Repo Men - Movie Review
Rating: 2 out of 5
This action movie misses the two big chances here: to play with the absurdities of its premise and to make a comment on corporate greed. Instead it's just brutally violent and staggeringly stupid.
Remy (Law) is a tough guy working with his childhood pal Jake (Whitaker) for The Union, a company that mercilessly repossesses artificial organs when people fail to make the payments. While their heartless boss (Schreiber) gleefully encourages their violent excesses, Remy's wife (van Houten) wants him to change to a desk job for the sake of their young son (Canterbury). Then there's an accident, and Remy becomes a client as well. So when he falls behind on his payments, he goes on the run with another renegade client (Braga).
There are so many gaping holes in this story that it's impossible to take any of it remotely seriously, and yet the filmmakers never have any fun, playing every scene seriously (with only throwaway humour, mostly of the cruel variety). The whopping crater at the centre is this: why not simply remotely turn off the artificial organ, then remove it humanely, rather than these unnecessarily grisly repossessions? Which then begs the question: is this business completely unregulated?
But down that path lies madness, because the more you think about it the less sense it makes, with a couple of final-act revelations that are beyond preposterous. And yet here is Law all beefed up and acting up an emotional storm, while a kinetic Whitaker merrily chomps on the scenery and Schreiber simmers in stone-cold villain mode. Braga's and van Houten's roles are underwritten and thankless, but these fine actresses manage to add a glimmer of feeling.
Meanwhile, director Sapochnik shows contempt for what plot there is by indulging in direction that strains for a Blade Runner vibe but never gets close. Set pieces are slickly staged but edited choppily, with dialog that never says anything in between the cliches and explicit violence that takes gratuitous to a new level. Actually, it's a remarkable achievement to turn such a promising premise into such a vacuous movie. If only it was vaguely amusing, it might have been a guilty pleasure.
Facts and Figures
Year: 2010
Genre: Action/Adventure
Run time: 111 mins
In Theaters: Friday 19th March 2010
Box Office USA: $13.2M
Box Office Worldwide: $12M
Budget: $32M
Distributed by: Universal Studios
Production compaines: Relativity Media, Stuber Productions, Dentsu, Universal Pictures
Reviews
Contactmusic.com: 2 / 5
Rotten Tomatoes: 22%
Fresh: 32 Rotten: 114
IMDB: 6.3 / 10
Cast & Crew
Director: Miguel Sapochnik
Producer: Mary Parent, Scott Stuber
Screenwriter: Eric Garcia, Garrett Lerner
Starring: Jude Law as Remy, Forest Whitaker as Jake, Alice Braga as Beth, Liev Schreiber as Frank, Carice van Houten as Carol, Chandler Canterbury as Peter, RZA as T-Bone, Joe Pingue as Ray, Tiffany Espensen as Little Alva, Liza Lapira as Alva, Yvette Nicole Brown as Rhodesia, Tanya Clarke as Hooker
Also starring: Eric Garcia