Friday, October 18, 2013

REVIEW: Rollicking But Rough Lawless Creates Bloody, Intoxicating Prohibition-Era World





As rollicking and rough as a drive down a dirt road with no suspension, Lawless is a tale of three-bootlegging brothers from Prohibition-era Franklin County, Virginia, who are, in the words of one character, some "hard-ass crackers." Directed by Australia's John Hillcoat (The Road) and written by musician Nick Cave (who's adapted Matt Bondurant's historical novel The Wettest County in the World), Lawless is, like their last collaboration The Propositiona kind of remixed Western at heart. 

It's a story in which the law and the outlaws are equally outsized and dangerous — and a world in which the fighting has nothing to do with keeping order and everything to do with displays of strength.

"It is not the violence that sets men apart. It is the distance that he is prepared to go," declares oldest brother Forrest Bondurant (Tom Hardy), the hardest boiled of them all. To say that Lawless (or The Proposition) romanticizes violence isn't quite right — every tommy-gun bullet wound and knife wound is sickeningly visceral, and when a character gets his throat cut the man doing the deed has to saw through resisting flesh. But the film does relish and find lyricism in these tribal philosopher psychopaths who use force with the measured anticipation of an oenophile savoring a sip of wine. 

The sheer appreciation Lawless has for its characters and its setting makes it a pleasure  to settle into, even though the film can be carelessly formless and feel like a rough draft that was never sculpted into something more meaningful.

As Jack Bondurant, the youngest of the three brothers and the one most eager to prove himself, Shia LaBeouf, is both the primary focus of the film and its narrator — an unfortunate thing, since he's also the character we least want to spend time with. 

Forrest is so tough he's developed a mythology around him, that even he might believe, about being invincible -- and given the ordeal he survives in this film, there might be something to that. Middle sibling Howard (Jason Clarke) is huge and half-feral, especially when he's on one of his benders. 

But Jack's been kept on the outside of the family business, allowed only to be the driver as the brothers travel the county, dispensing corn whiskey. That changes when an act of aggression by two out-of-towners gives him the opportunity to make a deal with gangster Floyd Banner (a gleeful Gary Oldman) after almost dying at his hands.

At the core of Lawless is the escalating conflict between the Bondurant brothers and a corrupt Chicago lawman named Charlie Rakes (Guy Pearce) who's coming down hard on the county to get protection money from its many moonshiners. But there are plenty of detours taken: Jack woos preacher's daughter Bertha (Mia Wasikowska) and starts up his own stills with the disabled Cricket (Dane DeHaan). Forrest makes sparks with dancer-turned-waitress Maggie (Jessica Chastain).

Lawless is really about the adventures of the Bondurants and their friends and foes during Prohibition, and the characters are so compelling it would really be enough to just spend time in their presence. Forrest in particular is a memorable contradiction: Aside from his flashes of savagery, Hardy maintains an almost grandfatherly air. Clad in cardigans and prone to muttering, he refuses to step down to anyone and yet, is utterly undone by Maggie's arrival in his life.

As Rakes, Pearce is almost too outsized for the film to contain him. With his blackened, immaculately pomaded hair, parted dramatically down the center, and his pale eyebrows, he looks like a cross between Crispin Glover and Voldemort. He wields his vague sexuality — "You're a peach," he croons to Jack before punching him in the face — like a threat, mincing in his flawless suit right before delivering a ruthless beating, then ceremoniously peeling off his blood-stained leather gloves. It's a unique performance, albeit so mannered it almost rends the already accommodating fabric of the film. Factor in the prevalence of international actors in the cast and the unfocused nature of the narrative,and Lawless seems to take place in an impressionistic space rather than a historical one.

It's Charlie and Forrest that we want to see have a showdown, though it's Jack who more often ends up in the former's crosshairs. It's not LaBeouf's fault that his character is the flimsiest. The story keeps giving him foolish things to do to bring around more action, including accidentally leading the police to the family's stills. His role as catalyst eventually becomes irritating because we don't want the story to move along.

