Max Payne Movie Review
Max Payne Review

"Max Payne" Overview

Rating: PG-13
2008
Cast and Crew
Director : John MooreProducer : Scott Faye,John Moore,Julie Yorn
Screenwiter : Beau Thorne
Starring : Mark Wahlberg,Mila Kunis,Beau Bridges,Chris "Ludacris" Bridges,Chris O'Donnell,Donal Logue,Amaury Nolasco, Olga Kurylenko
To paraphrase comedian/pundit Bill Maher, "New rule! Motion picture adaptations
of successful video games must at least be as exciting and inventive as the
product they are based on." Of course, Hollywood violates this mandate almost
every time they take a game title and turn it into a film. With very few
exceptions, the translation doesn't work. The latest victim of this mindless
media reimaging is Max Payne. While avoiding much of what made the
bullet-time-dependent third person shooter a hit, it tries to turn its tale of
a haunted policeman desperate for vengeance into something otherworldly and
epic. Until the oddball finish, it's just a lot of slo-mo stiffness.
Three years ago, Max Payne (Mark Wahlberg) was a cop. But after a trio of
junkies killed his wife and child, he went a little nuts. Now, he spends his
days digging through cold case files, and his nights tracking down unsuccessful
leads. When a young woman named Natasha (Olga Kurylenko) is found murdered, his
wallet in her hand, Payne is instantly a suspect. When his ex-partner (Donal
Logue) also turns up butchered, they put Officer Jim Bravura (Chris "Ludacris"
Bridges) on our hero's tail. Looking for answers, Max turns to his father's
friend BB (Beau Bridges), now the head of security for the pharmaceutical
company where his late wife worked, for some answers. It forces a confrontation
with guilt ridden corporate toadie Jason Colvin (Chris O'Donnell), a link to
insane ex-soldier Jack Lupino (Amaury Nolasco), the discovery of a highly
addictive (and dangerous) drug named Valkyr, and a standoff with no-nonsense
assassin Mona Sax (Mila Kunis). Whew!
Max Payne is an incredibly average wannabe action noir which tries to salvage
some originality by going completely goofy at the end. For the first 70 minutes
or so, we get the standard cop with a vendetta sweeping the streets clean of
every idiosyncratic snitch in central casting. At irregular moments, a Russian
hitwoman with the voice of Meg Griffin steps in and pouts. Friends turn out to
be enemies, with professional rivals (or in this case, a rapper turned Internal
Affairs investigator) coming around to our hero's way of thinking. Once the
denouement is revealed, it's time for the final showdown, right? Well, sort of.
Max Payne doesn't just deliver a last act firefight. Instead, the gunpowder
ballet is accented by what appears to be the Rapture as envisioned by Norse
mythology.
Up until the screwy Scandinavian Revelations, Payne provides nothing we haven't
seen before. In fact, for something that is supposed to move us to the edge of
our seat, there's very little spectacle during the first two acts. Just
plodding, talking, and more de-saturated metropolitan cityscapes. Director John
Moore (Flight of the Phoenix remake, The Omen remake) is so busy trying to keep
the various narrative balls in the air that he juggles himself out of anything
remotely thrilling. And while Wahlberg does a good glower, the rest of the cast
seems like someone's idea of a joke. Kunis can't play fierce, Ludacris lives up
to his stage name, and villain Nolasco is nothing more than buff man meat sans
shirt.
But then there's that ending. Without spoiling anything, we get to see the last
15 minutes or so through Payne's "poisoned" eyes. All manner of winged demons
and blazing horizons break out, turning the settling of scores into something
akin to the final battle between fire and brimstone. We keep waiting for Loki
and his minions to show up and start cheering. Up until the point where all
Hell literally breaks loose, Max Payne is nothing special. The finale doesn't
salvage it all, but it does make up for some of the dullness delivered.
Say hi to your mother for me.
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Review by Bill Gibron
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