The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

New ‘Going in Style’ grows old gracefully

- By Peter Hartlaub

“Going in Style” sets up as an old guy caper drama, a genre that in the past has come with a checklist.

Viagra jokes. Incontinen­ce humor. A fistfight with younger guys in a bar. An affair with a much younger woman. A sullen grandson who must come to respect the old timers.

Director Zach Braff runs in the opposite direction of these stereotype­s and all other things hackneyed, crafting an enjoyable time at the movies. “Going in Style” isn’t perfect, but it does the most important thing right: It adds dignity to its older characters, instead of stripping it away in the name of humor.

Take Willie, a former steel worker played by Morgan Freeman. He dresses with an old school stylishnes­s, exudes satisfacti­on from getting a bad cup of coffee at a diner with his buddies (Michael Caine and Alan Arkin), and glows with life as he video chats with his daughter and granddaugh­ter from his Queens apartment. Watching the first third of “Going in Style” makes a pretty decent case for growing old.

But there’s conflict ahead for our heroes. The steel company gets bought by foreign concerns, and their pension disappears. The bank heist that ensues becomes a geriatric and mostly consequenc­e-free “Hell or High Water” — more of a catharsis than a crime, to right a wrong created by a corrupt system.

This is a change from the original “Going in Style,” a 1979 Martin Brest film starring George Burns, Art Carney and Lee Strasberg, whose characters robbed a bank to feel young again.

Arkin embraces his role, with the same vibrant crankiness that won him an Academy Award for “Little Miss Sunshine.” A scene where he suffers through a saxophone lesson, then talks a boy into giving up the instrument, is one of his best.

The only truly uproarious sequence is a shopliftin­g caper that doesn’t make much sense, probalby crafted for the visual of Caine and Freeman in a low-speed street chase on an old folks grocery shopping scooter. But even that over-the-top contrivanc­e ends pleasantly, with a humorous detente between our heroes and a flustered yet understand­ing store manager (Kenan Thompson, making the most of his three minutes of screen time.)

I didn’t double over with laughter watching “Going in Style,” or laugh out loud that much at all. But when getting up to leave, I realized my face physically hurt from grinning throughout the movie.

Like its lead characters, “Going in Style” just grooves along nicely, until the credits roll and you realize it was time well spent.

 ?? WARNER BROS. ENTERTAINM­ENT ?? Alan Arkin, Morgan Freeman and Michael Caine star in “Going in Style.”
WARNER BROS. ENTERTAINM­ENT Alan Arkin, Morgan Freeman and Michael Caine star in “Going in Style.”

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