Last
Man Standing Movie Review:
"Everyone
ends up dead. It's just a matter of when."
So says John Smith (Bruce Willis), right before he goes
on a massive killing spree in the small town of Jericho,
Texas. Make no mistake about it - the body count rises to
unprecedented levels in "Last Man Standing", Walter Hill's
latest bullet-laden action flick.
Based
on Akira Kurosawa's "Yujimbo", the story centers around
a lone drifter (Willis) who arrives in a "dead end" town
that is essentially run by a couple of gangs - the Italian
gang, led by Strozzi (Ned Eisenberg) and the Irish gang,
led by Doyle (David Patrick Kelly). Most all the inhabitants
of the town either belong to one of the gangs, or trade
information about them, as does the sheriff (Bruce Dern).
After Smith kills a gang member who flattened his tire,
both gangs become interested in acquiring his "services".
Which gang will Smith join? Does he have a hidden agenda?
I won't give anything away, but it is established pretty
early on exactly how the story will play out, and that's
part of the film's problem. No real surprises, no real interesting
characters, just several hundred bullets flying through
the air, and one heck of a body count.
But
it's not the body count that is the real problem here, it's
that the story doesn't have much of an arc to it. Writer/director
Walter Hill, who's been making these kinds of movies for
a long time now, makes it very clear how the situation will
play itself out in the film's first act. The rest of the
movie delivers on what it promises in that first act, exactly
to a tee. Basically, it tells you what it's going to do,
does it, then tells you what it did. And yet it's obvious
it was done that way intentionally. "Last Man Standing"
isn't interested in being anything more than a violent,
adrenaline-pumping, testosterone-laden action movie aimed
at a very particular audience. I'm sure there are those
out there who will find this film thoroughly enjoyable.
I started getting restless about halfway through. (I also
found it strange that for a simple action/adventure flick,
the film spends a good deal of screen time trying to explain
the double-crossing, back-stabbing, and bootlegging operations
of the two gangs. None of that really matters, given what
will ultimately happen.)
The
performances actually aren't that bad. Willis is playing
the same type of character he plays in many of his films;
that of a down-on-his-luck loner, seeking some sort of redemption.
He understands these types of characters and is able to
get the most out of them. And Christopher Walken is fun
to watch, as the creepy henchman, Hickey. The look of the
movie is rather good, as is Ry Cooder's musical score. When
it comes to staging action scenes, director Hill is very
skilled; and some of the shootouts here are well done. It's
just that Walter Hill isn't aiming very high with this project.
In the past, he has proven he can make good films ("48hrs",
"Johnny Handsome", "Geronimo: An American Legend"), and
also make mediocre films ("Red Heat", "Trespass"). As action
movies go, he is on familiar ground here - maybe a little
too familiar. It's time to move on.
Copyright
2001
Michael Brendan McLarney
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