Los Angeles Times

White-water thriller is solid

- — Katie Walsh

The swift and efficient wilderness thriller “Blood Money,” directed by Lucky McKee and written by Jared Butler and Lars Norberg, stars Ellar Coltrane as a well-meaning young man caught in a love triangle with Willa Fitzgerald and Jacob Artist, that becomes a violent power struggle when the trio happen upon a stash of cash while on a white-water rafting trip.

McKee’s stylistic focus on the beauty of the wilderness and the human ugliness that erupts within it brings to mind the themes of “Deliveranc­e,” but “Blood Money” only delivers B-movie thrills that just can’t compare to John Boorman’s 1972 classic.

John Cusack plays the rumpled white-collar criminal who dumps his treasure into the river and ultimately ends up tangling with the trio for possession. He plays his character of Miller like a washed-up version of “Say Anything’s” Lloyd Dobler — irreverent, sarcastic and overly accessoriz­ed.

Coltrane displays a range he hasn’t shown before onscreen, dipping into darker realms as the romantical­ly spurned Victor. But Fitzgerald runs away with “Blood Money” as femme fatale Lynn, who doesn’t just want but needs the money.

“Blood Money.” Not rated. Running time: 1 hour, 29 minutes. Playing: Laemmle NoHo 7, North Hollywood.

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