The Phoenix Network:
The Phoenix
Boston
|
Portland
|
Providence
STUFF Boston
WFNX
Live Radio
|
On Demand
Tu Boston
About
|
Advertise
Adult
|
Moonsigns
|
Band Guide
|
Blogs
|
In Pictures
Movies
See all in Reviews
Review: Big Mommas: Like Father, Like Son
Reviews
Pride and Glory
Overwrought, derivative police procedural
By
BRETT MICHEL
|
October 31, 2008
PRIDE AND GLORY
" alt="photo of 'PRIDE AND GLORY'">
1.0
Stars
In my time as a critic, I’ve learned a few things. The first is that audiences will not respond well to a dog getting shot. (See — or don’t — Barry Levinson’s
What Just Happened
.) Now, here comes director Gavin O’Connor (
Miracle
) to demonstrate that threatening a baby — especially with a hot iron — will
never
be acceptable. Yet the scene in question is the single original touch and the only one that works in his derivative police procedural. O’Connor and co-writer Joe Carnahan (
Narc
) sketch an overwrought black-and-white tale of a conflicted family of New York’s blue-and-whites whose members (Edward Norton, Colin Farrell, Noah Emmerich, and Jon Voight) run the gamut from good to drunk to corrupt. When O’Connor sets a climactic scene in a convenience store, it proves an all too convenient plot device. I’ve also learned that audiences like to get the facts before spending $10 in these precarious economic climes. You’ve been warned.
125 minutes | Boston Common + Fenway + Fresh Pond + Chestnut Hill + Embassy + Suburbs
Related
:
Four Christmases
,
Review: The Imaginarium of Doctor Parnassus
,
Review: Crazy Heart
,
More
Four Christmases
Rather than the typical snowstorm that strands characters in a Holiday-themed comedy, it's heavy cloud cover that keeps San Francisco couple Brad and Kate from catching their flight to Fiji.
Review: The Imaginarium of Doctor Parnassus
Few filmmakers have suffered from the life-imitates-art phenomenon as has Terry Gilliam.
Review: Crazy Heart
Every great actor has at least one washed-up, alcoholic, award-winning-country-singer role in him. For Jeff Bridges, it's "Bad" Blake, a former C&W legend now reduced to playing bowling alleys and dive bars in tiny towns in the Southwest.
Review: The A-Team
This fun big-screen reboot takes the quartet of fugitive vigilantes-for-hire into the digital era, and it succeeds because director Joe Carnahan doesn't let technology overpower personality.
Review: Ondine
Love in a Neil Jordan film is almost always impossible: a guy falls for another man’s wife, or for his own mother, or (unwittingly) for another guy, or for the Blessed Virgin Mary.
Interview: Eloise Mumford and James Wolk of Lone Star
James Wolk and Eloise Mumford, the stars of Fox's new drama Lone Star [premiering Sept. 20) are both far more attractive in person than they are on the TV screen.
Review: Horrible Bosses
After two comedies, it's clear Seth Gordon is good at making . . . documentaries.
Review: Fright Night
Set in the sun-bleached city of sin, Las Vegas — where many of the strip's denizens are already dead inside — Fright Night plays upon elements of darkness and indulgence.
Review: The Grey
At the center of this superior stranded-men-picked-off-by-external-threat thriller is Ottway, an anguished loner powerfully played by Liam Neeson.
Human touch
Sage Francis has become the poster-boy emcee for a generation of literate rappers.
Less
Topics
:
Reviews
,
Celebrity News
,
Entertainment
,
Movie Stars
,
More
,
Celebrity News
,
Entertainment
,
Movie Stars
,
Colin Farrell
,
Colin Farrell
,
Jon Voight
,
Jon Voight
,
Joe Carnahan
,
Joe Carnahan
,
Edward Norton
,
Less
|
More
See more deals
view all
[
02/19
]
4-9 pm | Tom Tom Sunday: Celebrating the Big Beat of Tom Ardolino
@ The Met
[
02/19
]
Mary Poppins
@ Providence Performing Arts Center
[
02/19
]
"Nostalgia Machines"
@ David Winton Bell Gallery
ARTICLES BY BRETT MICHEL
REVIEW: THIS MEANS WAR
| February 16, 2012
What promises to be a modern Jules and Jim (until you realize it's directed by a 43-year-old who calls himself "McG") quickly devolves into Spy vs. Spy territory, only with incompetently staged and edited action and little of that ol' Mad magazine zing.
REVIEW: THE VIRAL FACTOR
| January 17, 2012
Made for a modest budget of $17 million — and feeling like it (who needs convincing explosions in an action movie?), Dante Lam's latest still gets the job done from a run-and-gun standpoint.
REVIEW: EXTREMELY LOUD AND INCREDIBLY CLOSE
| January 17, 2012
Too soon? For Stephen Daldry's 9/11 drama, the right time is "never."
REVIEW: THE DIVIDE
| January 10, 2012
Many a teleplay for The Twilight Zone threatened atomic Armageddon, and though Frontier(s) director Xavier Gens nukes New York in the opening shots of his latest thriller, he finds more inspiration in the horrors of human nature as seen in the old TV show's episode "The Monsters Are Due on Maple Street."
REVIEW: MISSION: IMPOSSIBLE – GHOST PROTOCOL
| December 20, 2011
Impossible Missions Force agent Ethan Hunt (Tom Cruise) returns to the screen in dramatic fashion as new teammate Jane (Paula Patton) and the returning Benji (Simon Pegg) break him out of a Russian prison.
See all articles by:
BRETT MICHEL
LATEST SLIDESHOWS
Photos: Providence celebrates 375th Birthday in style
Photos: Deer Tick at The Met
All Slideshows
Advertisement:
Buy Adult Novelties Online
Featured Articles in Reviews
:
Review: This Means War
Review: Safe House
Review: The Vow
Review: Rampart
Review: Journey 2: The Mysterious Island
|
Sign In
|
Register
thePhoenix.com:
Home
Listings
Editor's Picks
News
Music
Film + TV
Food + Drink
Life
Arts
Rec Room
Video
Phoenix Media/Communications Group:
Boston Phoenix
Portland Phoenix
Providence Phoenix
STUFF Boston
WFNX Radio
People2People
MassWeb Printing
G8Wave
About Us
Contact Us
Privacy Policy
Advertise With Us
Work For Us
Sitemap
RSS
Mobile
TODAY'S FEATURED ADVERTISERS
Copyright © 2012 The Phoenix Media/Communications Group