her fault, there just isn't really
anything there for her to get her teeth into. James Caan is by far the most
believable character but I did love Noah Emmerich's Lieutenant
Connellan and Griffin Dunne's little cameo, both looked authentic and as if
they really had just walked over from a real 70s cop movie. It was a huge flop,
not only because it had little marketing but also because it brought nothing
new to the genre and certainly nothing exciting. It's entertaining enough, with
strong performances, it's just nothing special and largely forgettable.
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