Mercury (Hobart)

Story easier than the maths

This New York cop movie is familiar — but it’s watchable, writes Jake Coyle

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HOW excited James Brown would have been for 21 Bridges.

Take you to bridge? How about 21 of them?

But I suspect even the Godfather of Soul would give an easy pass to Brian Kirk’s 21

Bridges, with Chadwick Boseman (who played Brown in the biopic Get on Up).

It’s a just-good-enough New York crime thriller, made with sufficient slinky shadows and leading-man charisma to do the trick. Even if its best trick is informing you, in case you ever wondered, how many bridges there are crossing into Manhattan.

The filmmakers themselves very nearly got it wrong. The movie’s original title was 17

Bridges. Accounting errors are one thing, but misplacing the Queensboro Bridge plus three more doesn’t exactly engender confidence in the entire enterprise.

Fortunatel­y the story is simple, even if the arithmetic isn’t. A drug heist goes awry leaving seven cops dead.

Andre Davis (Boseman) is put in charge of the investigat­ion, largely because of his shootfirst reputation.

The son of a slain officer, Davis has shot eight people in nine years. He’s known as “a trigger.” And nobody in the force will mind if this case ends with bloodshed.

With the two suspects believed to be in Manhattan — thanks to an image of them running a light from an overhead camera — Davis orders the most audacious dragnet in the history of dragnets: He shuts down Manhattan for the night, stopping all trains and ferries, shuttering the tunnels and, yes, closing all 21 bridges.

Now, Manhattan isn’t actually a medieval castle that protects itself by moat. Believe it not, there are holes in this plan. For starters, you can just about skip a stone across the Harlem River to the Bronx.

Sealing off a sprawling metropolis like Manhattan would be such a mammoth undertakin­g that I wish “21 Bridges” dropped the plot and instead turned its focus to hysterical transit authority officials. It could have been one very entertaini­ng traffic report.

But if the movie’s central conceit — putting Manhattan on lockdown — is laughably implausibl­e, Kirk (who has largely worked in television) neverthele­ss invests his movie with some genre muscle and noirish atmosphere.

The whole film takes place at night, as Davis and the narcotics officer he’s paired with (Sienna Miller) hunt their shooters.

The film tells it both from the detectives’ perspectiv­e and the criminals (a pair of veterans played by Stephan James and Taylor Kitsch), who stumbled into 300kg of uncut cocaine when expecting a more small-time heist. That police were casually on the scene at the time adds to the mystery that unfolds while Davis steadily closes in.

With J.K. Simmons playing a suspicious NYPD captain, it’s dispiritin­gly easy to see where 21 Bridges is heading.

But the quality of the actors — particular­ly James (from If

Beale Street Could Talk) and a nearly unrecogniz­able Kitsch — gives 21 Bridges a heft that its generic story doesn’t deserve.

Most of all, Boseman smoothly presides over the movie with poise and command, a fine movie star finally unencumber­ed by both the dictates of Marvel and the pressures of the biopic. (Though Avengers: Endgame directors Joe and Anthony Russo are producers.)

The sanitizing of Manhattan hasn’t been good for the New York crime movie. There are still pockets of scuzzy inspiratio­n to be found (for example, in the Safdie brothers’ Good Time). But, for better or worse, the New York of The French Connection may be long gone.

Now, 21 Bridges briefly alludes to that fact, but it’s wholly unconnecte­d — despite being a movie starring a gun-slinging police officer — to today’s debates of excessive force.

This is a film crafted well enough to pass the time, but to say it’s anything more than that is a bridge too far. 21 Bridges, rated MA15+, is now showing.

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