TRIPLE 9 – The Review

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Violent, profane, ambitious, pretentious, overcooked and entertaining as hell, director John Hillcoat’s TRIPLE 9 presents a wide canvas of memorable characters for a satisfying urban crime drama. Michael Atwood (Chiwetel Ejiofor) leads a crew of dirty Atlanta cops and ex-cops (Anthony Mackie, Aaron Paul, Norman Reedus, and Clifton Collins Jr.) working for the “Kosher Nostra”, a mob of Russian Jews led by dragon lady Irina Vlaslov (Kate Winslet), who operate out of a meatpacking plant.  The crooked cops are introduced pulling off an ultra-efficient bank heist for Irina, but she withholds payment until they execute another job – one she’s convinced will help spring her husband from the Russian Gulag (held there just because “Putin so fears him”) . Michael has a son with Irina’s sexy younger sister Elena (Gal Gadot), who he won’t see again unless he cooperates, so he convinces his team to break into a Homeland Security safe house, a nearly impossible mission. Michael concludes the only way to pull it off successfully is to create a 999, police code for “officer down”, as a distraction to buy them time to pull off their caper. The plan goes awry when Chris Allen (Casey Affleck), the innocent cop they set up to murder, refuses to be sacrificed, resulting in an action-packed third act complete with greedy double-crosses and bloody payback.

There’s plenty that’s familiar in TRIPLE 9 and there are portions that don’t work so well, but adrenalin junkies will appreciate the blistering pace and the careful sense of desperado tension. Hillcoat’s film is distinguished by a series of pulse-pounding dread-fueled scenes that leave the viewer perched on the edge of their seat — the tense opening bank robbery, a carefully planned police raid that quickly spirals out of control, a rolling gun battle, and three heads on the hood of a car – the result of a brutal gang execution. One major reason why I found TRIPLE 9 to be so effective is its complete messiness–there are neither tidy resolutions nor easy payoffs as the initially grim makes way for the even grimmer and almost no character is left off the hook. That all falls in line with what Hillcoat and writer Matt Cook obviously set out to do, which is to paint with grimy authenticity a warts-and-all portrait of cops and criminals and cops who are criminals. Hillcoat and Editor Dylan Tichenor do a great job of maintaining pace and suspense throughout and the remarkable cast helps to bring this sprawling web of nastiness to another level. Aaron Paul and Norman Reedus are excellent as desperate brothers, though Walking Dead fans may be disheartened at how soon their hero is dispatched. Collins Jr. and Ejiofor are especially noteworthy, and Woody Harrelson is outstanding as a drug-abusing good cop. Teresa Palmer as Chris’ wife and Gal Gadot are little more than window dressing but they both look great from behind while Casey Affleck’s performance grounds the story by making us care about the story’s single uncorrupted character. The one glaringly theatrical note is struck by a hammy Kate Winslet as the ballbusting Russian mobstress, but it’s a fun performance highlighted by repellent behavior and bright red high heels.

Whatever one’s reaction to the darkness and grit, it’s a shame that Hillcoat can’t quite maintain the film’s momentum. He effectively keeps TRIPLE 9 moving to its climactic bloodbath, which turns out to be a predictable chain of killings and not much else. The film calls to mind the nihilistic cop stories of director Antoine Fuqua such as TRAINING DAY and BROOKLYN’S FINEST with its tour through the seamy side of contemporary urban America but there is also a strong sense of the 1970s’ about it as it references the gritty police dramas of that decade, especially those from director Sidney Lumet, for its inspiration, pouring on all the realism and downbeat atmosphere movies of that era pioneered. It’s a style that suits Hillcoat and his actors well and TRIPLE 9 is recommended.

4 of 5 Stars

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New Trailer For TRIPLE 9 Is Here

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The new trailer for the upcoming movie, TRIPLE 9, has been released.

From director John Hillcoat (LAWLESS), the film stars the impressive lineup of Woody Harrelson, Anthony Mackie, Chiwetel Ejiofor, Kate Winslet and Casey Affleck, along with Aaron Paul and Norman Reedus.

