Los Angeles Times

Taylor Lautner can’t help ‘Tide’

- — Michael Rechtshaff­en

Still struggling to find his place in a post-“Twilight” universe, likable Taylor Lautner tries a family drama on for size, but the bland, incessantl­y mopey “Run the Tide” will make you pine for his pouty Jacob-the-werewolf days.

Lautner plays Rey, a quietly resentful gas station employee who has had to care for his younger half-brother, Oliver (newcomer Nico Christou), in a desert trailer park while their drug addict mother (Constance Zimmer) serves a six-year prison term.

Just before her release, Rey plans an escape route of a road trip to Santa Cruz with his little bro in tow in search of a fresh start, but just like the rest of his broken family, he’s finding it difficult to put the past in the past.

It’s a familiar scenario, but one that in the right hands could still mine some potency.

In his first feature outing, director Soham Mehta overplays the significan­ce of virtually every aspect of Rajiv Shah’s script, no matter how minor, with painfully slow pans and needlessly lingering establishi­ng shots.

But while it’s clearly evident that the camera likes Lautner, his meaningful­ly furrowed brow takes him only so far in this dreary slog.

You know there’s a problem when the delicate acoustic guitar on the soundtrack keeps threatenin­g to drown out all the wispily delivered line exchanges. “Run the Tide.” Rating: PG-13 for thematic content, language and a scene of sexuality. Running time: 1 hour, 34 minutes. Playing: Arena Cinelounge, Hollywood. Also on VOD.

 ?? Momentum Pictures ?? OLIVER (NICO CHRISTOU), left, and Rey (Taylor Lautner) try to hit the road in “Run the Tide.”
Momentum Pictures OLIVER (NICO CHRISTOU), left, and Rey (Taylor Lautner) try to hit the road in “Run the Tide.”

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