The
Yards Movie Review:
Returning
to his Queens, New York, home after doing time for auto
theft, Mark Wahlberg hooks up with old friend Joaquin Phoenix
and gets a job in a subway car repair yard run by Phoenix's
uncle, James Caan. Wahlberg soon learns the business hides
a big-money kickback and extortion ring, and when a pickup
job leads to a shooting and murder, he's made the fall guy.
Bleak and compelling drama also stars Ellen Burstyn, Faye
Dunaway, Charlize Theron.
A
young man sits alone on an elevated train, his thundersquall
of thoughts masked by a face of annealed determination.
The man's name is Leo Handler (Mark Wahlberg), and he has
just been released from prison after taking the fall for
a group of friends. At the same time, a gathering of the
man's family wait in anticipation, eager to embrace their
beloved progeny. Interspersed throughout the hearth are
Leo's childhood friends - friends whose feelings of compassion
may be genuine, but are also overshadowed by the life of
pettifoggery they've elected to partake in.
There
are many givens at the outset of "The Yards." We know simply
by looking at the variegated personalities which characters
will turn out heroic, which possess a mean streak behind
a feeble facade of composure, and which have destinies that
will at some point take a tragic turn. By providing this
much information up front, director James ("Little Odessa")
Gray has basically put the success or failure of his film
into the rugged palms of his cast. Fortunately, he has acquired
actors inherently brilliant and more than up to the challenge.
The
"yards" refers to the New York City subway yards, where
Leo's uncle Frank (James Caan) runs a company that builds
and repairs subway cars. When Leo approaches him about landing
a job, he is told immediately that he would have to enroll
in a training program which would take a couple years to
complete. Eager to help his sick mother (Ellen Burstyn)
immediately, Leo is unable to wait that long. So, he gets
involved with his childhood best friend, Willie Gutierrez
(Joaquin Phoenix) who also works for the company, but in
a more shady capacity - involved in paying off cops and
politicians. Soon Leo finds out that keeping out of trouble
can be a very daunting task (even for an innocent man) and
that no place is safe from the scaly touch of deception.
Despite
the fact that the world surrounding Leo is embroiled in
sabotage and high-stakes payoffs, director Gray and his
co-writer Matt Reeves do a fine job of displaying the notion
that the people involved aren't inherently evil, but rather
weak-minded individuals who'll do whatever it takes to maintain
the lifestyle they've grown accustomed to, even if it means
betrayal and murder. At one point, Frank is informed by
his associate what violent course of action might be necessary.
Somehow, he drops subtle hints that he agrees to the hit
while muttering lines like "What kind of man do you think
I am?" These people will engage in corrupt behavior while
cynically trying to distance themselves from it, all in
the name of protecting what they have.
The
movie contains a top-notch cast that embody their roles
with an impelling urgency. Mark Wahlberg, one of our very
best actors working today, is a good choice for Leo - combining
a quiet longing to earn the love of his family with a dogged
determination to free himself from the injustice he has
had to endure throughout his childhood. He has taken the
fall for his "friends" his entire life yet when the heat
gets turned up this time (and with the health of his mother
at stake as well) his ferocity takes over. Joaquin ("Gladiator",
"To Die For") Phoenix hits every note perfectly as a tragically
weak-willed young man who'll participate in any endeavor
- regardless of unlawfulness - if he feels it'll distance
himself from a heritage he has grown to despise. The barely-recognizable
Charlize ("The Cider House Rules") Theron turns in a solid
performance as Willie's girlfriend who knows the good in
Leo, and as a result, begins to understand the true nature
of the family she's about to marry into. James Caan is enormously
skilled at hiding his character's ulterior motives beneath
a cobweb of one-sided logic and selfish reasoning. And the
always wonderful Ellen Burstyn is the soul of the movie,
playing a worn woman whose been emotionally crushed several
times over from the perpetual trouble her son has gotten
into, yet loves him with the potency that could eminate
only from the most pure of hearts. She's aware of his feelings
of guilt, yet she also knows he deserves a better life for
himself, endearingly telling him at one point: "I always
thought you'd look good in one of those business suits the
men in the city wear. Who knows what they do?"
The
film concludes with a development that may be perceived
as being contrived, yet I was willing to accept it. Partly
because it does make sense, but mostly because I was completely
wrapped up in the lives of those involved.
Copyright
2001
Michael Brendan McLarney
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