TRIPLE 9 hits theaters February 19, 2016.

TRIPLE 9 Official Social Channels
OFFICIAL INSTAGRAM:  https://instagram.com/Triple9Movie/
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#Triple9

New TRIPLE 9 Red-Band Trailer Stars Woody Harrelson, Chiwetel Ejiofor, Kate Winslet And Casey Affleck

triple 9 affleck

Open Road Films has released the explosive first trailer and poster for director John Hillcoat’s TRIPLE 9.

The action-packed thriller features an A-list cast that includes Oscar-nominees Woody Harrelson, Chiwetel Ejiofor, Kate Winslet and Casey Affleck, along with Aaron Paul, Norman Reedus, Gal Gadot and Anthony Mackie.

This preview is NSFW


(Yahoo Movies)

The film is written by John Hillcoat (LAWLESS) and Matt Cook.

TRIPLE 9 hits theaters on February 19, 2016.

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LAWLESS – The Review

It’s well known that Prohibition was an epic failure in terms of deterring the consumption of alcohol, but it did succeed at making the 1920s and early 1930s a very exciting period of American history. Not since the Wild West era of the mid-1800s has America seen such lawlessness, hence the title of director John Hillcoat‘s new film LAWLESS. The story of the Bondurant brothers takes place during Prohibition in Franklin County, Virginia. Notoriously known as the “wettest county,” this rural mountain region is a central hub of illegal bootlegging. Everyone seems to be making moonshine, but no one seems to do it as well, or with as much disregard for the authorities and outside influences as the legendary Bondurant brothers.

John Hillcoat has established a reputation for atmospheric, impressive dramatic films that fall short of receiving the exposure nor the appreciation they truly deserve. Hillcoat’s previous offerings include THE PROPOSITION (2005) and THE ROAD (2009), both of which received some critical praise, but too few of the general movie-going public can lay claim knowing these films. Working from a rich and occasionally humorous screenplay co-written by the multi-talented Nick Cave and family descendant Mark Bondurant, LAWLESS is a pleasantly enjoyable mixture of historical drama, gangster lore, love story, and a healthy dose of action and comedy, but never in excess.

Tom Hardy (WARRIOR, BRONSON) continues his run of impressive performances as Forrest Bondurant, the eldest of the brothers and the one with his head on straight. Forrest is a man of few words, but when you can say as much or more with a simple stare and back it up with a furious fist of steel when necessary, there’s a reason Forrest is feared as much as he is respected by other bootleggers in Franklyn County. Of course, it doesn’t hurt that the family name carries with it a “legendary” status for being “immortal.” Hardy captures the quiet, calm and calculating nature of the eldest brother, complete with his simple trademark vocalization… “hmmph.”

Shia LeBeouf (EAGLE EYE, DISTURBIA) adds to his post-TRANSFORMERS resume, playing Jack Bondurant, the youngest of the brothers and the one with the most ambition. The problem is that Jack’s ambition is ruled by youthful recklessness and short-sighted materialism. Despite his good intentions, Jack naivety serves to get his family into hot water, a sticky situation his older, more courageous — or, perhaps more crazy — brothers ultimately must resolve in their own, unique ways. LaBeouf may not be the world’s greatest actor, but his talents serve a purpose. In this case, his range fits nicely into the mold and works well with his more seasoned co-stars.

Jason Clarke (PUBLIC ENEMIES) is easily the lesser known of the actors playing the Bondurant brothers, his contribution being that of Howard, the mostly drunken, questionably crazy mad dog factor of the family.Howard has the smallest role of the three brothers in LAWLESS, but his presence when made, is made loud and clear. Clarke has been an actor I watch for, rarely making major starring appearances in film, but also has an established — yet, unfortunate —  streak of bad luck with television (THE CHICAGO CODE, BROTHERHOOD) whereas his series rarely enjoy a long life expectancy.

