The News Herald (Willoughby, OH)

Light on ammo

Neeson stars in ‘The Marksman,’ a competent but bland road drama

- By Mark Meszoros mmeszoros@news-herald.com @MarkMeszor­os on Twitter

There is absolutely nothing wrong with “The Marksman.”

Part Western, part road movie, the film from director Robert Lorenz never misfires. It is competentl­y made and benefits from having ageless action star Liam Neeson at its center.

It’s also never interestin­g.

There is nary a surprise to be found in the by-thenumbers script for what once was called “The Minuteman” by Chris Charles and Danny Kravitz. And the food for thought offered in this tale involving the plight of Mexican people who live in fear of drug cartels amounts to little more than crumbs.

Neeson stars as Jim Hanson, who served in the Marines and now is a rancher living in an isolated stretch of borderland in Arizona. Although he has a loyal pooch, Jackson, he’s largely been a loner in recent years, having lost his wife to cancer. To make matters worse, Jim is in danger of losing his property.

Understand­ably, stepdaught­er Sarah (Katheryn Winnick) worries when she’s tipped off he’s seriously drowning his sorrows at a bar and makes sure he gets home safely.

Jim soon finds a purpose to drive him. Along the border, he encounters Rosa (Teresa Ruiz) and her 11-year-old son, Miguel (Jacob Perez), who, while fleeing a cartel, illegally cross into the United States.

Cartel forces, led by the

ruthless Mauricio (Juan Pablo Raba), arrive on the Mexican side of the border fence and exchange words with Jim. While Jim originally had wanted to contact local Border Patrol officers — Sarah is one, by the way — to handle the situation, he tries to help mother and son flee.

While one bullet finds his truck, another fatally wounds Rosa, who implores Jim to get Miguel to family members in Chicago.

He eventually reluctantl­y agrees to this task, Jim — in vintage Neeson growl — utters an expletive and turns his truck around after leaving the suddenly parentless Miquel with authoritie­s.

One problem Jim has is a reluctant travel companion, who initially feigns an inability to understand English but soon enough offers, “I don’t even want to be in your stupid country!” But he slowly wins Miguel over with compassion and food — including the promise of a first-rate hotdog when they arrive in the large Midwestern city.

A bigger problem is Mauricio and company. While Jim’s truck is dripping fluid and later smoking, he also leaves an easy-to-follow trail of credit-card transactio­ns.

Of course, the two sides eventually will meet, when, obviously, Jim’s titular abilities as a sharpshoot­er will come into play.

(At the risk of spoiling whether the pair will make it to Chicago, know that Northeast Ohio filled in for the Windy City in filming that took place after most of “The Marksman” was shot in September in Albuquerqu­e, New Mexico.)

As ho-hum as “The Marksman” is most of the time, we just can’t resist Neeson (“Taken,” “The Commuter”), seen only months ago in another soso theatrical release, “Honest Thief.” No doubt because of its story, this romp isn’t the heightened action flick that so many of the recent flicks starring Neeson have been, although he does get his chances to take out some bad guys.

 ?? OPEN ROAD FILMS/BRIARCLIFF ENTERTAINM­ENT PHOTOS ?? Jacob Perez ,as Miguel, and Liam Neeson, as Jim, appear in a scene from “The Marksman.”
OPEN ROAD FILMS/BRIARCLIFF ENTERTAINM­ENT PHOTOS Jacob Perez ,as Miguel, and Liam Neeson, as Jim, appear in a scene from “The Marksman.”

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