Patriots Day
Dir: Peter Berg
2017
**
Peter Berg’s Patriots Day is an
action crime thriller concentrating on the real life bombing of the 2013 Boston
Marathon that left three dead and serval injured, and the subsequent man-hunt
for the two suspected terrorists. This was to be a film that followed the
events as they happened, specifically based on the experiences of Boston Police
Commissioner Ed Davis but after CBS acquired the popular book Boston Strong,
the two ideas were merged to create a fictional account with factual elements.
I feel this was a mistake. I understand why film makers change certain aspects
of a true story to give the audience an overview best suited to the run time of
a typical feature length movie but there are time when fact is of the upmost
importance. You can’t give a vague outline of historical events when you have
the facts and when it is important. The Boston Marathon bombings happened three
years before the movie, the facts and turn of events are still very fresh in
the memory. Why twist something like an act of terrorist into a fictional story
for entertainment. I find it stupid, dangerous and distasteful. That said, it’s
such a badly made film I can’t see anyone really caring too much and thankfully
not that many people went to go and see it. It is the third collaboration
between Mark Wahlberg and Peter Berg, and the third time they’ve twisted fact
to suit their own obsession with mindless action. Wahlberg was originally said
to be against the movie and refused to be in it. He only accepted after reading
the script and realizing that he was one of very few actors who could make the
movie right. Wahlberg plays a fictional character who is meant to be a
composite of many Boston police officers who were at the Marathon and aided in
the subsequent manhunt following the bombing. He’s a cliché Boston cop who
doesn’t follow orders, is brash and not afraid to tell his boss where to stick
it. A bit insulting to Boston cops if you ask me, and why a film that is meant
to be factual, about real life events, spends most of the run time
concentrating on a fictional character is puzzling. He loves Boston though, and
that is supposedly enough. The supporting cast is pretty good, including J.K.
Simmons, John Goodman, Kevin Bacon and Michelle Monaghan but there are no
stand-out performances. J.K. Simmons’ portrayal of Police Sergeant Jeffrey
Pugliese is distastefully action-hero like and John Goodman’s Ed Davis get very
little screen time considering the movie was originally meant to be about him.
Kevin Bacon’s Head of FBI performance is so clichéd I’m sure they could have
CGI’ed it and saved some money. It’s an odd tribute, that’s for sure. I did
like the story of Patrick Downes and Jessica Kensky, the young couple who were
next to the first bomb at the time of detonation who both lost limbs but when
it came to it, the best part of their story came during the end credits where
we see them speaking for themselves in an interview. It’s a delicate story
turned into a lazy action film. I’m from London, I know the importance of a
City coming together after a tragic event such as this but I don’t think a
fictional account that spouts cliché, stereotype and ideas of patriotism is
really what the world needs. The last scene shows the speech Red Sox player
David Ortiz gave during a game played just days after the events. In it, he
delivers an unarticulated delivery on peace and unity, before saying the F word
live on television. The speech, much like the film, is well intended I’m sure,
just wincingly distasteful, utterly unnecessary and just a little bit of an
insult.
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