Movie
Review | A Man Apart
Reviewed by: Brian
Orndorf
DEA agent Sean Vetter (Vin Diesel) has finally captured a notorious
Mexican drug lord, Meno Lucero (Geno Silva, “Scarface”), after
seven years of work. After a celebratory time with his partner (Larenz
Tate, “Menace II Society”), and beloved wife Stacy (Jacqueline
Obradors, “Tortilla Soup”), Sean discovers that a new group has
taken over the cocaine trade, lead by the mysterious figurehead
“Diablo.” Diablo’s first act is to kill Sean’s wife as
payback, leaving Sean a shattered man, robbed of his reason for
living. Embarking on a singular path of revenge, Sean distances
himself those around him as he heads down to Mexico to find Diablo and
kill him.
If anything can be credited to director F. Gary Gray and the entire
“A Man Apart” production team, it is this: They actually manage to
pull a capable performance out of Vin Diesel. It’s strange to
consider such an idea, and even stranger to write that down for people
to see. After dismissing almost every lousy film he’s put out since
his rocket-ride to fame (“The Fast And The Furious,” “XXX”), I
was shocked to find myself genuinely moved by Diesel’s performance.
Now, don’t get me wrong, the man still has the enunciation of a
taffy addict, the eloquence of the damned, and disgustingly often, the
film favors his brawn over heartfelt sentiment. But there are moments
in the film that set aside brute force, and reveal an open heart. “A
Man Apart” plays to Diesel’s strength, which is laser-focused
intensity. But here the intensity is focused on a grieving widower,
which hands Diesel great scenes of pain, which he plays wonderfully.
When the film takes the grieving out, and places familiar machismo
back into his hands, that’s when the picture becomes a drag, and
becomes about as interesting as watching the minutes tick by on a
watch, which I did for long stretches of the movie.
It’s only regretful that Diesel’s best performance to date is
stuck in a gratingly routine drug war actioner that purports to have
the societal impact of “Traffic,” with an emotional wallop unseen
in this brand of mayhem. “A Man Apart” is a messy enterprise,
helmed by Gray as if even he doesn’t know exactly what genre he’s
going for. In the end, the characterizations are off (Vetter’s
captain proclaims he “loved Stacy like a daughter,” yet their only
scene together is awkward small talk), the gun-battles claustrophobic
and poorly staged, and the film features a whopper of an ending that,
in all honesty, doesn’t make much sense with the rest of the story.
Gray has rarely impressed as a director (“Friday, “The
Negotiator,” “Set It Off”), so his lack of control over “A Man
Apart” isn’t all that unexpected. He’s gutted his film of all
its meaning, and replaced it with needless macho posturings, and
half-assed sentiment to legitimize it all.
Filmed more than two years ago, this will be the last time we see
an emotionally naked Vin Diesel onscreen for a long time to come.
He’s become too big, too interwoven in his own celebrity to even
think of challenging himself like this again. It’s only a shame a
misguided film like “A Man Apart” is the last picture we have to
cling to for a reminder of Diesel’s nominal talents.
Grade: 3/10
COMMENTS
Date/Time of Posting:
Apr 10 2003 / 07:38:56
IP Address: 64.179.69.29
name = Pvt. Andrew
Email = woodsman@pronetisp.net
comments = I went to see A Man Apart a day after it came out in
theaters, I'd been waiting on this movie for a long time and very much
looking forward to seeing it. I first got interested in Vin Diesel
through his small roll in Saving Private Ryan as Pvt. Adrine Caparzo,
then moved on to see his new release at the time The Fast and The
Furious.
|