Uxbridge Gazette

WIFE OF CRIME

FEMALE STARS STEAL THE SHOW IN HIGH QUALITY HEIST THRILLER

-

WIDOWS (15) ★★★★★

DESPERATE times demand resourcefu­l women in Widows, a glossy heist thriller based on the 1980s TV series created by Lynda LaPlante. Gillian Flynn, author of Gone Girl, and director Steve McQueen co-write a script, which transplant­s the intrigue and betrayal from London to the gleaming apartments and deprived neighbourh­oods of Chicago.

They have sharp ears for snappy dialogue – “I’m in the driving seat, I just don’t have a set of wheels”; “He should have loved you more and the bookies less” – and position powerful female protagonis­ts at the centre of a muscular film that might otherwise be heavy on testostero­ne.

Two breathless­ly staged robberies, which quicken the pulse, bookend the picture but it’s a slow burn in between as the plot manoeuvres characters into position for a blood-spattered end game like pawns on a chessboard.

McQueen cannot resist attention-grabbing flourishes.

A politician’s journey home by car from a campaign appearance could be accomplish­ed without fanfare.

Instead, the Oscar-winning director of 12 Years A Slave captures the drive in a single fluid take, seemingly positionin­g his lens on the bonnet of the car as it travels through city streets while we listen to audio of a heated conversati­on in the back seat.

It’s an impressive piece of camerawork but rather indulgent, and such excesses contradict the central female character’s assertion that a group of women can pull off a robbery because they go unnoticed about their lives.

Career criminal Harry Rawlins (Liam Neeson) spearheads the theft of $2m with a three strong crew comprising Florek Gunner (Jon Bernthal), Carlos Perelli (Manuel Garcia-Rulfo) and Jimmy Nunn (Coburn Goss).

The job goes sour in a hail of SWAT team bullets and the robbers perish in an acetylene-fuelled fireball. The money is incinerate­d with them.

Shortly after Harry’s wife Veronica (Viola Davis) buries her husband, she receives an unwelcome visit from crime boss Jamal Manning (Brian Tyree Henry). He is standing for election in the city’s eighth district against Jack Mulligan (Colin Farrell), son of a crooked politician (Robert Duvall).

Jamal claims Harry stole the $2m from him and he wants Veronica to replace the missing funds or suffer grievous consequenc­es at the hands of his sadistic brother (Daniel Kaluuya).

Armed with a notebook containing plans for Harry’s next robbery, Veronica assembles a new crew including Carlos’s wife Linda (Michelle Rodriguez) and Florek’s wife Alice (Elizabeth Debicki).

Widows is a stylish portrait of crime and punishment, distinguis­hed by spirited performanc­es from Davis, Rodriguez and Debicki.

Tony Award-winning theatre star Cynthia Erivo is excellent in support as the babysitter recruited as a getaway driver.

Strip away McQueen’s brio and what remains is a high quality, convention­al thriller with a couple of satisfying narrative twists.

 ??  ?? Elizabeth Debicki as Alice Gunner, Viola Davis as Veronica Rawlins, Michelle Rodriguez as Linda Perelli and Cynthia Erivo as Belle
Elizabeth Debicki as Alice Gunner, Viola Davis as Veronica Rawlins, Michelle Rodriguez as Linda Perelli and Cynthia Erivo as Belle
 ??  ?? Daniel Kaluuya as Jatemme Manning and Brian Tyree Henry as Jamal Manning Liam Neeson and Viola Davis
Daniel Kaluuya as Jatemme Manning and Brian Tyree Henry as Jamal Manning Liam Neeson and Viola Davis

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom