Movie
Review | Assault on Precinct 13
Reviewed by: Susan
Granger
MODA MAG.COM -- As remakes go, this action thriller is a notch
above the rest. Granted, the characters are predictable caricatures
and you could drive a police cruiser through the plot loopholes.
Nevertheless, there are enough intriguing new twists to be
entertaining.
An end-of-the-year blizzard has stranded a prison-bound van carrying a
fierce, formidable crime lord (Laurence Fishburne), a fast-talking
junkie (John Leguizamo), a small-time hustler (Jeffrey "Ja
Rule" Atkins) and a gang member (Aisha Hinds) at Detroit's aged
Precinct 13, which is in the process of closing down. An injured,
troubled police sergeant (Ethan Hawke), a soon-to-be-retired veteran
Irish cop (Brian Dennehy) and a gum-cracking secretary (Drea de Matteo)
are in charge. Plus there's the sergeant's psychiatrist (Maria Bello)
who stops by for a curiously improbable appointment on New Year's Eve.
Yet when heavily armed, masked gunmen break in, led by a federal agent
in charge of an Organized Crime and Racketeering Squad (Gabriel
Byrne), it turns out that maybe the good guys and the bad guys aren't
exactly who you thought they were.
The original version was made by John Carpenter back in 1976, before
he made "Halloween," as an homage to the 1959 Howard Hawks
film "Rio Bravo," starring John Wayne and Dean Martin, whose
voice is on the soundtrack. Now in his English-language debut, French
director Jean-Francois Richet and screenwriter James DeMonaco
("The Negotiator") changed the claustrophobic location of
the carnage, injected more clichés and upped the brutal, explicit
violence quotient on a contemporary note. On the Granger Movie Gauge
of 1 to 10, "Assault on Precinct 13" is a serviceable 6.
It's yet another loud, profane, bleak action thriller.
Grade: 6/10
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