The Niagara Falls Review

Dead Man Down as much a drama as it is a thriller

- Dead Man The Dragon Tattoo Trilogy, Dead Man Down The Dragon Down Tattoo Trilogy Dead Man Down. Niels Arden Oplev Colin Farrell, Noomi Rapace One hour, 58 min. Dead Man Down Dead Man Down Down Dead Man bruce.kirkland@sunmedia.ca

is an American action thriller with almost no action — except in the over-the-top climax — and fewer thrills than the genre usually calls for. What it does have is a pair of great lead characters and two hours of careful character developmen­t. That makes this quite interestin­g, in an odd way, and as much of a drama as it is a thriller.

This should not have been a surprise. The director is the Danish filmmaker Niels Arden Oplev. He did the first instalment in the Swedish TV and movie series that is absolutely brilliant when you see the original “extended” versions. Meanwhile, the lead female in is Sweden’s Noomi Rapace, the girl with those dragon tattoos. She also had a yearning for revenge against the cabal of perverts who so abused her. That element of

is worth rememberin­g when you watch

In the new movie, Rapace plays a young beautician with a severely scarred face and a legacy of emotional trauma. Lowlife neighbourh­ood bullies yell, “Monster!” as she passes. She suffered the laceration­s in a car accident. The drunk driver who hit her escaped proper legal punishment. Rapace once again seeks illegal retributio­n.

In a stroke of casting genius, Oplev pairs Rapace with Colin Farrell, the mercurial Irish actor who brings such soulful sadness to his best roles. Farrell plays a Hungarian-American. His status as an outsider in the polyglot, multi- national social fabric of New York City is crucial to how plays out. National loyalty is critical to survival in the Big Apple’s underworld. While most of the movie is in English, some scenes are played in French, Albanian, Spanish and Hungarian.

Farrell’s tough guy is teamed with Dominic Cooper. They are buddy-thugs in a New York gang run by a dapper mobster (Terrence Howard). Appearance­s are deceiving. Farrell’s character has his own axes to grind.

is not quite leisurely, but it moves slowly and meticulous­ly to that operatic climax during which hellon-Earth breaks loose. That gives the movie time to work on the unsettled and unsettling RapaceFarr­ell relationsh­ip. Both actors possess the gift of winning our sympathy even when their characters are doing bad, bad things. The moral compass in

is affected by the atmospheri­c interferen­ce they generate together.

What the movie lacks, however, is scintillat­ing dialogue to match the quality of the character developmen­t. The screenplay by producer-writer J.H. Wyman has the plot, but not the words. Rapace and Farrell’s best moments are silent and not spoken: Body postures, longing looks, emotion welling up in the eyes.

But the most important element is maintained: We care what happens to both of them. You want to watch this movie through to the end.

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