Un sheriff intenta mantener la paz cuando un desesperado padre de familia roba violentamente una fábrica de pastillas con su cuñado, alertando a un matón de la mafia de Nueva Orleans.Un sheriff intenta mantener la paz cuando un desesperado padre de familia roba violentamente una fábrica de pastillas con su cuñado, alertando a un matón de la mafia de Nueva Orleans.Un sheriff intenta mantener la paz cuando un desesperado padre de familia roba violentamente una fábrica de pastillas con su cuñado, alertando a un matón de la mafia de Nueva Orleans.
- Dirección
- Guionistas
- Elenco
- Gas Station Attendant
- (as Tommy Kendrick)
Opiniones destacadas
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.
Now you might initially cringe (I did) at the thought of John Travolta carrying a big gun and wearing a cowboy hat as slow-talking Sheriff Bodie Davis in this small town, but I'm happy to report he never overplays his hand and delivers a truly respectable performance. However, despite the poster, his marquee name, and the gravitas he carries, Travolta is not the main focus here. Instead, Shiloh Fernandez plays Shelby Conners, a greasy-haired, drag racing, local truck driver and mechanic who shares a daughter with his town beauty wife, Caroline (Ashley Benson). The family is struggling to make ends meet in this town where drug overdoses barely raise an eyebrow.
Caroline's brother and Shelby's friend, Trey (Kevin Dillon), drags Shelby into a get-rich-quick scheme derived from desperate times. A local clinic is the front for a drug-dealer, which means piles of cash on hand, with not enough security. Shelby reluctantly agrees and, of course, things go sideways. Only it gets much worse when Clayton Minor (Stephen Dorff) shows up and informs the boys that they ripped off the New Orleans mafia, and as the fixer/enforcer, he's there to set things right.
Many times we have seen local boys looking for an easy score. Rarely are the scores easy, and never are they without consequences. Trey doesn't last long, but a strange connection occurs between Shelby and Clayton. Now he's been doing this for a while and he's very good at his job, but Clayton is struck by Shelby's sincerity. Empathy may be a stretch, but he's at least paying attention to the humanity of the situation, despite threatening Shelby's wife and daughter. It does present an unfamiliar dilemma for Clayton, serving as the crux of the story.
As you know, in small movie towns, everyone knows everyone else, so smooth-talking Clayton in his shiny black Caddy stands out like the proverbial sore thumb. Sheriff Brodie is suspicious and cautious and worried about his nephew Shelby, but there's not much he can do to keep up with the gangster. Travolta and Dorff have a couple of nice scenes together, and the film's opening sequences establish the contrast between their characters.
But it's Shelby and Clayton who spend the bulk of the film together. Dorff has most of the best lines, and Fernandez holds his own. Mr. Dorff has always been a personal favorite, and I've often wished he was cast in better movies. Mr. Fernandez was once considered a rising star, and seems to have settled into his acting career just fine (sans spotlight).
Devlin McCluskey sings a terrific and unusual version of "House of the Rising Sun" during the film, and Jason Dodson (the Maldives) plays a wonderful song over the credits, and both songs fit with the look and feel and tone and style of the film ... something that doesn't always happen. There is nothing about the film that gives the impression of 'first time director', so we will sit anxiously awaiting the next one from Nicholas Maggio. In the meantime, hopefully someone will give Stephen Dorff another perfect role.
Opens August 4, 2023.
The change of Stephen Dorff's character to help our protagonist seemed rather too abrupt and underwritten that didn't make much sense and if you've seen the aforementioned 2007 film you certainly wouldn't want to see this.
Nonetheless, it's well acted by the muscular cast , has decent cinematography makes most of its low budget origins and has a sympathetic character in John Travolta.
It won't win prizes for originality for passes for a passable time killer.
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...
¿Sabías que…?
- TriviaThe movie was entirely shot in only 11 days.
- Citas
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?'
- ConexionesReferenced in Film Threat: TEENAGE MUTANT NINJA TURTLES + MORE! | Hollywood on the Rocks (2023)
- Bandas sonorasGrave in the Pines
traditional
performed by Clayton McMichen
Selecciones populares
- How long is Mob Land?Con tecnología de Alexa
Detalles
Taquilla
- Total a nivel mundial
- USD 171
- Tiempo de ejecución1 hora 52 minutos
- Color
- Relación de aspecto
- 2.39:1