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| Shia LaBeouf, the breakthrough star, and Mia Wasikowska |
The film tells the tale of the Bondurant brothers and their
lawless meddling in the distribution of moonshine during prohibition era
Franklin. The two oldest brothers, the bullfrog Forrest and the looser cannon Howard,
are revered as legends. The men of the Bondurant are said to be immortal and
when we see Forrest clutching closed his slit open throat, we’re inclined to
believe the legend. The youngest brother Jack, in an excellent turn by Shia
LaBeouf, is the runt of the litter; he just drives the car and hangs out with
his cripple pal Cricket. The narrative takes off when Special Deputy Charley
Rakes comes to town and upsets the balance of the brothers and of the landscape
of the townsfolk permanently. Much attention will be drawn to Guy Pearce’s
portrayal of Rakes and quite rightly, it is a wonderful piece of
characterisation. In the year of Matthew McConaughey’s Killer Joe Cooper who’d of thought we
could get a more hideously charismatic and watchable villain but Guy Pearce has
given us the most barnstorming performance of the year. However, with a
performance as showy as that of Pearce’s it only works if the film around him
is sound enough to not be out performed by one role and Lawless is strong on
all fronts.
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| A Pearceing stare |
Nick Cave’s script is impeccable - laced with violence, soul
and a modest, dark but beautifully witty vein of humour (like all his music).
The Proposition (Hillcoat and Cave’s last writer/director collaboration) owed a
great debt to Cormac McCarthy’s Blood Meridian (for me, the greatest novel ever
written) and Hillcoat has said as much. His last film The Road was based on the
incredible, bleak McCarthy novel. Lawless though, along with Tommy Lee Jones’
The Three Burials of Melquiades Estrada(2005), is the film that best captures
McCarthy’s lyrical yet grounded dialogue and the ingrained poetry and base,
impulsive violence of a certain time and place, whether that is the old west or
the apocalypse. Hillcoat and Cave have captured just that in Lawless.
The film is exhilarating in a way that only film can be.
It’s exhilarating in the same way that no film has been since Nicolas Winding
Refn’s Drive last year. It’s perfectly paced, all characters utterly relevant
(Jessica Chastain has a lovely role as the woman that adds weight and humanity
to the reserved Forrest) and builds to a Peckinpah worthy shootout. Lawless
reminds me (as if I need reminding) why I love film as an entire medium. It’s
also the best use and disregarding of genre tropes since The Proposition. John
Hillcoat and Nick Cave have absolutely cemented themselves as one of the
greatest cinematic collaborations of all time. Rubbing shoulders with the heady
heights of Powell and Pressburger and have, in Lawless, crafted an immortal
film of masterful impact.


Tom Hardy is the man in this flick but the one who really runs away with it all is Guy Pearce who has never ever been as vicious as he is here. Everybody else here is great too, but he’s the one who steals the show, in my opinion. Nice review.
ReplyDeleteCheers. I agree, Hardy is stoically cool and Pearce was just incredible but for me LeBeouf was a real surprise and because of that my standout performance. But hey, brilliant film all round.
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