San Francisco Chronicle

‘Silk Road’ spins a complex story about the dark web

- By David Lewis

“Silk Road,” a catandmous­e tale involving a DEA agent and an internet outlaw, is never a dull affair, but the ambitious film doesn’t quite click: It’s got too many subplots and too few moments of suspense.

Directorwr­iter Tiller Russell, who recently helmed “Night Stalker: The Hunt for a Serial Killer,” can’t equal the tension of that eerie, stylish documentar­y. In “Silk Road,” Russell attempts to create something that’s a cross between “The Social Network,” a tale of internet ambitions run amok, and “Heat,” a thriller that delves intimately into the lives of both the cops and the robbers.

Ross Ulbricht (Nick Robinson) is an underachie­ving whiz kid who espouses libertaria­n ideas. He can’t seem to follow through on any project — until he dreams up Silk Road, a marketplac­e on the dark web where customers can secretly purchase products like illicit drugs and guns.

Drug Enforcemen­t Administra­tion Agent Rick Bowden ( Jason Clarke), meanwhile, is fresh off a stint in rehab (or worse), and in true Hollywood fashion, faces constant disciplina­ry problems at work for his outsidethe­lines behavior. For good measure, the oldschool agent — who can barely sign on to a computer — is assigned to the cybercrime­s unit.

Irrespecti­ve of the tropes, there are intriguing aspects to the premise, but the problem is that the rise of Silk Road is a complicate­d story unto itself, and it often gets short shrift in the screenplay (or in the editing room). We don’t feel the sense of excitement, or dread, or moral murkiness, as the Silk Road enterprise comes into prominence. Ulbricht might as well be working on a new fitness app or a cat video that goes viral.

The cuts between the rogue

agent and the internet kingpin are sometimes jarring. It’s disarming when we discover, through dialogue, that Silk Road is a multimilli­ondollar enterprise; indeed, major moments in Ulbricht’s life seem to be happening offscreen. When the movie explores the domestic lives of Ulbricht and Bowden, it diffuses the tension instead of adding layers to the characters.

Still, “Silk Road” remains watchable because both Robinson and Clarke are interestin­g screen presences. And there’s some humor, which consistent­ly lands better than the thrills. It’s a hoot, for example, to watch Bowden joining with neighborho­od “assistant” Rayford (Darrell BrittGibso­n) to get a handle on the internet underworld.

It’s also easy to understand why Russell would cast Robinson, who is steadily becoming one of the best actors of his generation. Even though Ulbricht’s character is not fleshed out completely, Robinson captures the essence of this disaffecte­d dork, a smart misfit who doesn’t fully grasp the ramificati­ons of what he’s doing.

Throughout “Silk Road” we await the ultimate confrontat­ion between two obsessives — a nerdy kingpin and a desperate agent — but it never really materializ­es. In the final shot, we see them in the same place, yet the only thing that transpires is the credit roll.

 ?? Lionsgate ?? In “Silk Road,” Ross Ulbricht (Nick Robinson) is the target of an undercover operation after he creates a site on the dark web that sells illicit drugs and weapons.
Lionsgate In “Silk Road,” Ross Ulbricht (Nick Robinson) is the target of an undercover operation after he creates a site on the dark web that sells illicit drugs and weapons.

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