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Current Issue: Artvoice v7n49, week of Thursday December 4 » back issues

Film Reviews

Dirty Harriet: The Brave One

Jodie Foster in "The Brave One."

Usually, the machine-tooled marketing hyperbole of movie studios and filmmakers is hardly worth noticing. Does anyone outside the industry pay much attention to this stuff?

But in the case of Neil Jordan’s new vigilante revenge thriller, The Brave One, the filmmakers’ promotional comments, particularly those of its star, Jodie Foster, are a little more interesting and may even reflect an ambivalence, perhaps a mild unease, about what they’ve wrought. They suggest they’re concerned that the movie won’t be taken seriously enough.

Foster, who claims to have reworked the script and to have helped hire Jordan, even denied to a New York magazine interviewer that it is a revenge thriller. It’s really about the deeply conflicted nature of New Yorkers’ relationship with their city, she told him.

Of course, Jordan told a Variety editor that Foster’s movie character “is a revenge killer…It’s a trail of revenge she’s embarked on.” Both of them have noted the moral subtlety and ethical complexities they ascribe to their movie.

I’ll be candid about this before I go any further: The Brave One isn’t conceptually complex or involving. It’s muddled and clumsily exaggerated. If it were as darkly transgressive as its makers evidently intended, it would be a truly disturbing work, on more than one level.

Foster is Erica Bain, a New York FM radio monologist, an audio essayist who weaves impressionistic prose poems about the city’s little human surprises. A woman vaguely of early middle age, she has a live-in fiancée, a doctor of Asian descent with a British-influenced accent (Naveen Andrews), who actually seems a little young for her.

One night, after her show and his hospital shift, they walk in the park with their dog, in a section marked by a sign reading “Strangers Gate” (mark that sign), where they’re set upon and beaten by urban savages. He dies. She awakens after three weeks in the hospital and begins to mend physically, but not spiritually, of course. Far from it.

For reasons not really made clear, she goes out and illegally obtains a nine-millimeter handgun. She scores this weapon so easily, in a matter of minutes, that one might easily be led to reconsider any previous reservations about the NRA’s disdain for the ineffectiveness of gun regulation.

When Erica returns to her show with a new more somber, more personal style, she tells her listeners that once she never knew fear in New York. What she doesn’t tell them is how she spends her off-time. Wouldn’t you know it, she can hardly step outside her building now without encountering some scum-sucking, semi-human goon who needs offing: in a bodega, on the subway, on night-darkened streets. Eventually, she sets out to stalk the three scumbags who killed her fiancée. Meanwhile, she has begun to bond with a homicide detective (Terrence Howard) who has his own nagging doubts about the probability of achieving official justice, particularly after a high-profile case against a mobster goes nowhere.

This dual parallelism doesn’t really work, partly because the two leads don’t play off each other well enough. Foster is effective enough as a ravaged soul, but her nervous, post- traumatic survivor doesn’t meld with Howard’s almost laidback performance. But there are more serious problems with the film.

On my way out of the packed theater where the movie previewed, I heard a woman say, “It was a good movie, but it was ridiculous.” I wouldn’t have put it that way, but I think I know what she meant.

Jordan (The Crying Game) is much too proficient and inventive a director to turn out a real stinker, technically speaking. His lurid, alienating, but slightly alluring atmospherics and scene-setting show his usual skills at work. In one quietly riveting, slightly concave panoramic night shot, held stationary for several seconds, Erica is shown lying on the ground in a cemetery as an elevated train rolls along above her. (Phillipe Rousselot is the cinematographer.)

But the movie’s clanking, arbitrary implausibilities combine with the filmmakers’ self-serious posturing to make The Brave One a failure, even as slickly engineered exploitation fare in the Dirty Harry mode. Weak links to the Iraq war and the use of horribly corrupted boy soldiers in Africa’s insurgencies are summoned up to make sure we get the seriousness of what’s being presented.

Erica’s voiceover mournfully observes that “There’s no going back; there’s just this stranger.” (Remember the sign?) She finds this new personality in the mirrors she keeps staring into. There’s a tone of faux-existential metaphysics, a middle-brow, Hollywood-liberal ethical attitudinizing infusing the movie.

If we were to take this movie the way its creators seem to want us to—in particular its pumped, morally dubious ending—it would be disturbing and obnoxious. But, as the woman in the multiplex observed, it’s too ridiculously over the top for us to let it get under our skin.


