Genre: Drama/Thriller
Director: Neil Jordan
Cast: Jodie Foster, Terrence Howard, Naveen
Andrews, Mary Steenburgen
RunTime: 1 hr 59 mins
Released By: GV
Rating: NC-16 (Violence)
Official Website: http://thebraveone.warnerbros.com/
Opening Day: 11 October 2007
Synopsis:
New York radio host Erica Bain (Jodie Foster)
has a life that she loves and a fiancé she adores.
All of it is taken from her when a brutal attack leaves Erica
badly wounded and her fiancé dead. Unable to move past
the tragedy, Erica begins prowling the city streets at night
to track down the men she holds responsible. Her dark pursuit
of justice catches the public's attention, and the city is
riveted by her anonymous exploits. But with the NYPD desperate
to find the culprit and a dogged police detective (Terrence
Howard) hot on her trail, she must decide whether her quest
for revenge is truly the right path, or if she is becoming
the very thing she is trying to stop.
Movie Review:
Men should know better than to make women angry, especially
if that woman in question is Jodie Foster. Haven’t you
seen her ferociously protect her daughter from the robbers
in David Fincher’s Panic Room (2002)? Haven’t
you seen her viciously demand to know her daughter’s
whereabouts in Robert Schwentke’s Flightplan (2005)?
Yes, she is one angry woman you wouldn’t want to mess
around with.
In
her latest movie directed by Neil Jordan (The End of the Affair,
Breakfast on Pluto), Foster gets really angry when she and
her fiancé (Naveen Andrews, TV’s Lost, Planet
Terror) gets brutally attacked by street thugs. The poor man
dies, while she takes things into her own hands, going around
New York City to set wrong things right, with a single gun
in her sling bag. Bad guys watch out!
Fans
of Jordan’s films will realize that this is his most
commercial work yet. After all, he is the director behind
the controversially shocking The Crying Game (1992) and the
atmospheric reflective Interview with the Vampire (1994).
And it is probably one of the Oscar winner’s indecisive
yet.
At
119 minutes (apparently what we are getting is an edited version
- for your information after all the Lust, Caution brouhaha),
the movie starts off well with Foster’s character commenting
on the sights and sounds of the metropolitan city, before
violence sets in and upsets her almost perfect life. From
there, the story becomes a revenge vehicle where baddies are
finished off one after another. The plot becomes predictably
dull and the movie’s pace suffers from it.
The
worst drawback of this crime drama thriller has to be its
last 30 minutes, where viewers are given a mediocre treatment
of a conclusion, which we are still fathoming what writers
Roderick Taylor and Bruce A. Taylor were thinking when they
penned the story.
New
York City’s sights are captured beautifully on camera
with Philippe Rousselot’s (Big Fish, Constantine) cinematography,
while the emotionally intensive moods are reflected in Dario
Marianelli’s (Pride and Prejudice, V for Vendetta) brooding
score.
What
audiences will be looking out for will be Foster’s explosive
performance as a radio talk-show presenter tormented by the
violent nightmares and how the agony is transformed into angst
and aggression. The Oscar winner slips into her role with
ease, and there is nothing to nitpick about her. Oscar nominee
Terence Howard plays a detective who is tasked to find out
who the gun-hurler is. While not as spectacularly wowing as
Foster, his performance is still comfortable to watch. After
all, it is Foster’s fiery performance everyone will
be cheering for.
Movie
Rating:
(Intensively fiery performances from the cast save this movie
from being mediocre and dreary)
Review
by John Li
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