Los Angeles Times

A noir so amateur it’s just criminal

- — Robert Abele

Sodden with amateurish­ness, “Wetlands” attempts to turn Atlantic City in December into a noir nexus of drug-dealing surfers, struggling moms and broken cops but, instead, merely claims a handful of good actors as unfortunat­e victims.

Adewale Akinnuoye-Agbaje glowers painfully as Babs, a disgraced, recovering-addict detective on a last-chance posting in a desolate stretch of New Jersey waterfront he once called home. (All we know, because it’s repeated incessantl­y, is that something went down in Philly.) His new partner is a loutish drunk (Christophe­r McDonald) with a disillusio­ned anchorwoma­n (Jennifer Ehle) for a wife.

Obsessed with reconnecti­ng with his teenage daughter (Celeste O’Connor), Babs sees trouble in his surf shop owner ex-wife (Heather Graham) hooking up with an unnamed surfer girl (Reyna de Courcy) who sells dope for a lowlife called Jimmy Coconuts (Louis Mustillo).

In fashionist­a-turnedfilm­maker Emanuele Della Valle’s nonsensica­l screenplay, the embarrassi­ng “tough” dialogue is somehow both needlessly oblique and glaringly obvious at the same time, leaving accomplish­ed performers looking like motivation-challenged hostages waiting for the words “It’s a wrap.” There are occasional­ly atmospheri­c shots of depopulate­d boardwalks and streets, but the strain to give the visuals meaning becomes its own clue in the worst crime committed here: the killing of good storytelli­ng. “Wetlands.” Not rated. Running time: 1 hour, 38 minutes. Playing: AMC Universal CityWalk 19.

 ?? Abramorama ?? A D E WA L E Akinnuoye-Agbaje plays a recovering addict detective who is returning to Atlantic City.
Abramorama A D E WA L E Akinnuoye-Agbaje plays a recovering addict detective who is returning to Atlantic City.

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