He's fallen on hard times, drinks too much, and travels to Mexico for a reunion with his old military buddy Rayburn ( Christopher Walken). Washington plays Creasy, whose resume includes anti-terrorism. Even the last scene involving his character is a disappointment there's a moment when one thing and one thing only should happen to him, and it doesn't, and the movie lets him, and us, down gently. Denzel Washington creates a believable, sympathetic character here - a character complex enough to deserve more than fancy action scenes. We count those still alive, and ask ourselves if the Law of Economy of Characters applies: That's the one that says a movie contains no unnecessary characters, and so the otherwise unexplained presence of a star in a seemingly insignificant role will be richly explained by the end.Īll of this is true, and yet the movie has real qualities. When it seems that everyone who could possibly be killed is dead and the movie must surely be over, there's another whole chapter. Sure, he gets shot now and again, but can you walk around Mexico City as an accused cop-killer and outgun professional killers indefinitely? And as he plows his way through the labyrinth of those responsible for kidnapping the girl, the body count becomes a little ridiculous, and Washington's character, who seemed very human, begins uncomfortably to resemble an invulnerable superhero. He seems to be homeless, yet has frequent changes of wardrobe and weaponry, even producing a shoulder-mounted missile launcher when necessary. The hero outshoots and outsmarts half the bad guys in Mexico City. The screenplay is by Brian Helgeland, whose work on " Mystic River" dealt with revenge in deep, painful personal terms.
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