These three actors combined, however, cannot match the gravitas of Guy Pearce (LOCKOUT) in this film, playing the germ-a-phobic sociopath Charlie Rakes. Being a “special deputy” and enforcer for the corrupt new government authority in town, Rakes blurs the line between good guy and bad guy, creating a turbulent tornado of tension as the big city outsider in this rural alien world of Franklin County. Pearce gives LAWLESS the counter-intuitive menace it needs to present the Bondurant brothers in the proper light. Pearce inhabits the creepy, frightening well-mannered loose cannon so well as to become unrecognizable at first. There’s something to be said about a man without eyebrows, but that only scratches the surface of the terrifying persona Pearce portrays, while still allowing the character to take part in the subtle, smart wit written into the film’s dialogue.

LAWLESS features a beautifully imagined landscape and atmosphere, courtesy of cinematography from Benoit Delhomme (1408, THE PROPOSITION). The film has a brilliantly soft, but saturated sunlit appeal. LAWLESS feels warm, despite the risk and danger at hand; happy, despite the danger and fear present just around each corner of the wooded landscape, often summoning fairytale-like glimpses of the trees and what lies just beyond, just out of sight. Combine this with a respectfully selected, upbeat choice of period musical accompaniments, LAWLESS succeeds in transporting the audience to the correct time and place, but still somehow hints at something slightly fantastical by way of expertly interpreted sunlight.

I must mention the remaining cast that make LAWLESS such a pleasing movie. Jessica Chastain (TAKE SHELTER, THE HELP) is a mind-blowing specimen of feminine beauty — as always — but certainly delivers once more on a dramatic level as the love interest and driving force for Forrest. Mia Wasikowski (JANE EYRE) has a relatively small role, but has a notable presence none-the-less as the religiously unattainable love interest of Jack Bondurant. Finally, with yet another relatively small role, Gary Oldman (THE DARK KNIGHT, THE BOOK OF ELI) takes what little screen time he has and produces his own magnificent version of a 1930s era gangster, in this case as “Mad Dog” Floyd Banner, a Tommy gun wielding intelligent man of action who throws caution to the wind and has not a hesitant bone in his body.

LAWLESS runs just shy of two hours with a 115-minute length. The pacing is consistent, but to some may feel slightly slowed in the middle. Stick with it, it passes and picks up significantly in the third act. The film could be described as a rural PUBLIC ENEMIES with a very subtle pinch of O BROTHER WHERE ART THOU? thrown in by way of the colorful characters.

Overall Rating: 4 out of 5 stars

LAWLESS Red-Band Trailer

‘We control the fear, you understand? Without the fear, we are all good as dead.’

Acclaimed director John Hillcoat (THE ROAD, THE PROPOSITION) delivers a thrillingly vivid slice of American outlaw history in his epic gangster tale, LAWLESS. LAWLESS is the true story of the infamous Bondurant Brothers: three bootlegging siblings who made a run for the American Dream in Prohibition-era Virginia. Based on author Matt Bondurant’s fictionalized account of his family, “The Wettest County in the World,” the film gathers an ensemble of gifted, dynamic new-generation stars – Shia LaBeouf, Tom Hardy, Jessica Chastain, Jason Clarke, Mia Wasikowska, Dane DeHaan – alongside two of the finest actors of their generations, Guy Pearce and Gary Oldman. A riveting, intense story of crime and corruption, loyalty and love, brutality and tenderness, LAWLESS is a rich addition to the American gangster canon.

Before the film opens on August 29th, watch the new red-band trailer.

In the mountains of Franklin County, Virginia, the Bondurant brothers are the stuff of legend. The eldest, Howard (Jason Clarke), managed to survive the carnage of the Great War, but he returned home unmoored by what he had seen and done. His brother Forrest (Tom Hardy) nearly died from the
Spanish Flu that took his parents. He beat back death with a quiet strength and ferocious, visceral invincibility that came to define him. Jack (Shia LaBeouf) is the youngest sibling, impressionable, sensitive, smart. Times are tough and jobs are scarce, but the Bondurants are entrepreneurs and have
built a thriving local business by concocting an intense and popular brand of moonshine. But Franklin County’s bootlegging days are about to end with the arrival of Special Deputy Charlie Rakes (Guy Pearce) from Chicago. The new “law” Rakes brings is lethal and corrupt and will challenge everything
the brothers have built and represent. But while the rest of the county gives in to Rakes’ ruthless crackdown, the Bondurants will bow to no one.