Artvoice Blog Headlines

JP Losman is sacked. AV correspondent Dave Staba reports…

posted December 2, 11:16 am on Artvoice Daily

JP Losman is sacked. AV correspondent Dave Staba reports on Sunday’s loss from the cheap seats at Ralph Wilson Stadium: Trent Edwards rolled to his right. And he rolled to his right. And then he rolled some more. Finally, a moment before he would have run completely off the field, Buffalo’s quarterback flung the ball towards his intended receiver, who was evidently sitting in a third-row seat near the southerly corner at the tunnel end of Ralph Wilson Stadium... (more)

West Side Neighborhood Housing Services

posted November 28, 3:44 pm on Artvoice Daily

As promised in this article, the membership list for West Side Neighborhood Housing Services is right here. Highlighted in yellow are city employees who report to the mayor or their relatives; highlighted in pink are other city employees. Most of the highlighted names (though not all) are new members, who joined just in time to vote at last Thursday’s annual members meeting, when Harvey Garrett was voted off WSNHS’s board... (more)

On the Waterfront

posted November 26, 2:00 pm on Artvoice Daily

So you think Buffalo has a hard time figuring out what to do with its waterfront, do ya? Mad that we can’t just build a signature bridge, huh? Madder still that we can’t just knock the Skyway bridge down? Furious with obstructionists who don’t want a Bass Pro Shop? Livid about the ice boom? And don’t even get you started about all the blind, misguided fools who can’t see that a huge casino downtown will turn our city around? Yes, my friend, you do in fact have all the answers... (more)

Chow Chocolat welcomes Denise Sperry’s Watercolor Exhibition…

posted November 26, 12:46 pm on Chew on This

  Watercolor Painting by Denise Sperry Merging the fine arts with gastronomic art, Chow Chocolat (731 Main Street, Buffalo, 843.4388) is now featuring a watercolor exhibition by Denise Sperry. A reception commencing Sperry’s works will take place on December 5th, 2008 (6-9 PM)... (more)

GRILLE 620 (Wine… Down the Weekend)

posted November 26, 11:34 am on Chew on This

If you haven’t already checked out “Wine… Down the Weekend” at Grille 620, (620 Delaware Ave, Buffalo, 886.2121) GO! This has to be one of the best deals in the city of Buffalo. Every Friday & Saturday, patrons can choose a complimentary bottle from the bistro’s extensive wine list to accompany any 2 entrees... (more)

Another Voice

posted November 26, 10:11 am on Artvoice Daily

Here’s something that drives me crazy about the Buffalo News: the “Another Voice” column on the editorial page. It would be a nice idea, except that so often it is not given over to “another” voice. It is given, rather, to the same old voices: to people who are frequently quoted as sources in articles, who are in positions of political or economic power, to folks whose job is to push agendas—to people, in other words, who have no difficulty making their voices heard... (more)

Who Goes Where When Hillary Goes to State?

posted November 19, 12:04 pm on Artvoice Daily

City Hall News has flow_chart that tracks who might replace who, from Hillary’s Senate seat on down (click to expand or follow the link—it’s an awkward shape):

It’s Robert Rich Sr. All High Stadium

posted November 14, 5:05 pm on Artvoice Daily

These new signs properly label the structure. We’ve been reading recent stories in the Buffalo News about sportswriter Tom Borrelli’s terrible fall last week at the old All High Stadium. He’s currently battling life-threatening injuries... (more)

CWM Fined for Violations

posted November 14, 2:41 pm on Artvoice Daily

Here's a picture of the sort of thing that got CWM in trouble This week Chemical Waste Management was fined $175,000 by the New York State Department of Environmental Conservation for violating its permits and the state’s hazardous waste laws... (more)

Musical Chairs

posted November 14, 12:51 pm on Artvoice Daily

The AP reports that Hillary Clinton met with Barack Obama in Chicago yesterday, adding fuel to speculation that she might be Obama’s choice for secretary of state. If that happens, it has long been rumored that Brian Higgins would be appointed to her Senate seat... (more)

Paint the Town

posted November 14, 11:06 am on Artvoice Daily

Late last night, at the tail end of one of the few weeks in the past year in which we did not publish anything snarky about anybody, someone threw two gallons of paint on our front doors. Seems a waste; we hadn’t even earned it. Nonetheless, we were cleaning up all morning... (more)

Old Editions Book Shop

posted November 13, 1:58 pm on Artvoice Daily

AV videographer Matt Quinn tours Old Editions, an often overlooked treasure at the corner of Oak and Huron Streets downtown: show enclosure (video/x-flv; 21.29 MB)

Mazzariello’s Ristorante & Martini Bar

posted November 7, 4:30 pm on Chew on This

  Photo taken by Rose Mattrey From Antipasti to Primi to Secondi, Mazzariello’s (114 Bloomfield Ave, Lancaster, 206.0561) has conquered the map of Italian cooking. Your palate will be exposed to an array of spices, herbs, and ingredients indigenous to Northern & Southern Italy... (more)

Post Election Bits & Bytes

posted November 7, 12:02 am on Tech Voice

Election ‘08 is now in the history books - so I figured it’s time to take a look backward, and a look forward at some relevant headlines. Hacking Democracy First, we’ll take a look at one of the best kept secrets of the campaign season, from both sides, care of a Newsweek article published just today... (more)

Artvoice TV: Latest Additions » more on AVTV

Punisher: War Zone

posted December 3, 4:04 pm on channel Movie Trailers

Movie trailer for Punisher: War Zone, in theaters December 5th. Read M. Faust's review of the film here.

