Los Angeles Times

Faith healing and crime a bad mix

- — Gary Goldstein

“The Lucky Man” is an undercooke­d road movie that never effectivel­y squares its mix of “Badlands”-style sweetheart­s-on-the-run crime drama with the religious fervor and hucksteris­m of the Steve Martin dramedy “Leap of Faith.”

The film follows childhood friends and now-longtime lovers Johnny (Jesse James), a coke-addicted preacher, and Rebecca (Mariana Paola Vicente), a materialis­tic beauty, as they cross the American southwest conning churchgoer­s and God-fearers into filling the collection plate on behalf of the Lord. The caveat: Johnny may actually possess the gift of healing, though it feels more sci-fi than spiritual.

But a series of wrongheade­d moves tighten the screws on the trigger-happy Johnny and pouty Rebecca, sending them speeding toward the Mexican border to escape the law. Even for this volatile, impulsive, nonetoo-bright pair, their plan eludes logic. Meanwhile, Rebecca wants to get married, have kids and talk to her worried mother (Rebecca Flores), who considers Johnny “El Diablo.”

Writer-director Norman Gregory McGuire needed to better flesh out his inconsiste­nt main characters, clarify their goals and motivation­s, and deepen their journey with more vivid set pieces and fewer clichés. Stronger, less repetitive dialogue and moments, a fresher portrayal of Latinos and a firmer hand with the film’s uneven supporting cast would have helped as well. “The Lucky Man.” Not rated. Running time: 1 hour, 36 minutes. Playing: Starlight 4-Star Cinemas, Garden Grove; also on VOD.

 ?? Ian Sharar ?? “LUCKY MAN” follows a preacher (Jesse James) and his lover (Mariana Paola Vicente) on a road trip.
Ian Sharar “LUCKY MAN” follows a preacher (Jesse James) and his lover (Mariana Paola Vicente) on a road trip.

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