As the family rallies to fight Rakes, the fraternal dynamic shifts. Jack’s ambitions and enterprises alter the balance of power between the brothers as he careens into manhood. Dreaming of expensive suits, fast cars and beautiful women, Jack starts his own bootlegging operation, with his friend Cricket (Dane DeHaan) helping him to soup up cars and build stills – even against Forrest’s wishes. Jack starts to prosper, even selling his moonshine to Floyd Banner (Gary Oldman), the big city gangster he idolizes. The lives of the Bondurants are soon complicated by the appearance of two beautiful women: the exotic, steadfast Maggie (Jessica Chastain), who brings a secret past with her and catches the eye of the guarded Forrest – and the quiet, pious Bertha (Mia Wasikowska), who slowly warms to Jack’s charms and channels her own rebellious streak.

Jack’s confidence however soon trumps his good sense, and the consequences will test the brothers’  loyalty and endangers them all. Determined to do whatever is necessary to fight for what is theirs, the Bondurants take up arms and confront the corrupt forces of the law in a faceoff to determine who
controls the wettest county in the world.

LAWLESS opens in theaters on August 29th.

Visit the film’s official site: http://lawless-film.com/

“Like” it on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/lawlessmovie

Follow on Twitter: @lawlessfilm @WeinsteinFilms  #Lawless

Hillcoat’s THE PROMISED LAND Not So Promised After All

I end the year appropriately – gazing into the apocalypse of my own industry.

That is how writer/director John Hillcoat ended his years-long diary he kept while production on THE ROAD was taking place.   He submitted his entries to The Telegraph, and it is with his final entry that the first, worst movie news of the year hits us.   Evidently, Hillcoat’s passion project, THE PROMISED LAND, is no longer moving forward, as the financing for the film has fallen into oblivion.

Here is the exact diary entry where Hillcoat explains the situation and give his general consensus on the film industry as a whole:

The joke on set and in the edit suite was that we had to get this movie out before it became a reality. Ironically, the movie industry itself now faces its own apocalypse. The perfect storm has arrived in Hollywood: a global economic downturn combined with piracy and the increase of downloading on the internet – what happened to the record companies years ago but with much higher stakes. The reactionary first phase has kicked in – few films in development, many films put on hold or shut down.

My own new project – with a much-loved script by Nick Cave and a dream all-star cast – has fallen apart. The finance company that we began The Road with has also fallen apart, having to radically downsize to one remaining staff member. The great divide has begun, with only very low-budget films being made or huge 3-D franchise films – the birth of brand films such as Barbie, Monopoly: The Movie – who knows what’s next, Coca-Cola: The Movie?

I end the year appropriately – gazing into the apocalypse of my own industry.

This is very unfortunate, as the adaptation of Matt Bondurant’s novel THE WETTEST COUNTY IN THE WORLD that was to be THE PROMISED LAND was written by Nick Cave and had already attracted Ryan Gosling and Shia LaBeouf to star.

The writing has been on the wall for quite some time for these middle-of-the-road passion projects, and Hillcoat’s words in his diary are more true now than they ever have been.   With films like AVATAR making a billion dollars worldwide, more and more money is going to get pumped into big budget outings that studios can present under the 3-D canopy.   Extremely independent films, the true independents, as some would call them, will always be around, because there will always be film makers who find a way to get their stories out with minimal funding.

This isn’t to say we’ve seen the last of Hillcoat or even THE PROMISED LAND, though.   Hillcoat has many projects in the pipeline including THE DEATH OF BUNNY MUNRO based on the Nick Cave novel, MOB COPS starring Benicio Del Toro,   and he was also in talks to remake the 1973 French heist film, LA BONNE ANNEE.   And, who knows, some funders may come out of the woodworks to get THE PROMISED LAND off the ground.   Nothing is ever completely dead.   Just ask Terry Gilliam.   Until then, we all should keep our fingers crossed for John Hillcoat, THE PROMISED LAND, and the general state of the struggling, middle-of-the-road Hollywood players.

