A Man Apart
review by
Cynthia Fuchs,
4 April 2003
Turbulencia
Plots don't come more worn out than this one. Ex-L.A.
banger and current undercover DEA agent Sean (Vin Diesel) takes down
the biggest dealer in Mexico (you know he's wicked because he's
introduced dancing with a slithery girl in an underground club).
Sean's first words following this difficult bust (he literally runs
down the villain's car on foot) are a request for time to see his
wife. Can you guess what will happen next?
A Man Apart
isn't much for suspense. Following a few aren't-they-great-friends
party scenes and dreamy sunset-salsa-dancing shots, cartel henchmen
arrive at Sean's gorgeous beachfront home, shadows in the window,
large weapons drawn. Before you can say Mad Max, or Lethal
Weapon, or maybe Hard To Kill, they've shot up Sean's
exquisite wife (Jacqueline Obradors).
It's sad that
the wife is dead, of course. More painful is the death scene per se,
as Vin Diesel has to play something approximating tragedy: he
cradles her bloodied face, mumbles on his cell phone to a 911
operator, and cries, all at the same time. Ouch.
The rest of the
film -- originally slated to open in November 2002 --concerns Sean's
vengeance plot, pedestrian in its conception (written by Christian
Gudegast and Paul Scheuring), and darkly operatic in its execution.
Director F. Gary Gray knows how to convey drama through composition,
as evidenced by his terrific work on Set It Off, The
Negotiator, and the splendid video for OutKast's "Ms. Jackson."
Here, he has his work cut out for him.
Among the
hurdles: making Sean, whose plot path is so clearly marked from the
start, even remotely compelling. Toward this end, he comes equipped
with a nominal support system, in his DEA "family," as well as his
longtime partner (in banging and policing), Demetrius, a.k.a. D (Larenz
Tate). These male bonds grant Sean a standard means to vent: he'll
get angry at his captain (Steve Eastin) and he'll mourn with his
partner, as D holds his head and says, "I got you, I got you."
This is about
the extent of the guys' articulation of their "feelings." For the
most part, Sean's internal states are revealed through a mundane
voiceover, rowdy action scenes, and occasional close-ups of his
ravaged, increasingly scruffy face, as he downs little airplane
bottles of liquor and smokes endless cigarettes. A mournful
soundtrack underlines his grief in these moments, as he gazes on his
home, still broken and bound with police tape, even after his own
gunshot wounds have healed (which suggests weeks if not months have
passed). Through the still open glass doors, pocked with bullet
holes, you see the remains of the party. Sean says he can't stand to
go inside, so apparently, he lives on the porch. Lucky it doesn't
rain much in southern California.
The initial
focus of Sean's wrath is, of course, the now incarcerated cartel
boss, Memo Lucero (Geno Silva). For reasons unknowable, he's allowed
access to his sworn enemy in prison, repeatedly. Unsurprisingly,
Lucero insists he's not responsible for the hit, that indeed,
there's a new sheriff in town, called "El Diablo." Mmm-hmmm. Sean
buys this story, and heads off into the fray, his voiceover
informing us that in order to get guys at the top of the drug trade,
"you have to work your way up from the bottom." This ensures that he
and his team -- namely, D and their buddy from banger days, Big Sexy
(George Sharperson) -- will pursue a series of violent encounters
with assorted scuzzy characters, granting the film a familiar
boom-boom-boom trajectory.
Among these
characters is the redoubtable Pomona Joe (Jeff Kober), whom Sean
meets, needless to say, at a strip club. Undercover as a heroin
dealer with "major weight" to move, Sean plays cool until he tells a
half-naked girl to "get the f*ck off my lap." Here, Joe surmises
that maybe Sean's a "faggot," at which point Mr. Tough Guy
Undercover gets stupid and nearly blows the transaction.
This bad
behavior is not enough to clue his teammates that Sean's "on the
edge," though his haunted face and red eyes certainly suggest this
much. And so, a few scenes later, Sean wreaks havoc during a
supposed buy. When the mark boasts that he was the one assigned to
shoot some DEA agent's "stupid bitch wife," Sean beats him to death,
ferociously, initiating a horrific shootout that leaves three agents
and several bad guys dead -- a calamity emphasized by the camera
craning out to show the pavement mural on which they all stand, a
huge, colorful face. Surrounded by bodies, Sean stands in an eye's
pupil, at once target and shooter, victim and psycho killer.
Such
extravagant imagery makes the film look more exciting than it is.
The human equivalent of this hyperbole is Timothy Olyphant's
Hollywood Jack. Ostensibly the owner of a Beverly Hills tanning
salon, Jack is really a dealer and remarkably ruthless killer
("remarkably" even in this crowd). Especially helpful to the film,
Jack has style to burn. He first appears in a slick powder-blue
ensemble, right down to his blue-suede loafers, featured in
portentous close-up as he steps from his silver Porsche.
Jack brings a
bit of welcome speed and pizzazz to the proceedings, fragments of
buzzy antidote to Sean's ponderous sense of purpose. When Sean
announces that he's been fingered by a junkie named Overdose (Malieek
Straughter), Jack waits a perfect beat before he sniggers, "There's
a human being called Overdose?" Or again, when he's getting off a
plane and must explain the results of a severe beating (courtesy of
Sean) to his Mexican connections, Jack shrugs and says, "Turbulencia!"
Sean doesn't
get these jokes. He's so wrapped up in his blood frenzy that he
can't see the absurdity of the world into which he's plunged so
wholeheartedly. This makes him too familiar, a cop who can only
clean up the underworld by turning as damned and dirty as the
culprits he pursues. Indeed, Lucero, who would know, tells him he
must become "a monster." And so, when Sean's suspended (so he can
take "time to grieve"), he doesn't go much for that idea, and shows
up at D's door, insisting that he's put together a squad from the
neighborhood. D is stunned; with a wife and child of his own, he's
got reservations about running off into battle with a crazy man.
No matter. Sean
deems his cause "just," even if it's obviously delusional to
everyone else. And that rage for justice is the most tedious aspect
of A Man Apart. While it occasionally suggests that maybe
Sean's not the healthiest of rampagers, it mostly just tries to stay
out of his way. |
Directed
by:
F. Gary Gray
Starring:
Vin Diesel
Larenz Tate
Steve Eastin
Timothy Olyphant
Jacqueline Obradors
George Sharperson
Geno Silva
Jeff Kober
Written
by:
Christian Gudegast
Paul Scheuring
Rated:
PG-13 - Parents
Strongly Cautioned.
Some material may
be inappropriate for
children under 13.
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