Los Angeles Times

He didn’t see this coming? Really?

- — Gary Goldstein

In director Trevor White’s middling crime thriller “A Crooked Somebody,” Michael Vaughn (Rich Sommer, who cowrote with Andrew Zilch) tours the country pretending to be a medium who can communicat­e with the dead. In books and at shows, Michael may convince some of his “powers,” but as friend and business partner Chelsea (Joanne Froggatt) notes, he simply “tells people what they’re desperate to hear.”

Michael’s minster father (Ed Harris) and more compliant mom (Amy Madigan) certainly have his number.

But when drifter Nathan (Clifton Collins Jr.) attends one of Michael’s group readings and believes the “telepathis­t” has intuited the truth about a homicide he committed long ago, he kidnaps Michael with fatal intent.

Michael, however, soon hatches a long-shot plan to save his neck, revive his career and even “absolve” Nathan, all against inevitable media mayhem. Suffice to say, it’s a bumpy ride.

Logic and credibilit­y gaps aside, this might have played better if Michael were a stronger, more intriguing, less transparen­t con man. Unfortunat­ely, we’re asked to invest in a hapless opportunis­t, one who goes from bad to worse without redemption or emotional growth.

Sommer, who did fine supporting work on TV’s “Mad Men,” doesn’t prove a distinctiv­e or charismati­c enough presence to carry an entire film, especially one as uneven as this. “A Crooked Somebody.” Rated: R, for language and brief violence. Running time: 1 hour, 42 minutes. Playing: Vintage Los Feliz 3, Los Angeles; also on VOD and DirecTV.

 ?? Vertical Entertainm­ent / DirecTV ?? “MEDIUM” Michael (Rich Sommer, left) weighs next move with drifter Nathan (Clifton Collins Jr.).
Vertical Entertainm­ent / DirecTV “MEDIUM” Michael (Rich Sommer, left) weighs next move with drifter Nathan (Clifton Collins Jr.).

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States