Criminal: Mini-review


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Kevin Costner

What this movie does to Kevin Costner’s career is criminal

D+Ryan Reynolds‘ career is on a roll now, but he needs to steer clear of movies in which one man’s memory is transplanted into another man’s body. It didn’t work out too well in Self/Less, and the results are even worse, both for Reynolds and the audience, in Criminal

Actually, Reynolds is only on hand for the first 10 minutes of Criminal before his character, CIA agent Bill Pope, is tortured and killed by an international terrorist (Jordi Molla) trying to find the location of a potential doomsday device. In order to get the information Pope had and find the device before the terrorist does, Pope’s boss, Quaker Wells (Gary Oldman), has a scientist, Dr. Franks (Tommy Lee Jones) perform an experimental operation transferring Pope’s brain cells into the body of convicted murderer Jericho Stewart (Kevin Costner). Before he reveals what Pope knew, however, Stewart escapes custody, killing several people, and both the CIA and the terrorists are after him.

The plot of Criminal is completely preposterous, but it’s the type of movie that might be over-the-top fun in the right hands. Unfortunately, director Ariel Vromen plays it far too straight. From the moment the audience realizes that Pope left behind a wife (Gal Gadot) and adorable moppet daughter (Lara Decaro), there’s no doubt where Stewart is headed. Of course, Pope’s implanted memories eventually allow Stewart for the first time in his life to feel emotions for Pope’s loved ones. Before that, however, Costner is fun to watch for a while as he casually and brutally beats up anyone who literally gets in his way. The fun quickly wears off as the nearly non-stop violence is excessively brutal and overdone. Unfortunately, there’s little else besides Costner’s performance to recommend in Criminal. Gary Oldman bellows and blusters through every scene while Tommy Lee Jones compensates by mumbling his lines. The plot is needlessly convoluted. and almost every character in Criminal is, well, criminally stupid, seemingly for the sole purpose of allowing dozens of stunt persons to meet sometimes grisly demises. And, while the movie has plenty of set pieces, Vromen’s handling of them is rather pedestrian. Ironically, Nicolas Cage turned down Costner’s role in this movie; that one fact should tell you all you need to know about whether to see Criminal. 
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Child 44: Mini-Review


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Tom Hardy

Tom Hardy delivers a solid, self-deprecating performance in Child 44

B-The real star of the new serial killer drama Child 44 is not its detective, even though Tom Hardy delivers another solid performance. And it’s not the appropriately creepy killer (Paddy Considine) who tortures and murders little boys. Instead, the real star of Child 44 is the Soviet Union in the terrifying days at the end of the Stalin era, a time when the secret police were far scarier than any murderer.

Hardy plays one of those policemen, MGB agent Leo Demidov, whose time is spent chasing political dissidents rather than actual criminals. He loses his cushy post in Moscow, thanks to a jealous underling (Joel Kinnaman) and is banished to a smaller city hundreds of miles away. There, he discovers that the killer of a boy in Moscow has actually been operating around the country freely for years, killing dozens of other children. With the help of his wife (Noomi Rapace), Leo tries to find and stop the killer.

Director Daniel Espinosa‘s focus in Child 44 is on showing the horrors of life in Stalinist Russia, where everyone, guilty or not, lived in terror of being arrested as a political dissident. After being arrested, the real horror began as people were coerced into naming even more names of other dissidents, real or invented. Throughout all this, Davidov tries to do his job but is thwarted by suspicious fellow officers and a system that doesn’t officially recognize that murder exists. Child 44 is an often fascinating movie, built around a sincere, moving performance by Tom Hardy, but it’s a slow-moving and occasionally confusing one as well. Subplots are edited to the point where it’s hard to tell who some secondary characters are, But by the end of Child 44, viewers can understand the fear and paranoia of the era and setting in a way few mainstream films have ever managed.
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