Like all the best Liam Neeson action/thrillers of late, Run All Night taps into a deep well of
depression and sadness. It’s brisk and exciting, but suffused with reluctance,
concerned with matters of broken homes and beaten psyches. Neeson brings a
certain amount of dignity to these man-of-action roles, a great actor refusing
to coast in material others might view as merely paychecks. He can see the
tragedy here. It’s a big part of what makes The
Grey, Non-Stop, A Walk Among the Tombstones, and the
best bits of Taken such crackling
entertainments. They’re elevated by solid direction smartly focused on Neeson’s
weary gravitas, a man fighting through existential sorrow to do what he feels must
be done.
In Run All Night,
he plays an alcoholic ex-hit man trying to wrestle with the demons of his past.
He’s estranged from his grown son (Joel Kinnaman), who knows the truth about
him and has run towards respectability, working two jobs to make ends meet for
his young family. When complications arise and the shooting starts, we find
ourselves in an exciting actioner about bad dads and shattered sons trying
their best to heal understandably troubled relationships. It’s gruff tough-guy
poetry, family melodrama through car chases and shootouts, a gripping violent
thriller lamenting the difficulties in breaking cycles of violence.
Neeson’s boss (Ed Harris) has a son (Boyd Holbrook) the same
age as his. This young man is the opposite of Kinnaman, trying to be even half
the gangster his father was. This leads him to killing a rival drug dealer, a
crime Kinnaman happens to witness. Talk about your bad coincidences. So Neeson
must scramble to save his son as the full weight of his old criminal friends’
organization swings down to silence the witness. This time, it’s personal. Neeson
and Kinnaman race around a New York City night, illuminated by scattered
thunderstorms to enhance the drama, trying to stay alive. Around seemingly
every corner they find crooked cops, trained killers, and old friends who are
suddenly, reluctantly, new enemies (an ensemble full of small roles for Bruce McGill, Vincent
D’Onofrio, Common, Genesis Rodriguez, and Nick Nolte).
What’s so satisfying about this set-up is the way
screenwriter Brad Ingelsby and director Jaume Collet-Serra make the pulp
melodrama as crackling as the action. Terrifically tense scenes of suspense and
violence turn into moments of interpersonal conflicts, atonement, and
reconciliation as great actors sit and work out characters’ problems.
Collet-Serra, who has been grinding out clever and blindsiding impactful genre
fare for a while now, quietly becoming one of our most reliable B-movie auteurs
with the likes of Orphan and Neeson’s
aforementioned Non-Stop, makes space
in a film of hard-charging grit for quiet emotional beats. These moments in
which characters engage in off-the-cuff soul bearing one-on-one exchanges play
just as effectively as the hand-to-hand combat, vehicular mayhem, and
discharging firearms.
Collet-Serra’s camera swoops through New York streets,
connecting scenes with a CGI Google Street View aesthetic, but Anton Corbijn
collaborator Martin Ruhe’s cinematography settles into dancing grain crisply cut together by editor Dirk Westervelt. The
filmmakers know how to make a weighty action contraption look great and really
move. It starts slow, but once it takes off it builds an irresistible momentum grounded
in slick crime drama stoicism, the kind that has as much fun conjuring the
dread of violence as the act itself. Whether we're running through an evacuating apartment building tracking multiple deadly cat-and-mouse games, or sitting behind a curtain hoping a bad guy won't think to look there, the film builds its tension out of what might happen, even as it gets satisfaction setting off the fireworks when happenings do erupt.
There’s a moral gravity here, of a deadly sort, that emphasizes the terror as well as the thrill. The
filmmakers are wise to key into Neeson’s form, the weariness and grief conjured
up by a slump of his shoulders, or in a soft gravely sigh. He’s playing a man
clearly skilled in the art of effective violence, and yet can now only summon up
the power to put those skills to use to protect those he loves. It’s a
dependable formula, and in the hands of such skilled practitioners of the
craft, it’s a fine example of its type.
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