The world that Lawless presents is so vivid and pleasing that we want to linger over the details. It's a film that finds delicate beauty in the image of someone bleeding out in the snow, and turns a drunken, impulsive visit to church service into an overwhelming sensory experience. The appeal of Lawless is not the story it tells but rather the world that it creates.

Article Source: http://movieline.com/2012/08/28/lawless-review-shia-labeouf-tom-hardy-guy-pearce-jessica-chastain/

Lawless: Cannes Film Review

The Bottom Line

A gritty and suspenseful bootlegger tale based on real-life Prohibition figures that sees “The Proposition” team of director John Hillcoat and screenwriter Nick Cave working in a more mainstream vein to satisfying effect.

Shia LaBeouf, Tom Hardy, Guy Pearce, Mia Wasikowska, Jessica Chastain and Gary Oldman inhabit Prohibition-era Virginia in John Hillcoat's outlaw drama. 

The main action begins in 1931. The now-grown Bondurant brothers run a thriving bootlegging operation in the mountains, one of many outfits supplying quality hooch to the county -- whites, blacks, civilians and lawmen alike. But up north in gangster-land, a crime wave is sweeping the nation, its tentacles inevitably reaching Virginia.

Wanting a slice of the moonshine profits, the crooked commonwealth attorney dispatches Special Deputy Charlie Rakes (Pearce), a vicious, perfumed snake who makes no effort to hide his disdain for these hicks. But Forrest makes it clear the Bondurants won’t lie down for anybody, delivering his message with a persuasive combination of knuckleduster and contempt. 

That sets up him and Rakes as instant nemeses. Forrest also resists overtures from other local bootleggers to comply with the new “law,” insisting on staying solo. That stance combined with Cricket’s high-grade brew helps the brothers prosper.

Running parallel to the encroaching friction with Rakes is the more prosaic strand of Jack’s efforts to earn his big brothers’ respect and become a legitimate player in their operation. His opportunity comes while Forrest is laid up with a fresh Frankenstein scar across his throat from where Rakes’ goons sliced him open.

 Jack gets a lucky break in a near-fatal encounter with Floyd Banner’s men, among them a nasty stooge played by Noah Taylor. Jack’s cut of the deal allows him to purchase a snazzy auto and sharp threads to help him court the pious and pretty Bertha. Meanwhile, lovely Maggie works the bar at the boys’ Blackwater Station, as she and Forrest shoot each other smoldering glances.
 
Aided by fluid work from editor Dylan Tichenor, Hillcoat punches the action along at an unhurried yet steady pace, expertly sustaining tension and a mood of impending menace. The inevitable showdown, after Jack’s carelessness leads Rakes to their secret distillery location, is a little too protracted, and the coda 10 years on lingers unduly. But the film maintains its suspense and compelling character engagement throughout.

VIDEO: Shia LaBeouf, Tom Hardy Get Violent in 'Lawless' Red Band Trailer

Without exactly glorifying their outlaw heroes, Hillcoat and Cave definitely keep us in their corner, showing even their most violent actions to be driven by self-protection or payback, never merely by malice. The most memorable of them is somber Forrest, whose dialogue is delivered from somewhere way back in Hardy’s throat, often as barely more than an inarticulate rumble. But from in amongst those animal growls spout occasional pearls of outlaw wisdom, such as “It is not the violence that sets a man apart, it’s the distance he is prepared to go.”

Benoit Delhomme’s widescreen visuals have a handsome epic sweep. The earthy sepia tones and shadowy interiors are shuffled with crisp skies and green forestland covered with vines and tangled willows. The evocative feel for time and place is furthered by Chris Kennedy’s rustic period production design and Margot Wilson’s sharp costumes.

As in The Proposition, Cave’s contribution extends to an indispensable score, co-written with Warren Ellis. (The team also provided music for Andrew Dominik’s The Assassination of Jesse James by the Coward Robert Ford, a film that some will no doubt say the less nuanced Lawless aspires to be.) Their score here mixes rootsy bluegrass, gospel, country and contemporary songs reinterpreted by Emmylou Harris and Ralph Stanley, among others.

