Law Abiding Citizen (1 1/2 Stars)


Movie Review by Michael Phillips

 

Jamie Foxx  & Gerard Butler in the movie Law Abiding Citizen
Jamie Foxx & Gerard Butler

"Law Abiding Citizen" is a glib, brutal and preposterous revenge fantasy, a take-the-law-in-your-own-hands rabble rouser that taps into a lot of fears and gripes about the American legal system.

It's the sort of movie that Mel Gibson or Clint Eastwood might have made back in the day -- a man survives the slaughter of his family and sets out to get even, and then some.

Gerard Butler has the title role, Clyde Shelton, a "tinkerer" who is stabbed during a home invasion. Jamie Foxx is the politically ambitious Philadelphia prosecutor who lets one of the killers get off easy so the other will be executed.

"It's not what you know, it's what you can prove in court," Nick Rice tells a distraught Clyde.

Nick is listening to his boss (Bruce McGill): "In this job, your best asset is a short memory." But that's not Clyde. Ten years later, when one of the killers is finally executed, his elaborate revenge begins.

"Citizen" is a "You don't know who you're messing with" thriller, like "Taken." Clyde may be a law-abiding citizen, but he has gadget skills and a sadistic streak. When he kills crooks and the legal eagles who kept them from justice, he makes them suffer. Almost all of them have terrifying seconds to realize their fate.

Nick knows who is doing this, even locks up Clyde. But because he's the ultimate quarry in this blood feud, Nick must see those around him die at Clyde's gadget-guru hands.

Butler gives Clyde a wicked glee but only a hint of the humanity he lost when his wife and daughter were slain. His battle-of-brains-and-wills scenes with Foxx don't have a lot of snap, and because those confrontations are the heart here, that drains some energy from the film.

A rich canvas of character actors (Colm Meaney, Viola Davis) are mostly plot necessities. The Kurt Wimmer ("The Recruit") script has a cruel wit, up until it falls apart in a dishonest and outlandish third act. Director F. Gary Gray ("The Italian Job") maintains his reputation for action scenes that deflate on-screen.

You'd like to hope that filmmakers, outside the horror genre anyway, don't start from a place of utter cynicism. But we know exactly what we're dealing with here. It's a "Who dies next?" slasher film masquerading as a revenge thriller.

 

 

Clyde Shelton (Gerard Butler) is an upstanding family man whose wife and daughter are brutally murdered during a home invasion.

When the killers are caught, Nick Rice (Jamie Foxx), a hotshot young Philadelphia prosecutor, is assigned to the case. Over his objections, Nick is forced by his boss to offer one of the suspects a light sentence in exchange for testifying against his accomplice.

Fast forward ten years.

The man who got away with murder is found dead and Clyde Shelton coolly admits his guilt. Then he issues a warning to Nick: Either fix the flawed justice system that failed his family, or key players in the trial will die.

MPAA rating: R (for strong bloody brutal violence and torture, a scene of rape and pervasive language).

Running time: 1:47.

Cast: Jamie Foxx (Nick); Gerard Butler (Clyde); Viola Davis (Mayor); Colm Meaney (Detective Dunnigan); Leslie Bibb (Sarah).

Credits: Directed by F. Gary Gray; written by Kurt Wimmer; produced by Lucas Foster, Gerard Butler, Alan Siegel, Mark Gill, Wimmer and Robert Katz. An Overture Films release.

 

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