San Antonio Express-News

‘Honest Thief’: Neeson walks on the milder side

- By Mick Lasalle

Liam Neeson is a movie actor, but at this point, he’s also a movie genre. Since “Taken” (2008), he has been most associated with a certain kind of action picture, in which a nice and slightly downtrodde­n guy gets pushed and pushed until he becomes a killing machine.

These are rags-to-riches stories in which the hero achieves status through violence.

His latest, which is opening in theaters (not streaming), is “Honest Thief,” in which he plays a brilliant bank robber, who sneaks in when banks are closed and cleans out their safes. But because this is Neeson, he’s not a hotshot bank robber. No, he’s sensitive and even a little ashamed of himself. And when he finally gets a girlfriend (Kate Walsh), he decides to go straight.

The appeal of Neeson’s movies is in the contrast between how mild he seems and how enraged he becomes; between how humble he acts and how violent he can be, and between how dysfunctio­nal he is at the small details of life and how proficient he is at destructio­n. This appeal is twofold:

1. It’s satisfying to see the underdog get ahead.

2. It’s funny watching the softspoken, laid-back Neeson

turn into a raging maniac.

But what this all means is that the success of a Neeson action movie is dependent upon how extreme those contrasts can be made. That is, it’s better if he’s really humble and then becomes really violent. And that’s where “The Honest Thief” disappoint­s. The movie has built-in structural limits on the extent to which Neeson can go full-on ballistic.

The story is simple, as all action-movie stories should be. Tom (Neeson) wants to start a new life with the woman he loves, but he doesn’t want his secret past as a successful bank robber to come between them. So one day, he calls the FBI and tries to broker a deal: He’ll turn in all of the $9 million he has stolen, in exchange for a re

duced sentence in a minimum security jail.

Two minor quibbles: He hasn’t spent any of the money? Really? And if he feels guilty for stealing the money —keep in mind, he hurt no one doing it; he didn’t even scare anyone — why doesn’t he just mail the money back to the banks? Why involve law enforcemen­t? A lot could go wrong.

To be clear, the problem here is not that Tom’s actions are hard to believe, but rather that the only way to believe his actions is to also believe that he’s stupid. But fine. If we don’t accept a movie’s premise, we can’t enjoy it, so we should all do our best to accept it and take the ride.

Oh, but there are complicati­ons. Tom runs into some crooked FBI agents, and one of them ( Jai Courtney) gets the idea that he should steal Tom’s money and kill him. Mistake! He thinks Tom is a pushover. The agent doesn’t realize that very soon he’ll be picking up the phone to hear that familiar Neeson growl: “I’m coming for you!”

Now, just between us, I can watch one of these Neeson movies once a week and be happy, but “The Honest Thief” isn’t one of the better ones for the reason mentioned earlier. Because he is fighting government agents, because his identity is known to law enforcemen­t, and because he is eventually heading to jail no matter what happens, Tom can only go so crazy. And a Neeson movie with constraint­s, that can’t scale the heights and depths of absolute mayhem, can’t achieve its full potential.

But still, if you love this kind of movie, you will at least like “Honest Thief.”

Running time: 99 minutes Rating: PG-13 (violence, profanity

 ?? Open Road Films ?? Kate Walsh and Liam Neeson star in “Honest Thief,” about a bank robber trying to go straight after a life of crime.
Open Road Films Kate Walsh and Liam Neeson star in “Honest Thief,” about a bank robber trying to go straight after a life of crime.
 ??  ?? As Tom, Neeson finds leaving his criminal past behind is nearly as dangerous as robbing banks.
As Tom, Neeson finds leaving his criminal past behind is nearly as dangerous as robbing banks.

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