If Lawless doesn’t achieve the mythic dimensions of the truly great outlaw and gangster movies, it is a highly entertaining tale set in a vivid milieu, told with style and populated by a terrific ensemble. For those of us who are suckers for blood-soaked American crime sagas from that era, those merits will be plenty.

STORY: How 'Lawless' Nabbed New A-Listers Tom Hardy and Jessica Chastain

Venue: Cannes Film Festival (In Competition; Weinstein Co.)
Production companies: Blumhansonallen Films, Metropolitan Filmexport, Benaroya Pictures, FilmNation Entertainment, Annapurna Pictures
Cast: Shia LaBeouf, Tom Hardy, Mia Wasikowska, Jessica Chastain, Jason Clarke, Guy Pearce, Gary Oldman, Dane DeHaan, Noah Taylor, Chris McGarry, Tim Tolin, Lew Temple, Marcus Hester, Bill Camp
Director: John Hillcoat
Screenwriter: Nick Cave, based on the book “The Wettest County in the World,” by Matt Bondurant
Producers: Douglas Wick, Lucy Fisher, Megan Ellison, Michael Benaroya
Executive producers: Dany Wolf, Rachel Shane, Jason Blum, Scott Hanson, Cassian Elwes, Laura Rister, Robert Ogden Barnum, Ted Schipper, Randy Manis, Ben Sachs
Director of photography: Benoit Delhomme
Production designer: Chris Kennedy
Music: Nick Cave, Warren Ellis
Costume designer: Margot Wilson
Editor: Dylan Tichenor
Sales: FilmNation
7.2/10, 116 minutes


Article Source: http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/movie/lawless/review/326812

Bootlegging tale with Shia LaBeouf, Jessica Chastain and Tom Hardy is a satisfying blend of action and history

Shia LaBeouf, right, stars in ‘Lawless.’

The move from brainless popcorn fare to high-minded Oscar bait is a yearly shift as inevitable as cooler weather and changing leaves. But where do we place John Hillcoat’s “Lawless,” which is opening just before Labor Day?
Consider this brooding moonshine saga your segue between seasons. The gratuitous nudity and bloody shootouts suggest summer; the pedigreed cast and historical subject matter are more commonly found in fall.

Hillcoat (“The Road”) and screenwriter Nick Cave adapted the film from Matt Bondurant’s novel “The Wettest County in the World.” That the ’30s-set story has its roots in truth makes an already forceful tale even more compelling.

Shia LaBeouf is Jack Bondurant, younger brother to notorious Blue Ridge bootleggers Forrest (Tom Hardy) and Howard (Jason Clarke). Their booming backwoods business attracts the attention of a new deputy, Rakes (Guy Pearce), who insists on his cut.

While Forrest and Howard get involved in an increasingly vicious battle with Rakes, Jack is busy figuring out his future path. Will he settle down with preacher’s daughter Bertha (Mia Wasikowska) or join forces with legendary gangster Floyd Banner (Gary Oldman)?
Just as Jack is coming of age, LaBeouf clearly intends for “Lawless” to signal his own professional maturation. He doesn’t disappoint, building on the promise he’s already shown in other non-“Transformers” films. But the indisputable star is the chameleonlike Hardy, whose outsized talent and charisma will surely lead him up Oscar’s carpet one day.

That won’t happen yet, though. At heart, this Prohibition yarn is really just a genre picture done better than most. And it’s far from flawless. Pearce makes an uncharacteristic misstep by turning Rakes into a cartoonish sadist, while Jessica Chastain is both exploited and underused in an ornamental role as Forrest’s girlfriend. The taut script takes a few unnecessary shortcuts, and the energy flags a bit before the finale.

Still, the action is, overall, as exciting as the primary performances are impressive. “Lawless” is unlikely to be one of the strongest contenders of autumn, but it may be the best to come out of August.