The Hard Easy Movie Review
The Hard Easy Review
"The Hard Easy" Overview

Rating: R
2005
Cast and Crew
Director : Ari RyanProducer : Scott M. Gold,Daniel Levin
Screenwiter : Jon Lindstrom
Starring : Henry Thomas,David Boreanaz,Vera Farmiga,Bruce Dern,Peter Weller,Nick Lachey,Elimu Nelson,Gary Busey
Jon Lindstrom must have thought he was on to the gimmick of the century when he
sat down to write The Hard Easy: Two separate gangs plan a diamond theft that
goes down at the same time. One gang shows up, only to find the other's already
working the job. Now that's an "oh snap!" moment.
And hey, it's not a bad idea. The problem is that The Hard Easy doesn't have
any other ideas to sustain the other 95 minutes that don't involve the two
gangs facing off. Director Ari Ryan practically admits this from the start. He
opens with a snippet of the botched heist, then flashes back to how we got
there, then we see the heist in all its glory. Those are some rocky times,
alas. Try as he might to make Henry Thomas's lovable loser Paul into the hero
we're supposed to root for, it doesn't really pan out. Thomas is a terrible
choice for the role, in the end, a whiny loser and a bit of a jerk (and on the
hook for countless gambling debts) that deserves what he has coming. The schlub
on the other team: David Boreanaz, an odd choice who has substantially less
screen time than Thomas but does little with what he gets.
The Hard Easy marks time by parading a variety of biggish stars (Peter Weller,
Bruce Dern, Gary Busey) in smallish roles, pacing back and forth as we wend our
way toward the dual-gang heist. Rising star Vera Farmiga saves much of the film
in her (also smallish) role as a doctor who ultimately turns out to be in on
the whole shebang.
But it's Easy's resolution that feels like the biggest let-down of them all.
What do rival gangs do when both try to rob the same place at the same time?
Well, they kill each other, of course. The Hard Easy's final parade of bullets
is so pat, so expected, that I was waiting for almost anything else to happen
except for what turns out to be the blatantly obvious. Wrong!
The DVD includes a commentary track and an interview with Ryan.
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Review by Christopher Null
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