Ashes of Time Redux

posted December 3, 3:58 pm on channel Movie Trailers

Movie trailer for Ashes of Time Redux, in theaters now. Read M. Faust's review of the film here.

Dr. Riyaz Hassanali: The TANNING BED, Yes? No?

posted December 2, 4:57 pm on channel Health

Cosmetic surgeon Dr. Riyaz Hassanali sat down with Buffalo actress and television host Lorraine O'Donnell for part 3 of our series of interviews with area medical experts. Today's subject is the popular use of Tanning Beds. Dr. Hassanali, of Williamsville (626-1593) is a well respected cosmetic surgeon who works internationally, as well as locally. This is the 3rd of six segments from Dr. Hassanali...

Ani DiFranco at Babeville

posted December 1, 8:19 pm on channel Music

Ani DiFranco played a sold out concert Saturday, Nov. 29 at Babeville, home of Righteous Babe records. Fans were clearly thrilled to have her back in Buffalo for the performance. During the show Ani introduced the crowd to a new tune she wrote upon the election of Barack Obama, "November 4, 2008". Watch it here.

Peanut Brittle Satellite with Jeff Mcleod of Lazlo Holyfield

posted November 29, 1:44 pm on channel Music

Wednesday, Nov. 28 Peanut Brittle Satellite opened the show for Lazlo Holyfield and guitarist Jeff Mcleod of LH sat in on one of the tunes. Great musicianship from both bands.

Artisans Bazaar on Elmwood

posted November 29, 1:16 pm on channel Art

Annie Adams, Jennifer Mogensen and Deborah Ellis of Artvoice gathered 30 local artists to exhibit in the rear space of the Neighborhood Collective at 810 Elmwood Ave. (887-2929). The idea was to offer people an opportunity to find unique gifts and a chance to shop from our local talent and support our community this holiday season.

City Mission: Food for the Needy

posted November 28, 08:47 am on channel Local Interest

Artvoice videographer Korey Green follows City Mission volunteer Julian Russell to discover what the City Mission does on Thanksgiving.

Turkey Trot: Buffalo's 113th

posted November 27, 5:57 pm on channel Events

On Saturday morning, more than 10,000 people ran, laughed, talked, giggled, walked and shivered the more than six-mile long footrace along Delaware Ave. from North Buffalo to City Hall. We can't show you all 10,000 in this video, but pretty damn close.

Dr. Riyaz Hassanali: Talks about BOTOX

posted November 26, 5:46 pm on channel Health

Cosmetic surgeon Dr. Riyaz Hassanali sat down with Buffalo actress and television host Lorraine O'Donnell for part 2 of our series of interviews with area medical experts. Today's subject is the popular non-invasive cosmetic treatment, BOTOX. Dr. Hassanali, of Williamsville (626-1593) is a well respected cosmetic surgeon who works internationally, as well as locally. This is the 2nd of six segments from Dr...

Viva Vivaldi Festival @ The First Presbyterian Church

posted November 23, 3:48 pm on channel Music

The Ars Nova Musicians invited us to their rehearsal for their 4th Concert. Alex Jokipii and Geoffrey Hardcastle joined Marylouise Nanna and her orchestra for Sinfonoa Decima a 7, Vivaldi.

The Burchfield-Penney Opens

posted November 23, 2:33 pm on channel Art

We took a cruise through Buffalo's newest museum and it gets a big thumbs up. Here are a few quick clips of some of things you'll see when you visit.

Synecdoche, New York

posted November 23, 12:24 am on channel Movie Trailers

Movie trailer for Synecdoche, New York, in theaters now. Read M. Faust's review of the film here.

One Day You'll Understand

posted November 23, 12:12 am on channel Movie Trailers

Movie trailer for One Day You'll Understand. Read George Sax's review of the film here.

Four Christmases

posted November 23, 11:53 am on channel Movie Trailers

Movie trailer for Four Christmases, in theaters November 26. Read M. Faust's review of the film here

Australia

posted November 23, 11:46 am on channel Movie Trailers

Movie trailer for Australia, in theaters November 26. Read M. Faust's review of the film here.



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