The Equalizer is an entertaining film but serves to frustrate because, upon reflection, the viewer
comes to realise that it could have been so much better if more consideration
had been given to logical progression of its story. Denzel Washington turns in an
every-man performance that allows him to display enough semblance of humanity
to keep the film from becoming a preposterous exercise in the pursuit of
gratuitous violence. What could have been a genuinely great film that expanded
upon the central concept of its 1980s TV namesake teeters on the edge of
becoming yet another entry in the rapidly expanding over-50s action revenge
thriller sub-genre that has seen Liam Neeson reshape his career into an admired
anti-hero.
Fortunately, Denzel
Washington, as the mysterious Robert McCall, never allows himself to fall into
the trap of muttering down the end of the phone to a disembodied antagonist,
but he sure comes close as The Mechanic and Expendables 2 writer Richard Wenk’s
script struggles to maintain a dramatic balance from which to make Washington’s
character credible. The movie starts extremely well, as the First Act
establishes a compelling scenario and range of secondary characters that enable
McCall to become the avenging protagonist of the film’s title in its final
stages. McCall is a man with a past, but the first half of the film doesn’t
feel the need to embellish his story it simply allows the audience to partake
in his routine and engage in conjecture as to the kind of man he is and may
have been.
The Second Act fails to
capitalise on the strong set-up as Chloe Grace-Moretz’s character of Teri, who
is the reason why McCall takes up the mantle of The Equalizer, all but
disappears from the story. Instead, Washington’s McCall engages in a
cat-and-mouse game with Teddy, a Russian mob enforcer played with
scenery-chomping glee by versatile Kiwi actor Marton Csokas. Teddy starts much
like McCall; very understated, but he soon turns into a force of nature as he
single-handedly starts taking apart the Boston criminal network in search of
the man who has killed his goons.
Toward the end of the Second
Act, McCall takes the opportunity to leave Boston and meet with former
colleagues Brian and Susan Plummer, played respectively by Bill Pullman and
Melissa Leo. This odd diversion serves as pure exposition and the audience
discovers over the course of a few minutes McCall’s entire background. Despite
the seriousness with which the scenes are played, there’s a sense of inevitable
cliché about this digression which creates the circumstances through which the
audience can throw their fourth-wall support behind Washington as he confronts
corrupt elements of the Boston Police and the Russian mobsters who operate
outside the law.
By the time the Third Act is
done, the audience will be in one of two camps. There will be those who regard
the film as an above-average action thriller that doesn’t shy away from
violence but never quite reaches Tarantino-type gratuity and successfully
positions Washington at a tilt for Neeson’s anti-hero title. The other group of
viewers will walk away questioning how one man could be capable of what has
just played out over the course of the last 130 minutes and will be entirely
unconvinced of the premise or its outcome.
Fortunately, the production
value of The Equalizer was enough for this reviewer to lean toward the former
rather than the latter. Special mention must be made of Director of Photography
Mauro Fiore, who employs his wonderful sense of composition and lighting to The
Equalizer; elevating it above the standard action thriller “hero” point-of-view
camera perspective. Fiore is currently one of cinema’s most sought after
cameramen, with credits that range from James Cameron’s
technologically-spectacular Avatar to the Peter Berg’s political thriller The
Kingdom. In one of the most interesting and bizarre camera moves in recent
mainstream cinema, Fiore and Fuqua design a scene that visually captures just
how different Teddy’s Russian mobster is by comparison to the “American”
environment in which he finds himself. The shot itself extends from the bottom
half to the top half of his shirtless tattooed torso, but the contortion of his
body makes him appear to be some sort of cross between an alien and a reptile
fighting some unseen inner-demon that the audience will never quite fathom.
It’s a unique shot that serves to highlight just how good and different The
Equalizer could have been had this level of cinematic creativity been used
throughout the entire production.
While Washington’s presence
is a bonus and a blessing, Marton Csokas provides no shortage of support to
help keep the film moving toward its inevitable showdown between McCall and
Teddy. One scene at the mobster’s restaurant is especially riveting and was
reminiscent of the great Diner meeting between Al Pacino and Robert DeNiro in
Michael Mann’s Heat. There’s no doubt that Anton Fuqua, the film’s Director,
has the ability to direct good actors into the extended investigation of
character’s personal lives and domestic matters that bears the comparison
between him and Mann. Fuqua helped Washington realise an Academy Award in
2001’s Training Day; a film that has held up reasonably well since its release.
Unfortunately, The Equalizer also suffers from some of Fuqua’s excesses that
were so prominent in 2013’s artistic misstep Olympus Has Fallen. The Equalizer
doesn’t have the “Director for hire” feel of that film, as it exhibits a higher
level of craftsmanship, but a more considerate approach to the utilisation of
the characters so well established in the first part of the film would have resulted
in a much better movie; especially with such a great performer as Denzel
Washington head-lining the project.
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