0 out of 1 people found the following comment useful :- With Intent to Act..., 1 August 2008
Author:
dunmore_ego from Los Angeles, California
*** This comment may contain spoilers ***
Has Bruce Willis been taking acting lessons?
Rather than Just Another Tough Guy Infurio role, in 16 BLOCKS, Willis
has put some nuanced daylight between himself and The John McClane. His
detective Jack Mosley is haggard, worn-out, somber, morose, sporting a
paunch (which looks suspiciously like a pillow), washing down meds with
cheap whiskey, and so out-of-shape he loses breath climbing stairs. It
is almost hilarious to see Willis play so debilitated.
Yet the John McClane id still ebbs in this character's veins when
faced with Saving The Day, he will. But not willingly. Roger Ebert
describes The John McClance best: "It's going to be a pain in the ass
for me to do this, but I couldn't live with myself if I didn't."
What he has to "do" in this Richard Donner-directed actioner is
transport a witness, Eddie Bunker (Mos Def), sixteen blocks in two
hours, to a courthouse to testify. What starts as a seemingly mindless,
shitkicking assignment turns into a gauntlet-run as everyone who
DOESN'T want Eddie to testify comes at Eddie and Mosley hell-tilt with
murderous intent.
For that dramatic knife in the guts, the people who don't want Eddie to
testify are THE COPS. Twisting the knife: they're led by Mosley's
ex-partner, Detective Nugent (David Morse).
The first plagiarized movie plot that comes to mind is Clint Eastwood's
THE GAUNTLET (1977), and I'm sure there are a thousand other movies in
this "running the gauntlet" genre, yet this movie's 105 well-paced
minutes, written by Richard Wenk, rush by on the strength of the
performances.
Willis has always had the acting chops in this movie and in HOSTAGE
(2005), he actually throws them down; and we all know how sturdy David
Morse is (DANCER IN THE DARK, THE GREEN MILE) at one point, his
conflicting emotions are incredible to behold, when he confronts his
ex-partner, Mosley, but cannot shoot him, then gives the order for
someone else to do so but the acting revelation here is most
definitely Mos Def.
Never let it be said this guy is "just a rapper" his attention to the
Eddie character is indicative of his talent as a full-blooded, mustered
ARTIST from his adenoidal motormouth, to his browbeaten stoop, to
carrying around a scrapbook with scrawled birthday cake recipes because
he wants to "go straight" and become a baker Mos Def is a sensation!
His best line can also be applied to what he and Willis wrought on
their characters throughout this entertaining ride: When Nugent thinks
he has the drop on Mosley, "You can't get lucky all the time!" Eddie
then ambushes Nugent, "You can be smart every day, though!"
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0 out of 1 people found the following comment useful :-

With Intent to Act..., 1 August 2008
Author: dunmore_ego from Los Angeles, California
*** This comment may contain spoilers ***
Has Bruce Willis been taking acting lessons?
Rather than Just Another Tough Guy Infurio role, in 16 BLOCKS, Willis has put some nuanced daylight between himself and The John McClane. His detective Jack Mosley is haggard, worn-out, somber, morose, sporting a paunch (which looks suspiciously like a pillow), washing down meds with cheap whiskey, and so out-of-shape he loses breath climbing stairs. It is almost hilarious to see Willis play so debilitated.
Yet the John McClane id still ebbs in this character's veins when faced with Saving The Day, he will. But not willingly. Roger Ebert describes The John McClance best: "It's going to be a pain in the ass for me to do this, but I couldn't live with myself if I didn't."
What he has to "do" in this Richard Donner-directed actioner is transport a witness, Eddie Bunker (Mos Def), sixteen blocks in two hours, to a courthouse to testify. What starts as a seemingly mindless, shitkicking assignment turns into a gauntlet-run as everyone who DOESN'T want Eddie to testify comes at Eddie and Mosley hell-tilt with murderous intent.
For that dramatic knife in the guts, the people who don't want Eddie to testify are THE COPS. Twisting the knife: they're led by Mosley's ex-partner, Detective Nugent (David Morse).
The first plagiarized movie plot that comes to mind is Clint Eastwood's THE GAUNTLET (1977), and I'm sure there are a thousand other movies in this "running the gauntlet" genre, yet this movie's 105 well-paced minutes, written by Richard Wenk, rush by on the strength of the performances.
Willis has always had the acting chops in this movie and in HOSTAGE (2005), he actually throws them down; and we all know how sturdy David Morse is (DANCER IN THE DARK, THE GREEN MILE) at one point, his conflicting emotions are incredible to behold, when he confronts his ex-partner, Mosley, but cannot shoot him, then gives the order for someone else to do so but the acting revelation here is most definitely Mos Def.
Never let it be said this guy is "just a rapper" his attention to the Eddie character is indicative of his talent as a full-blooded, mustered ARTIST from his adenoidal motormouth, to his browbeaten stoop, to carrying around a scrapbook with scrawled birthday cake recipes because he wants to "go straight" and become a baker Mos Def is a sensation!
His best line can also be applied to what he and Willis wrought on their characters throughout this entertaining ride: When Nugent thinks he has the drop on Mosley, "You can't get lucky all the time!" Eddie then ambushes Nugent, "You can be smart every day, though!"
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