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Review: 'The Immigrant'Despite a request to ignore any former associates and a desire to avoid unlawful situations, Foley is approached by the shifty Ethan. With a jacket full of drugs, a pocket flush with cash, and a smooth, inky pompadour, Ethan weasels his way into a conversation with Foley, coyly suggesting he knows all about Foley's life. When Foley rebuffs Ethan, the wannabe smoothly pulls out his trump card: Foley murdered his father.
Ethan talks tough, but Foley holds his head high, retreating to a life of respectable odd-jobs. Instead of pulling grifts, he becomes a homebody with an alluring young girl nursing a serious drug addiction, a reclamation project that gives Foley a chance to rebuild his broken life. But the getaway is never clean, and soon Foley finds his hands stained with blood, at the mercy of a con referred to as The Samaritan.
Much of whatever weight comes from the film's second half comes from the Canadian actor Luke Kirby. Much of what made Kirby so eccentric and off-putting in upcoming infidelity drama "Take This Waltz" is in full effect as Ethan. When this lowlife prepares to speak, he shapes his lips into an "O" formation, as if he's holding back what he's trying to say both because he's weighing a few options, and because he's clearly unsure about the right type of phrasing. All sideways grins and effeminate, theatrical poses, Ethan is the kind of hoodlum that stays five steps ahead of his opponent, when he thinks its ten.
His manic, unpredictable energy carries the film as Samuel L. Jackson contributes a deadening, uncertain performance as Foley. When not doing outsized, Jackson can be a dull presence as an actor, and while he deserves credit for playing himself in flashbacks, you're never really sure what drove young Foley, and old Foley is only defined by his reactive nature. A whole lot happens to this hapless ex-con, and while Foley radiates a humorless, old-fashioned intelligence, his character is written to be both a skilled tough guy and a kind-hearted patsy. Sadly, Jackson can't seem to find the middle ground, reducing "The Samaritan" from a servicable thriller into a Canadian cheapie that rips off a major contemporary classic. [C]
8 Comments
Lori | April 29, 2012 8:08 PM
Saw the movie. It's the American version of Old Boy but w/o all the cool action scenes. It's a pretty good rip off though, lol. 8/10
S.H | April 9, 2012 8:20 PM
I smell Old Boy
tanisha | April 9, 2012 5:28 PM
He should just play only the nic fury type screaming in your face roles.
harry | April 9, 2012 5:16 PM
hahah Gabe Toro is back! yay! Fuck yeah!
Tarantino | April 9, 2012 5:16 PM
SLJ lost it ages ago. sad.
Punk.C.M | April 9, 2012 5:14 PM
so, is the movie good or not?