Review: THE ROAD

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Underneath the grit, grime, grey skies, and melancholy of THE ROAD, there is a heart to it, an overpowering optimism that stems from the energy a father gives in the love for his son.  It is a hard world the father and son in this film live in, and, many times, it seems the end has come.  You believe those moments, and it all stems from the power given by the film’s director and the actors involved.

THE ROAD tells an incredible story put to paper by Cormac McCarthy, the author who also gave us NO COUNTRY FOR OLD MEN.  The titles and the stories they convey are interchangeable.  Every character in THE ROAD is an old man in one form or another.  They have each lived a long time in a world that has moved on and, seemingly, forgotten them.  McCarthy’s novel, THE ROAD, is a masterpiece, and, for the most part, the film based on it, directed by THE PROPOSITION helmer John Hillcoat, keeps in step with its source material.  There are faults here and there, and, unfortunately, they are noticeable.  However, in the end, the film is a grand depiction of a barren world and the fire within all of us to keep living if not for ourselves then for those who depend on us.

Viggo Mortensen plays the father.  Kodi Smit-McPhee of the upcoming LET THE RIGHT ONE IN remake plays his son.  They travel across a post-apocalyptic America towards the coast, hoping to find some kind of salvation to the South.  The conditions of the world have been caused by some, unseen event, and we get snippets of life right after the cataclysm in scattered flash-backs.  The father and son move through their day-to-day lives, trying to survive the environment (periodic earthquakes let them know just much alive the planet still is), starvation and scurried band of  cannibals  that have long-since given up on the civil ways the world used to be.

Hillcoat’s recreation of the world McCarthy’s created in his novel is staggering, a triumph of desolation and earthy apocalypse.  It is a cliché  to say about a film with so much style that every shot could be a painting hung on the wall.  It doesn’t make it any less true in the case of THE ROAD, a film so full of directorial style, it completely transfixes you away from how little happens in the film in terms of action.  It isn’t a lie to refer to THE ROAD as an “edge of your seat” film, but the tension is derived from the quiet moments, the periods where you think all is well and the characters you have come to know are safe for the time being.

Though Hillcoat’s style and the way he perfectly captures the cold of the world (both in a literal and figurative sense), there are chinks in Hillcoat’s directing armor here.  I’m not sure how deliberate it is, but the sense of direction is all off here.  The lacking in the sense of time is, probably, deliberate.  It’s easy to grasp how long the world has been the way it is based on the age of the boy, but we aren’t supposed to know how long events surrounding the father and son take.  When they come across an underground bunker full of food, we aren’t really supposed to know how long they stay before deciding it is too dangerous.  That element of the film is just an understanding in the way of this world.

However, we never really know where in the world we are.  For a majority of the film, I was believing they were on the West coast working their way towards the Pacific coast.  Late in the film, we are shown a map telling us they are, in fact, on the East coast working towards the Atlantic coastline.  Hillcoat never gives us any sense of this before this scene.  In fact, there is no rhyme or reason as to the direction the characters are moving in any, given scene.  Sometimes they are moving towards screen right.  Other times, they are moving towards screen left.  When you stand back and look at it, this is a minor flaw in things.  Unfortunately, it is quite a noticeable one, and it never fails in creating some bit of distraction from the story at hand.

One thing to help in this distraction, though, is how marvelous the performances are from everyone in the film, Mortensen in particular who ends up doing the best work of his career.  He makes a believer out of you as to the love he gives his son, and you can almost tell just from the performance that Mortensen has children of his own.  There are both scenes where Mortensen has to break down at the hardships he and his son are going through and scenes where he must become a harder man, a  defender  against the dangers slowly seeping in.  I wouldn’t say Mortensen carries the film, because Smit-McPhee gives a performance that is just as gripping and substantial as Mortensen’s.  These two actors together provide such a powerhouse of emotions that their performances alone make THE ROAD an emotionally challenging film.

