Los Angeles Times

Crime tale takes a ho-hum turn

- — Katie Walsh

Cast Frank Grillo, Bruce Willis and Johnathon Schaech in a bank heist film and it’ll essentiall­y write itself, right? One only wishes that writer Bryce Hammons had put a bit more effort into “Reprisal,” a strictly routine B-movie.

This is the third film on which director Brian A. Miller has worked with Willis, part of a string of low-rent movies starring aging action stars that Miller has made for Lionsgate Premiere, and they’re all starting to blend together.

Grillo stars as Jacob, a family man and bank security chief whose bank is robbed by career thief Gabriel (Schaech). Grillo enlists his neighbor (Willis), a retired police investigat­or, to track down the culprit, and they study his methods and patterns to follow him to his next heist.

Films like these rely on stereotype­s. Grillo is his usual grizzled, lone-wolf hero, while Wills speaks in a bizarre, strained accent that sounds like a bad Brando imitation. Schaech is a slick villain but not given much to do. Jacob’s wife is played by Olivia Culpo, who spends the movie yelling about her daughter’s diabetes.

“Reprisal” is a standardis­sue story of vigilante heroics; there isn’t any any suspense or tension to speak of, as we know who the culprit is, and we simply watch the pair predictabl­y track him down, culminatin­g with a relentless chase scene. “Reprisal.” Rated: R, for violence and language. Running time: 1 hour, 29 minutes. Playing: Laemmle Music Hall, Beverly Hills.

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