Written by / 2/09/2014 / No comments / , , , , ,

JOSH BROLIN IN LABOR DAY

year: 2014 rating: **1/2
In any romance there needs a tinge of excitement and danger to make it all worthwhile, and LABOR DAY has a premise that true love is not only blind, it can also be illegal…

But the “chick flick” aspect is merely a cover. LABOR is more of a melancholy coming of age story, centering on our narrator voiced by Tobey Maguire, the grownup version of Gattlin Griffith’s Henry, the 7th grade son son of depressed single mother Adele played by Kate Winslet. Taking place in a small town circa 1987, the first act centers on mom and son meeting Frank, a wounded man that happens to be an escaped convict: Herein, Josh Brolin has the slowburn intensity perfect for the role but director Jason Reitman tones down the suspense… as Frank talks Kate and Henry into taking him home… so there’s very little tension, making the eventual thug-to-lug transition not matter like it should.

Brolin and Winslet have a steamy Noir sizzle but their lusty relationship, through the son's eyes, is more perceived than experienced. As the story progresses we’re given sporadic reminders that the law is (literally) just outside the door, and that Frank is a wanted man. Take away the criminal aspect and this is a pretty normal family baking pies, playing catch, and fixing cars. If he's a good husband at night he’s an even better father during the daytime. 

Glimpses into Frank’s past… how he wound up in jail in the first place… are inserted mysteriously, without being intrusive, but the real stuff occurs when young Henry attends school, hangs with a blunt young girl (Maika Monroe), and figures out life on his own: The suspense relies on how much accidental information he’ll disclose about mom – to the local cop or his real dad – who’s no longer so miserable and/or alone.

Perhaps LABOR DAY is too cozy when it should have been more ominous and unpredictable… Feeling like a last ditch effort, the final act provides a mad dash of suspense while the long-winded epilogue, summing up the future of the main characters, desperately crams all the syrupy romance the rest of the movie surprisingly (and for men forced to see this, thankfully) left out.
Share This Post :
Tags : , , , , ,

No comments:

Post a Comment

Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.

All Time Popular

Featured Post

RUSHING THROUGH JOHN SCHLESINGER'S 'HONKY TONK FREEWAY'

Title: HONKY TONK FREEWAY Year: 1981 Rating: **** John Schlesinger's HONKY TONK FREEWAY has two composers: Elmer Bernstein doing his usu...

WWW.CULTFILMFREAKS.COM

WWW.CULTFILMFREAKS.COM
Movie Reviews, Interviews, Articles and Pop Culture from White Heat to Blue City

RIP ACTOR KEN HUTCHISON

TOTAL HITS

Popular Trending

FOUNDED BY JAMES M. TATE

FOUNDED BY JAMES M. TATE
RANDOM QUOTE: "Powerful little things, these credit cards." Harry Morgan, Dragnet

FILM NOIR & NEO NOIR CRIME

FAVORITES SHORTLIST

1)OTLEY 2)HELL IS A CITY 3)ROBBERY 4)THE FEARMAKERS 5)CANYON PASSAGE 6)VIOLENT SATURDAY 7)HOT CARS 8)JUNGLE STREET 9)THE CROWDED SKY 10)THE ROARING TWENTIES 11) ANATOMY OF A MURDER 12)CALCULATED RISK 13)SWEENEY TWO 14)RAIDERS FROM BENEATH THE SEA 15)HARDCORE 16)THE BREAK 17)WHITE HEAT 18)AL CAPONE 19)THE SERGEANT 20)FALLEN ANGEL 21)SHARKS' TREASURE 22)THE ASPHALT JUNGLE 23)ASH WEDNESDAY 24)THE SYSTEM 25)AIR PATROL 26)THE STONE KILLER 27)SANDS OF THE KALAHARI 28)WILLIAM CONRAD'S BRAINSTORM 29)RIOT 30)THE MAN FROM LARAMIE FAVORITE ACTORS 1)DANA ANDREWS 2)JAMES CAGNEY 3)STANLEY BAKER 4)MARLON BRANDO 5)JACK NICHOLSON 6) CHARLES BRONSON 7)BURT REYNOLDS 8)WILLIAM LUCAS 9)TOM COURTENAY 10)GENE HACKMAN DIRECTORS 1)JACQUES TOURNEUR 2)RICHARD FLEISCHER 3)VAL GUEST 4)STANLEY KUBRICK 5)OTTO PREMINGER 6)ORSON WELLES 7)JOHN GUILLERMAN 8)JOHN LANDIS 9)SAM PECKINPAH 10)MICHAEL WINNER

BRITISH NEW WAVE CINEMA

RARITIES AND EXPLOITATION

HAMMER HORROR & THRILLER

Popular This Month

CHARLES BRONSON CINEMA

CINEMA OF DANA ANDREWS

WESTERN GENRE REVIEWS

PEAKING INTO THE SIXTIES

KICKING IN THE EIGHTIES

TALES AND REFLECTIONS

REVVING THE SEVENTIES

Most Popular Last Year