Other notable roles come from Charlize Theron as the wife/mother of the pair, only seen in the flashbacks, and Robert Duvall and Guy Pearce as two men who the boy and his father meet in their journey.  Everyone, even the always mentionable Garret Dillahunt as a member of a gang, does a superb job making the world of THE ROAD even that much more realistic.

Mention should also be given to both Nick Cave and Warren Ellis, who have crafted a musical score for THE ROAD that is just as moving as the work they did for THE PROPOSITION and THE ASSASSINATION OF JESSE JAMES BY THE COWARD ROBERT FORD.  Their music is melancholy, almost depressing at times, but it, too, instills a sense of hope and an element of direction towards something greater.

It is strange to call a film like THE ROAD beautiful, a word that doesn’t, in and of itself, give a sense of the dour and dejected world shown here.  It is a beautiful film, and it is because of the optimism Hillcoat and screenwriter Joe Penhall took from McCarthy’s novel.  The original novel is a masterpiece, a triumph of survival and idealism as shown in a stark world.  Hillcoat’s film doesn’t quite reach that same level of craftsmanship.  Much of this comes from how forced everything seems to be in order to get everything into a two-hour film, and even more of this stems from Hillcoat’s diverting usage of direction.  Nonetheless, THE ROAD is a powerful film.  Though it is a hard one to travel, it is well worth the effort.

Gosling and LaBeouf Set for John Hillcoat’s WETTEST COUNTY

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Ryan Gosling?   Shia LaBeouf? John Hillcoat?   Bootleggin’?   Suddenly, THE WETTEST COUNTY IN THE WORLD is creeping its way up to the top of my most anticipated list.   We knew Hillcoat was directing the film about bootlegging brothers in Depression-era Virginia.   However, thanks to an interview with the director by our buddies over at Atomic Popcorn, we have some faces to go with those characters.   Hillcoat, whether he was suppossed to reveal them or not, stated that Gosling and LaBeouf were attached.

But yeah, I shouldn’t really talk about it cause it’s in the middle of all sorts of stuff.

That’s what he said precisely.   What’s more is the fact that Nick Cave, who has had a hand in Hillcoat’s previous films (he wrote THE PROPOSITION and co-wrote the music for THE ROAD), is also adapting the screenplay for WETTEST COUNTY from the novel by Matt Bondurant.   It is Bondurant’s grandfather, Jack, who is the central character of the true-life story.

What do you think?   Are Gosling and LaBeouf the perfect choice to play Depression-era, bootlegging siblings?   Can Hillcoat and Cave working together do any wrong?   Be honest.   Which actor is cooler in those two pics above?   Give us your take on this story in the comment section below.

THE ROAD To Nowhere Leads to This Final Poster

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At this point, the marketing campaign for the John Hillcoat-directed adaptation of Cormac McCarthy’s THE ROAD could be an extreme closeup of dry pavement, and we’d all be standing in line opening day to see it.  This final poster for the film, however, brought to us by Coming Soon, does a fine job, nonetheless, of conveying the film’s message.  A father in a barren wasteland of a world desperately struggling to keep his young son safe from the dangers of this strange world.  That about sums it up, and it’s all there in brilliant color.

THE ROAD hits theaters on November 25th.

Trailer for ‘The Road’ like a highway to Hell!

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If you haven’t seen this already, you REALLY need to watch the trailer for ‘The Road’… like, right now! The beginning intro of th trailer does sort of feel like ‘The Happening’ meets ‘The Day After Tomorrow’ but, trust me, it gets much better! If the remainder of this trailer doesn’t get you all giddy and crazy-effing pumped up to see ‘The Road’ then I worry about your mental state. Between the incredible cinematography and killer production design combined with the added bonus of what looks like an outstanding performance from Viggo Mortenson… oh yeah, and it’s adapted from a book by Cormac McCarthy (who also wrote the book ‘No Country for Old Men’)… how could this movie NOT end up being a total, adrenaline producing fear-filled terror trip? ‘The Road’ is set to open nationwide in October 2009.