Montreal Gazette

Star-studded Broken City needs fixing

Story too complicate­d, overly spelled out, not intriguing

- CHRISTY LEMIRE

Broken City

Starring: Russell Crowe, Mark Wahlberg and Catherine Zeta-Jones Directed by Allan Hughes Running time: 108 minutes

Parental guidance: R, strong language, some violence and sexual content

Playing at: Cavendish, Colossus, Côte des Neiges, Forum, Kirkland,

Lacordaire, LaSalle, Marché Central, Sphèretech, Taschereau

cinemas

It should come as no surprise that every character in a movie called Broken City is either rotten to the core, or a liar, or a schemer, or the bearer of seriously damaging secrets.

What is surprising — and frustratin­g, really — is that these characters never feel like real people, despite a series of twists that should reveal hidden, unexpected facets of their personalit­ies and despite being played by big-name stars including Mark Wahlberg, Russell Crowe and Catherine Zeta-Jones. They’re all still conniving, only with varying alliances and targets.

At the centre of these dizzying double crosses is Wahlberg as Billy Taggart, a former New York police detective who got kicked off the force after a questionab­le shooting. Seven years later, Billy is barely getting by as a private eye in Brooklyn. He is, however, sober these days and enjoying life with his gorgeous actress-girlfriend (Natalie Martinez) who’s just starred in her first film. (Clips of the movie, which we see at the premiere, have the glossy, stilted look of a commercial for erectile dysfunctio­n medication, just one of many elements of this film from director Allen Hughes that feel distractin­gly unconvinci­ng.)

Then one day, New York City mayor Nicholas Hostetler (Crowe), who’d always been on Billy’s side, hires Billy to investigat­e whether his wife (Zeta-Jones) is having an affair. Hostetler is up for re-election in a week and doesn’t want to lose to his young, well-financed challenger, Jack Valliant (Barry Pepper), over scandalous revelation­s that he’s being cuckolded.

But Billy’s digging, with the help of his wisecracki­ng assistant (Alona Tal, who shares some amusing banter with Wahlberg), leads to layers upon layers of discoverie­s that indicate that the mayor is setting him up. These involve Valliant, Valliant’s campaign manager (Kyle Chandler), the police commission­er (Jeffrey Wright) and some wealthy, well-connected land developers. Everything is simultaneo­usly too complicate­d and overly spelled-out in Brian Tucker’s script, and none of it is terribly intriguing.

Hughes, best known as one-half of the filmmaking Hughes Brothers (Menace II Society, The Book of Eli), has come up with a forgettabl­e piece of pulp with some uncomforta­ble injections of humour and a weird homophobic streak.

For a supposedly great detective, Wahlberg’s character always seems sort of startled and one step behind. When Billy finally does fall off the wagon — which is no big shocker, given how much he talks about his sobriety — neither the drinking nor the recovery feels authentic. Crowe is singularly sleazy behind his inconsiste­nt New York accent. And Zeta-Jones, despite being confident and well-coiffed at all times, feels underused in a poorly developed supporting part.

Everyone involved here has made and will make vastly better films. Time to deposit that paycheque and move on.

 ?? ALAN MARKFIELD/ 20TH CENTURY FOX ?? Catherine Zeta-Jones and Russell Crowe have made better movies than Broken City — and will again.
ALAN MARKFIELD/ 20TH CENTURY FOX Catherine Zeta-Jones and Russell Crowe have made better movies than Broken City — and will again.

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