Ein Sheriff versucht, den Frieden zu bewahren, als ein verzweifelter Familienvater zusammen mit seinem Schwager gewaltsam eine Pillenfabrik ausraubt und damit einen Vollstrecker der Mafia vo... Alles lesenEin Sheriff versucht, den Frieden zu bewahren, als ein verzweifelter Familienvater zusammen mit seinem Schwager gewaltsam eine Pillenfabrik ausraubt und damit einen Vollstrecker der Mafia von New Orleans alarmiert.Ein Sheriff versucht, den Frieden zu bewahren, als ein verzweifelter Familienvater zusammen mit seinem Schwager gewaltsam eine Pillenfabrik ausraubt und damit einen Vollstrecker der Mafia von New Orleans alarmiert.
- Gas Station Attendant
- (as Tommy Kendrick)
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A badly aging John Travolta headlines with typical aplomb as a smalltown redneck sheriff, with Matt's bro Kevin Dillon also putting in a decent turn as the film's pivotal catalyst to disaster. However, it's the oft underrated Stephen Dorff who steals the show as a New Orleans mafia enforcer. Dorff is off the hook and carries his weighty bad guy role with typically sinister yet cool-calculated nastiness. He will keep you watching if nothing much else will.
The story itself however is a letdown. It's slow, lacking in tension, originality and continuity, while you really have to shake your head at Travolta's continual failures to connect the dots.
On the plus side there are some decent shootouts, driving scenes and reasonable character development, but the bottomline is this is a rather predictable, low-budget b-movie that fails to ignite, or be quirky/original enough to push it into 'cult' movie territory like an early Cohen Brothers flick for example.
In summation then a one-watch rainy night film at best. Y'all come back now y'hear...
The story wasn't amazingly original and could even be called cliched, but it was interesting enough to keep me interested for a few hours which is more than I can say for a lot of the post-COVID films I've seen.
Brief synopsis: Travolta's a Sheriff, Kevin Dillon and some dude I've never heard of are thieves who stole from the wrong bunch for the wrong reasons, and Dorff is the mob's "avenger" sent to get revenge on the thieves.
Good acting all around, decent story, and overall entertaining.
And ya know what? It really wasn't a bad movie! Which unfortunately kind of plays to the audiences detriment. It's not bad enough to be fun and not good enough to be fun. It's a middle of the road picture that grasps at some really interesting ideas but doesn't have the finesse to make them work effectively.
For example our lead character is an out of work mechanic with Parkinson's who is at his wits end on how to provide for his family (interesting!), his solution is to rob a local drug dealer with his scumbag uncle (not very interesting). When the big boss hears about the robbery he sends his top head smasher to go recover the stolen loot and deliver the punks responsible. It's been done a lot.
The acting is good, actually. Stephen Dorff and John Travolta give a solid effort and have the charisma and depth to add nuance to their characters. Kevin Dillon plays that moocher, kinda scummy uncle we all have. There are decent performances here. It's the script that squanders their potential to push the movie out of mediocrity.
Mob Land is a movie very much in the same vein as No Country For Old Men, The Place Beyond The Pines, and Hell or High Water. Yes, those films had staggering budgets and a plethora of Grade A talent but most importantly they had wonderful scripts. The difference between Mob Land and those other pictures is that when characters have philosophical conversations about their motives, or meandering questions about their situations, it's interesting. They're building to something. Through misdirection and unconvention these films grip the audience and never let go.
I feel like Mob Land tries hard to be a character study disguised as a crime drama but it doesn't know how to examine itself. It's a vacuum sucking up all this inspiration from wonderful films but it just sits there with the pieces.
Also, Mob Land suffers from some pacing issues, that meandering, philosophical dialogue I mentioned earlier? There is a lot of it here. And we're sitting in cars listening to it, sitting in diners listening to it, sitting in garages listening to it. But philosophy turns to redundancy; it simply never goes anywhere.
Unlike the camera in this movie which goes everywhere! I've coined a new term for how this movie was shot: "Chimp-Cam". 95% of this movie was shot handheld with a stomach-churning shaky cam that is crotch level looking up at the actors. I literally, in my mind, pictured a chimpanzee shooting this movie. And it made it better. 20% of that 95% were tracking shots that were tracking shots just to be tracking shots. Do we need a nauseatingly shaky tracking shot to watch a guy walk from his car to his front door? What's the point?
I don't want to rag on this movie, truly. It's a massive step in the right direction for Saban Films. I feel like they've made an actual film in Mob Land.
If this script could've had one or two more passes that took those longer dialogue exchanges and cut them down to be leaner and more tense...shoot this would be so much better. If they could've given a little more dimension or originality to our lead character's development, hot dang this would be a different review. If they would've hired an actual director of photography and not a half trained chimpanzee...
The movie has the pulse of a dying man. John Travolta is the IV drip that keeps this movie alive. That is not saying much about JT but since I am a fan I kept watching through to the end. Stephen Dorff plays the same character as in Old Henry. Its just a costume change for him basically same speech same tone.
I think most people will stick with the movie because they know how it will end. Its just a house fire and yet we can't resist staring.
5 stars for JT's appearance.
This is a good ensemble film. Nothing great, but an interesting watch and get a lot of down home southern homilies - they are a type of religion in the south.
The problem was, that everyone was a philosopher.
There were some surprising performances, quiet, smooth. My favorite was Timothy V. Murphy - who played Sheriff Ben. Not a big part, but he was a great foil for Travolta.
It's not the best film around, but it has good music and it's worth the watch when there's nothing else that tickles your fancy.
Wusstest du schon
- WissenswertesThe movie was entirely shot in only 11 days.
- Zitate
Clayton Minor: Dead of winter. Cold as all hell. A man hails a cab. He slides in, sits in the warmth of the back seat. A few miles down the road, the cab hits a sheet of black ice, starts spinnin' out of control. Headin' towards the edge of the bridge, nothing but blackness below. The driver screams 'we're all gonna die!' The man calmly leans forward and softly says 'could you turn the radio up?'
- SoundtracksGrave in the Pines
traditional
performed by Clayton McMichen
Top-Auswahl
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Details
Box Office
- Weltweiter Bruttoertrag
- 171 $
- Laufzeit1 Stunde 52 Minuten
- Farbe
- Seitenverhältnis
- 2.39:1