It’s not every day you
get excited about a Ray Liotta movie. Goodfellas and Cop Land were a long time
ago, and not since Smokin’ Aces seven years back had he appeared in anything
interesting until The Place Beyond The Pines. Step forward Suzanne
Collins, author of The Hunger Games, to try and save the day. Co-written with
director Doug Lodato (he’s directed one other film, Australian
comedy Best Shots way back in 1990), Collins adds a bit of oomph to a movie
better known as Ticket Out.
Forced to flee with
her two young children, recently divorced mother Jocelyn (Alexandra
Breckenridge) must keep her family safe from her dangerous ex-husband but also avoid the law. With the police
chasing her on charges of kidnapping, Jocelyn’s only hope is an underground
network whose purpose is to aid people in her situation. Putting her trust in
Jim (Liotta) and his mysterious contacts may be her only hope of freeing her
family and putting a dark chapter of their lives behind them…
Alexandra
Breckenridge came to our attention playing the young, sexy and extremely
naughty maid Moira in the original American Horror Story (2011). Ever since she
teased Dylan McDermott’s character Ben by wearing that little black number we have sworn to keep a close eye on her career, so it’s pleasing to see that she
has been cast as the lead in Breakout. It’s a shame she’s
limited to longing glances at Liotta’s Jim as he befriends her son, but she does have extremely poor taste in men, including big bad
Billy Burke’s character Dennis, her hectoring husband.
Oddly, Burke and
Liotta would suit each other’s roles perfectly, as both are miscast.
Burke plays the less than imposing bully well, even if at times his
darker side seems slightly contrived, whilst Liotta attempts the mysterious
stranger with a bigger heart than he lets on just as adequately, but he’s
hardly easy on the eye anymore, so a burgeoning romance between Breckenridge and
Burke would be more convincing and slightly less vomit inducing than the one we
are forced to endure. Luckily, the fireworks to this fling are never lit, which
sums up most of the script’s dramas as they fade without a fight.
To be fair the
actors all achieve what is required of them, but they're never allowed to show
just what they can do. Breckenridge deserves a meatier role than the one
she is given here, especially as she looks pretty swell with a gun in her hand.
Sadly, there’s little conflict, despite the threat of a husband prepared to do
anything to get his children back, proven when he prefers to hire a private detective and
his dog to hunt down the runaways. The police are never far behind either.
They are, however, always behind (a staple of crime thrillers these days). A
twist half way through proceedings adds potential, but opportunities
are wasted until a frantic final ten minutes which make the whole journey
almost worthwhile.
Colin Ford, who
plays DJ, the young boy at the heart of this story, is a welcome surprise,
although for fans of Supernatural (he played Sam Winchester) his precious and
pretty performance may not be. Born in Nashville, Tennessee, he won his first modelling
job at the age of four, broke into feature films at the age of five (his family
bought a zoo in Cameron Crowe’s movie from 2011), and will be appearing in the
highly anticipated television series Under The Dome, which adapts Stephen
King’s novel of the same name. Ford is one to keep an eye on, so it’s fortunate
that this mediocre thriller didn’t hinder his progress.
One of Breakout’s
biggest problems is that it sets itself up as a cliff-hanger but fails to
deliver much to keep us on the edge of our sofas. The
action and thrills take a backseat to the barely noteworthy histrionics and the
splendour of the baron locations, so although there’s a decent dust up and the
already mentioned flight of fancy in the final act, brief flashes of tension
scattered across the sparse script just aren’t enough. You can’t really call a
film Breakout when our jaded leads prefer to tip-toe and sneak about instead.
It’s not all bad
though. In fact, the whole package is somehow watchable, benefiting from a good
pace, a tasty set-up
sadly lost in the closing stages, and a slight spark at the film’s
heart which will keep you rooting for Jocelyn and her son, whilst putting up with the annoying
daughter (who only seems to be there to do something silly). Ray, soft in the middle and slightly too old to be chasing
planes, deserves some empathy, even if he is clearly thankful this isn’t
the killer ride Turbulence was. That said, a bit of brainless action would not
have gone amiss.
We could give
Suzanne Collins the benefit of the doubt and say she was responsible for penning the few good points in Breakout - two commendable action
scenes and a half decent premise - but we haven't a clue if she did. Instead, a promising cast has been
short-changed, and the author of The Hunger Games has left us malnourished; craving a little bit more action and a few more thrills to go with our slice of
family feuding. Lodato could be waiting another 23 years for his next
outing. DW
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