The Denver Post

“Purge” erratic, angry

- By Michael Phillips Annette Brown, Universal Pictures

Warning: The following review contains references to the political content, rampant and pointed, in the “Purge” franchise begun in 2013. With these movies, there’s no way around what they’re really saying.

The latest “Purge” is an erratic, fairly absorbing and righteousl­y angry prequel. It sets up scenarios in which African-American and Latino resistance fighters rebel against the dear white people exploiting them for bloody political gain. Honestly: There is no avoiding politics and messaging with that setup.

When last we purged, two summers back with “The Purge: Election Year” (2016), our current president was a few months away from the White House. In various degrees of bluntness, screenwrit­er/director/executive producer James DeMonaco had a few things to say about the fear-mongering tactics that would ultimately put him there.

Now, with a new DeMonaco script directed by second-time feature filmmaker Gerard McMurray, “The First Purge” imagines what went down, and why, with the initial 12-hour crime-and-murder spree allowing an angry, disenfranc­hised U.S. citizenry to blow off steam with zero consequenc­es.

For newbies: This is set a few short years in the future. The third-party American ruler represents the New Founding Fathers of America, backed by the National Rifle Associatio­n. The prequel has it that a nonpartisa­n behavioral scientist has designed the 12-hour societal “experiment” as a way of lessening the crime rate and providing a mass catharsis. Looking a little dazed, Marisa Tomei plays the scientist, Dr. Updale, so named presumably because Dr. Downhill was taken.

The experiment unfolds on Staten Island, N.Y., and those participat­ing in the purge receive $5,000 plus a bonus if they ramp up the bloodshed personally. Via the characters’ creepy blue surveillan­ce contact lenses, we, the audience, witness the havoc they wreak. The first few seconds of screen time belong to the story’s stone-cold psycho (Rotimi Paul, truly scary as Skeletor). I took no pleasure in the blockparty sequence where Skeletor randomly selects his next victims. (It’s vicious in a morally inert fashion.) But the franchise lives (or dies) on its own hypocrisy, shaking its head at a society encouragin­g such sickness while relishing the narrative possibilit­ies.

Neighborho­od activist Nya (Lex Scott Davis, lately of “Superfly” and this film’s sole grace note amid the carnage) and her exlover, drug lord Dmitri (Y’lan Noel, beefy but indistinct) join forces under fire. They have neighbors and friends and business interests to protect. One of the wittier details in DeMonaco’s functional, largely generic script finds the slavish TV news anchors frustrated by the purge’s relatively sluggish start. Then the government’s own goon squads, to Dr. Updale’s alarm, enter the fray.

The bulk of “The First Purge” is pursuit and evasion, attack and counteratt­ack, multiple, frenzied stabbings followed by multiple, frenzied rounds of automatic gunfire tearing through flesh. A key group of Staten Island residents seek sanctuary in a church, foolishly, while Nya’s little brother (Joivan Wade) risks his already-injured neck on the streets. “We are all Staten Islanders tonight,” the president intones at one point, waiting for things to start cooking.

 ??  ?? Lex Scott Davis in “The First Purge.”
Lex Scott Davis in “The First Purge.”

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