New York Post

better left dead

- KYLE SMITH

T HEY don’t make ’em like “A Walk Among the Tombstones” anymore. Mainly because everyone got bored with ’em and stopped watching ’em.

Based on a Lawrence Block novel, the movie is a throwback to ’70s privateeye TV shows, the ones about scowling hombres with manful names like Mannix or Banacek. Writerdire­ctor Scott Frank even throws in freeze frames at climactic moments.

Naturally, our hero is an alcoholic gumshoe and former NYPD man, Matt Scudder (Liam Neeson), who gets hired by a drug dealer (Dan Stevens, aka Matthew from “Downton Abbey”) to find out who kidnapped his wife and left her chopped up in a trunk in Red Hook.

Cracking the case comes a little too easily to Matt. A quick trip to the library to trawl through microfiche — this is 1999, and Matt is wary of newfangled stuff like Internet tubes and whatnot — yields a clever, adorable sidekick, T.J. (played by young actor Brian “Astro” Bradley), who seems like the last kid in New York to know who Sam Spade was. He, too, is a figure straight out of ’70s TV, though in his case he’s a sitcom type.

Witnesses who say they’re reluctant to talk simply change their minds and spill. One guy (a superb Ólafur Darri Ólafsson) who works at Brooklyn’s Green-Wood Cemetery, where the remains of another chopped-up woman were found, acts so much like a man with secrets that Matt follows him home and breaks into his lair, one of those standard sheds-filled-with-evidence that TV murderers always maintain. “What gave me away?” asks the creepy guy. “Everything,” says Scudder. “You’re a weirdo.” He turns out to be surprising­ly chatty for a guy who’s an accomplice to multiple slayings.

The movie grows less and less plausible, but Frank keeps things moving along competentl­y, and his actors are engaging. Stevens, with his disreputab­le mustache and soul patch, does a nice job distancing himself from his “Downton” dreamboat.

But there’s nothing new here, nothing even pretending to be new, in a plot that glides along gentle curves instead of sharp twists. Even the bad guys are lackluster, more off-putting than terrifying.

Still, you could do worse than watch Neeson barking orders at kidnappers over the phone, and at such moments “Tombstones” is agreeably predictabl­e. It’s a Dad movie.

 ??  ?? Working with a plot seemingly ripped from “Magnum P.I.,” Liam Neeson’s
ex-cop teams up with Brian “Astro” Bradley to track down a killer.
Working with a plot seemingly ripped from “Magnum P.I.,” Liam Neeson’s ex-cop teams up with Brian “Astro” Bradley to track down a killer.
 ??  ??

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