Chicago Sun-Times

RUNNING TO FREEDOM

Will Smith stars in an OK action movie that could have been so much more

- RICHARD ROEPER MOVIE COLUMNIST rroeper@suntimes.com | @RichardERo­eper

We reach full overkill in the historical action epic “Emancipati­on” when an alligator rises up and pulls Will Smith’s Peter into the swamp, igniting a monumental battle in which Peter uses a small knife to stab the alligator again and again and again, ultimately killing the great beast and living to fight another day.

At that point, it becomes clear director Antoine Fuqua, screenwrit­er William N. Collage and Smith are more interested in delivering a thriller that plays like an 1863 version of “The Fugitive” than in delving too deep into the particular­s of the real-life man who became a worldwide symbol of the horrors of slavery when photos of the monstrous keloid scarring of his back from repeated whippings were circulated around the world.

Although “Emancipati­on” contains certain basic elements from the real-life Peter’s story, including his escape and his eventual enlistment in the Union Army, the great majority of the film is devoted to Peter battling the unforgivin­g swamps and forestland­s, fending off the aforementi­oned alligator as well as a snake, dodging bullets, hiding in a tree trunk, coming up with ingenious ways to find food and water — and trying to say one step ahead of the relentless slave hunter (Ben Foster). It’s a well-made film with some admittedly exciting action sequences, but even after 2 hours and 12 minutes, it feels as we’ve just skimmed the surface of this important piece of American history.

With director Fuqua (“Training Day,” “The Equalizer”) and cinematogr­apher Robert Richardson employing a desaturate­d technique that veers close to black-andwhite, with occasional, attention-getting pops of color, e.g., drops of blood falling on a leaf, or yellow flames licking a plantation from every side, “Emancipati­on” begins with Peter, his wife Dodienne (Charmaine Bingwa in a moving performanc­e) and their children huddled in prayer. They are a beautiful family trapped in the ugliest, most horrific of circumstan­ces — and it somehow gets even worse when Peter is separated from his family and put to work in a slave encampment, building a railroad for the Confederat­e Army.

Time and again, Peter is subjected to brutal beatings and inhumane abuse by a series of snarling, drooling animals, e.g., Steven Ogg’s Sgt. Howard, who is itching for an excuse to put a bullet in Peter’s head. On the sidelines lurks the most efficientl­y ruthless, cunning and racist beast of them all: Ben Foster’s Fassel, who calmly smokes a small pipe while tending to his huge bloodhound­s and telling Peter the only God in Peter’s life is Fassel himself. When Peter takes the opportunit­y to escape, Fassel can’t contain his enthusiasm as he rounds up his men and his dogs. This is what Fassel lives for — the chase, and the torture, and the kill. (Foster is a great actor and he is given one memorable speech in which Fassel tells a chilling story from his youth, but other than that, it’s a one-dimensiona­l role. Fassel is simply a hate machine pursuing Peter.)

With an abundance of overhead, dronetype shots tracking the action, Peter relies on his intelligen­ce, his survival instincts and his faith as he slogs through swamps, climbs trees, hides underwater and employs various clever techniques to throw Fassel and his men and those unrelentin­g dogs off his tracks, all in the name of somehow making it to a Union Army camp in Baton Rouge, finding his freedom and reuniting with his family.

We occasional­ly catch up with Dodienne and the children, but “Emancipati­on” is mostly about Peter’s incredible resolve and fortitude, as he narrowly escapes what appears to be certain death more than once and indeed does make it to that Union camp, with the great assistance of the all-Black 1st Louisiana Native Guard. Even then, though, we remain in action-film mode, with Smith delivering more of a big, Movie Star performanc­e than a grounded work of acting.

Despite the undeniable importance of this story and the obvious passion of those involved in telling it, “Emancipati­on” is more than anything a relatively standard-issue, period-piece action film — and that’s a shame, because we see glimpses of how it could have been something much more than that.

 ?? ??
 ?? APPLE TV+ ?? After escaping from slavery, Peter (Will Smith, left) is pursued by the relentless Fassel (Ben Foster) in “Emancipati­on.”
APPLE TV+ After escaping from slavery, Peter (Will Smith, left) is pursued by the relentless Fassel (Ben Foster) in “Emancipati­on.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States